Absolutely, was just trying to create less churn for the Lemmy devs as it appears both them and the kbin devs are a bit overwhelmed at the moment.
Absolutely, was just trying to create less churn for the Lemmy devs as it appears both them and the kbin devs are a bit overwhelmed at the moment.
Because for right now, Reddit is still far more accessible than either Lemmy or Kbin via web interface. Single simple keypress navigation for jumping around comments.
On here every single image on this page is named “image” and every single list is named “list”. I am all for getting to the fediverse, but right now the experience for me is brutal.
Let’s not cut off our nose to spite our face, the PEOPLE in the community are the important bit not the location, and if we switch off the place that works while we are midway through building a new place and bunch of people will be left beyind and disconnected and I don’t think that is what any of us want.
Ah, sad news about the cross-posting.
On the fork, I fear I slightly miscommunicated. I was not talking about a deep fork with major feature deltas. Keeping forks up to date is much easier these days as github added a button into the web ui. Most modern PRs come from forks already in github, as that is the common workflow, fork from lemmy to a personal fork under my github username, make changes, generate PR.
What I was proposing, is a workflow that was instead of:
Lemmy -> robertmeta fork -> Lemmy
it would be
Lemmy -> rblind tracking fork -> robertmeta fork -> rblind tracking fork -> Lemmy
The goal would be three fold, first as mentioned, to gain trust in a source of PRs over time as we would act as gate-keepers. Second to be able to batch accessibility related work so that the Lemmy devs can worry about less PRs. Third, we could test on this site a bit in production use to see how it works before we ship it back to Lemmy proper.
Additionally, I hope neither full time developers nor rust developers would be required as it is mostly going to be html accessibility stuff (typescript, css, html, etc).
Right now, the experience on Lemmy is a fairly huge step down from Reddit for me, so trying to think aloud about best ways to improve it, maybe just direct contribution to Lemmy is best.
The power of the fediverse at work!
That is a fairly killer feature of federated systems, a great theme here for rblind useres and we can still consume stuff from everywhere in an ideal way.