By Eugen Rochko (CEO/Founder @ Mastodon)
Today, Meta is launching its new microblogging platform called Threads. What is noteworthy about this launch is that Threads intends to become part of the decentralized social web by using the same standard protocol as Mastodon, ActivityPub. There’s been a lot of speculation around what Threads will be and what it means for Mastodon. We’ve put together some of the most common questions and our responses based on what was launched today…
When I went to join mastadon, I had to type a URL to join. I had to google what URL to put in. So that tracks.
Oh yea I remember looking at some sort of spreadsheet of instances that had stats like users and uptime and stuff to pick one.
Do I want to be on a German server with people who have similar interests but 70% German language posts or the instance for people in Glasgow (which is a different continent from me but most of them were…) or perhaps the server that has 4 members?
I think I chose about 4 different servers at random in part because my password manager/browser combo wouldn’t let me log in despite appearing to fill everything in correctly. Joining Mastodon was a nightmare, but at least it prepared me for Lemmy. I joined 2 servers and I haven’t ever needed my backup server. Community Discovery and subscription is still a little wonky though.