Are there communities, free software/open source or otherwise, using Lemmy as their forum software?

Nowadays, many use Discourse, some are on Zulip, and I just don’t care about the Discord ones. Would Lenmy not fit the same purposes? It is federated and easier to participate in, like mailing lists - no need to sign up per forum. Matrix is too, but it doesn’t seem to be made for long-form writing.

I believe Discourse was designed based on experience with community dynamics, and Zulip is well-designed too. Would something with federated participation like Lemmy not work as well?

  • Foster Hangdaan@lemmy.hangdaan.com
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    2 hours ago

    I’m open to the idea of using Lemmy for discussions, and feature requests, for my open-source software projects. My projects are on a self-hosted Forgejo instance and Forgejo currently lacks a discussion feature. But, unfortunately, none of my projects are popular enough to deserve a discussion board. 😭

    • Nutomic@lemmy.ml
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      1 hour ago

      You can setup a Lemmy community and link it in all your project repos. Sooner or later people will show up.

  • who@feddit.org
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    2 hours ago

    I’m not aware of any such communities that run their forum on Lemmy.

    I think it could fit, although Lemmy’s design as a link aggregation site gives it some rough edges for the purpose we’re discussing. For example, the search functions are a bit awkward to use, there is no support for subtopics, and file upload support is (from what I’ve seen) very limited.

    On the other hand, Lemmy’s use of Markdown makes it more comfortable for text formatting than BBCode, which is the HTML-like markup used on many forums.

    • Nutomic@lemmy.ml
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      1 hour ago

      In what way is the search function in Lemmy awkward to use, is there anything specific that can be fixed? You are right about subtopics, and also Lemmy normally doesnt show discussions organized by topic on the frontpage. That can be changed though with different frontends like lemmyBB.

      • who@feddit.org
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        23 minutes ago

        In what way is the search function in Lemmy awkward to use,

        Generally, I find that it requires too many clicks.

        To search for things I’m usually interested in, I have to click a link to reach the search page, wait for the page to load, click a drop-down box, select and click a target type from the list (e.g. “Posts”), click a scope (usually “Subscribed”), click another drop-down box, select and and click a date range from the list, and then enter my search. That’s a lot of steps.

        (I could enter my search before selecting all those other things, of course, but it wouldn’t reduce the number of steps, and it would put extra load on the instance host by triggering multiple extra searches before the one that matters to me.)

        Also, in certain cases like searching for a community by ID, there’s a weird glitch where the search yields no results at first, but clicking the Search button again gets the expected results.

        is there anything specific that can be fixed?

        Yes, I think the user friction could be improved in several ways.

        I haven’t made a list of potential improvements, but just off the top of my head, it would be convenient to have a simple search box in each community’s sidebar. Reddit had this back when I was using it, and it made checking for duplicates before submitting an article much more convenient than it is here.

        EDIT:

        Outside of search, the first thing I would suggest is making Lemmy readable without JavaScript. This would make it usable by people who disable scripts for security and privacy reasons*, and allow more search engines to index it, both of which would expand Lemmy’s reach and utility.

        *Note that this matters not only for someone’s home instance, which might be whitelisted for scripts, but also when following links to other instances, which is pretty common in my experience.

  • Novocirab@feddit.org
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    3 hours ago

    There is forum software that’s integrated in the fediverse. Most often I’ve heard about NodeBB, which is open source and one can self-host it for free; there is even a YunoHost package.

  • katy ✨@piefed.blahaj.zone
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    3 hours ago

    i miss actual forum software :(

    i think i still have a vbulletin v3(?) zip from when i had a license back in the day