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Very neat, thanks for sharing! What do the dotted lines between non-Fediverse protocols and Fediverse platforms represent? Do those platforms use multiple protocols?
Im not sure, I just found it on wikipedia
What are the common attributes between each app that allows them to be federated with each other? Users, a post with multimedia support (images, links, maybe videos), a comment thread, and what else? Can an app deviate completely from this user/post/comment model and still be federated? Do each app need to manually integrate with another app to be considered federated or is any app using ActivityPub automatically integrated to your app?
Do each app need to manually integrate with another app to be considered federated or is any app using ActivityPub automatically integrated to your app?
ActivityPub provides the framework, but a platform also has to be designed to support another platform. It's not automatic.
Here's a list of 130: https://the-federation.info/#projects
One I like not mentioned so far is bookwyrm, which is like a federated goodreads (track books you're reading, review them, read other's reviews).
Edit: the flagship instance is https://bookwyrm.social
I think it's worth noting that Mastodon is by far the most mature. Everything else is buggy and may not always work the way you might expect but I think many are still worth using if you can put up with the quirks.
Also worth noting that BookWyrm can import your books from a GoodReads export, so you can try it without risking much.
I just found Bookwyrm and love it! Now that's a great idea for a federated site.
Akkoma is also very stable and much faster than Mastodon.
Still not sure what this is supposed to do based on the site? It's some kind of all-in-one fediverse thing? Doesn't help that they reference a ton of federated services that I've never heard of in the website
Implements ActivityPub, you can do Twitter-like messaging with it and define the maximum length of the text. The client API is the same as with Mastodon, so you can use any Mastodon app with it, or even run the Mastodon web frontend.
It is written in Elixir instead of Ruby, so it is much faster and uses less resources than Mastodon. Supports quoting and emoji reactions like Misskey does. Super easy to install.
is there any android app for bookwyrm?
Yes and no. Yes an app exists, but it's not official, and the app is only a wrapper for the website. It may be better to "install" the website to your home screen using the option in your browser.
If you want to check it out, it's not on Google Play, but you can get it on F-Droid if you have it, otherwise you can install the APK directly by downloading it here.
PixelFed is federated Instagram!
Thanks thatβs exactly what Iβm looking for!
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Peertube is a relatively popular federated-decentralized video platform, a couple of serious youtuber even have a mirror set there. But if you look for a place to share informal video with or without personal data it's better place than youtube (When reddit r/guitar had the weekly* first take challenge* I uploaded a few video on peertube because I don't want to tell google or the world about my bad but fun attempt jamming a guitar for an online challenge)
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Pixelfed is a photo sharing app, I have an account there but don't use it as I am not that much in photography, They do even have an instance dedicated to artists
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I heard about Calckey/Firefish/Misskey but not really sure what's the benefit over Mastodon
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Diaspora* is the great old one of federated social network last time I opened it it was full of conspiracy nuts
I don't think it's federated but Matrix is decentralized
Federated under ActivityPub, no. But individual matrix home servers can federated with one another, so in that way yes.
Misskey and Firefish
They are microblogs like Mastodon but with much more functions.
My favorite is PixelFed. I'm an artist, so Instagram was important for me, but for a few years now it's absolutely terrible (no reach at all with their special algorithms). PixelFed fixes all that, it replicates the feeling of IG as it was 8-10 years ago: chronological feed, tag-based, no extraneous features. I'm really enjoying it, as I can finally grow again my followship as an artist: https://pixelfed.org/
Do you have any suggestions as to how to find people on there? I have it installed and am trying it out, but I'm running into a lot of the same problems I was having on Mastodon; it seems difficult to discover engaging content.
Nostr. It's a decentralized protocol working with relays and no instances.
Its filled with cryptobros and libertarians. Its a cesspool I wouldn't touch with a 10 foot pole.
With a recommendation like that, I HAD to try it! Thanks!
It has free speech and zaps are optional.
PeerTube, basically a federated YouTube-like
Recommended android app?
newpipe.net supports peertube.