Im pretty satisfied with Lemmy, but one thing i wish you could do is browse instances. Like i wish there was a way i could almost emulate being on my programming.dev account and see all that instances communities while im logged into this account. Afaik theres no easy way to do that without visiting some aggregator website. It would be nice to do within Lemmy itself.
The ability to “subscribe” to a thread so you could be told when anyone adds to the thread. I don’t understand how people follow a thread without this. You would have to constantly be going back to it (over and over) to seeing if anything was added.
I use “New comments” for this
I host my own instance and in the database I can see all the instances my instance knows. Why is this not in the ui? That way I could just click on an instance (as admin) and open up their homepage.
Also, why arent the community headers auto federated? If I federate with lemmy world, I want to be able to see any community on there and by subscribing to one community it copies the content (current situation).
Have you tried looking here?
Just remembered there is also this add-on to help you subscribe to communities in your own instance while browsing another one: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/lemmy-instance-assistant/
Some ability to move identity. I don’t love the way you move accounts on Mastodon, but I appreciate that its possible.
Having your identity being tied to an instance is not great UX imo. Bans happen, not always for great reasons. Instances die or close up shop. Having to re-do all your subscriptions, losing your comment history, etc just because your smaller instance closes is pretty annoying and pushes people to more stable, centralized, large instances.
This is why I prefer nostr over mastodon, it’s basically the same in every key way except that your identity is not tied to your instance. I believe nostr devs are working on a reddit clone like lemmy or kbin, but it’s not done yet. Their twitter/mastodon clone is great though.
Having to re-do all your subscriptions,
You can mitigate that by exporting your settings and keeping them as a backup. That’s one of the nice features that 19.X brought
Is there a reason for nostr do not adopt AP protocol?
It’s just a different protocol that makes different trade-offs, so it can’t use AP protocol. Nostr is an underlying protocol in the same way that AP is, so you can build twitter clones, reddit clones, video streaming services, etc on top of it just like you can with AP.
Nostr’s key difference IMO is where your identity lives, and nostr decided not to have it tied to a particular instance. AP decided to have it tied to an instance, that is a pretty fundamental part of the AP protocol and is the same way e-mail works.
AP did not tie it to an instance. It left it up to clients and platforms. Mastodon tied identity to instances