Reddit refugee here with a big question, How do we create a subreddit-like experience here?
Most discussions about kbin right now are focused on the user side of things, what about mods who want to bring their communities to kbin? I’m not talking about moving all the existing discussions and content, just making the actual place for new content and discussion complete with moderation.
Would creating a magazine do this?
@Nodachi216 Magazines are the kbin equivalent of a subreddit. They have two large categories of content, threads and microblogging. Threads are any content not a “post” while threads are articles, links, and media posts. Threads are what you see on the “front page” with posts showing up in the microblogging part of a matching magazine.
@dannekrose Could you expand on the difference between threads and microblog posts (are these what are referred to just as “posts”?)? I think my confusion comes from the fact that I see, in this magazine, for example, plain text posts in both the thread and microblog section, so I’m not sure what the difference is.
@Nodachi216
@cache_miss
When you open up kbin.social or any other kbin instance at the moment, you’ll be taken to the “front page” or main page which will show a list of “threads” with the following:
Those are “threads” and will have one of the following types:
They will not be of type “post.”
I used the term microblogging because that’s the menu item you have to select from inside a magazine to view “posts.”
Looking at my screen which is almost certainly the same as that for kbin.social, after I select a magazine via the “Magazines” menu item at the top of the front page (or some other location where the magazine link takes you to the magazine page), it shows me a new “top bar” that consists of the following:
[Site name] /m/[magazine name] Threads Microblog People Magazines.
By default, when you open a magazine page, it will have the “Threads” menu item selected. It will look similar to the front page in that it will have a list of “threads” with the up and down vote buttons to the left, a title, and some content underneath depending on the type: article, link, photo, video.
If you click the Microblog menu item, it will show a much different screen with an empty text box at the top with the built-in editor, a selection box to the bottom right with the current magazine selected already and some other options.
Below the text box you will see options for changing the ordering of the content below. The content below this box are all “posts” that either originated on this instance, or else were federated in from other platforms like Mastodon, Calckey, etc.
From a user’s perspective, this is the difference between a “Thread” and “Microblog” and is a distinction I believe doesn’t exist in Lemmy. (I don’t actually know though, since I’ve never actually used Lemmy)
Under the hood, the different types - article, link, photo, video, and post - use different Activity Pub types to distinguish them. I don’t know exactly for all of them, but I know kbin articles are federated as type “Page” while Mastodon, for example, sends out posts as type “Note.” A “Note” is then treated as type “Post” by kbin and will not show up in the “threads” view (that’s the view with the upvote and downvote buttons to the left, the nice title and content in the middle and comment counts). To view “posts”, you must look at the Microblog link for the Magazine that the content was created in, or routed into if it is a new post from an outside platform.
I don’t mean to sound condescending or rude so if I did, that is a lack of skill on my word choices and I apologize.
I hope that helps clear up some confusion!
@Nodachi216
@dannekrose Thank you for the detailed reply, and that definitely gives me a better big-picture understanding.
I think I know enough now to be able to refine my question a bit. It sounds like a kbin Article is different than a kbin Post in that it has a different ActivityPub type and is displayed in different tabs of the kbin UI (Article in Threads, and Post in Microblog).
But what about from a poster’s perspective? Say for example I’m posting a text-only question. Why would I want to choose to create a Post vs. an Article or vice versa? I’m sure I’m missing something, but they both seem to have the same basic features even though they have a different UI.
@Nodachi216
@cache_miss
The Why is going to be a bit subjective so I’ll try to lay out the more “concrete” differences between creating a thread (of which article is just one type) and a post.
Posts:
Threads:
These are just the differences that I can think of off the top of my head. Also, if I’m wrong on any of these, I hope someone corrects me.
Thank you and I hope that helps.
@Nodachi216