Perhaps a bit of a tangent: I’m pegnant and have been craving something all day but couldn’t work out what I wanted. I tried pico de gallo, bacon, mango. No luck. Eventually I realised: it was tap water with ice. That’s all I’ve wanted all day
An “instance” is a techie way of saying it’s a copy of that thing
(disclaimer: I’m not a lemmy expert, just techie.)
A Lemmy instance is just the server where accounts and set of communities lives. e.g, Lemmy.world or Lemmy.ml, etc. Each instance can “federate” content from other instances, which is a way of publishing content to servers you otherwise wouldn’t see. You can see content and communities from other instances as well as comment on those other instances even though you don’t have an account on each one.
Perhaps a bit of a tangent: I’m pegnant and have been craving something all day but couldn’t work out what I wanted. I tried pico de gallo, bacon, mango. No luck. Eventually I realised: it was tap water with ice. That’s all I’ve wanted all day
pregante
Perganat.
Pergola
Gregnant
Picante
Permanganate
https://youtu.be/EShUeudtaFg
It’s an absolute classic.
A classic!
tbf this is common behavior for me and i’m not pegnant
Is there a hydrohomies here?
Yes. I’ve definitely seen it, but don’t remember which instance it’s on.
Gonna be honest, I still don’t know how instances even work
An “instance” is a techie way of saying it’s a copy of that thing
(disclaimer: I’m not a lemmy expert, just techie.)
A Lemmy instance is just the server where accounts and set of communities lives. e.g, Lemmy.world or Lemmy.ml, etc. Each instance can “federate” content from other instances, which is a way of publishing content to servers you otherwise wouldn’t see. You can see content and communities from other instances as well as comment on those other instances even though you don’t have an account on each one.
You are probably looking for
!hydrohomies@lemmy.world
But there are also:
!hydrohomies@lemmy.ml
and
!hydrohomies@lemmy.de
You could subscribe to all three, or just the one on your home instance, or whatever.
Thanks, that was a really clear ELI5