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What the title says. I think there is still a long way for that to happen but i've been hopeful. What do you think?

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[-] henfredemars@infosec.pub 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

This doesn't fully address your concern, but I thought I might be able to illuminate. Lemmy is not running on a server per se. Every instance is a server that communicates with other servers and this network taken together is called Lemmy. This means that as communities grow the load spreads out across these machines laterally as long as people don't bunch up too heavily on a popular instance, like Lemmy.world. I made the secondary account on a smaller instance and my performance improved drastically. If you examine my username you'll see I'm coming from a different instance than you are.

It's good for the network and for you to register an account outside of the big instances. The concern that isn't as clear to me right now is what happens if the major communities are all actually hosted on one huge instance. Does that instance just have to bear the load? I do not know exactly how spread out the network ends up being due to people wanting to participate in the biggest communities.

I'm not sure anybody knows right now because it depends on how humans behave.

EDIT: I see that the account you're posting from is from the largest instance in Lemmy. You can help spread out the load if you choose to use an account on a different instance. This won't compromise your ability to see the same content. It should also improve your experience with using it because your smaller instance is usually less overwhelmed and can give you more reliable responses.

[-] scottlowe@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

Understood on scaling instances, but even those instances will eventually outstrip a single server’s capabilities. In considering the question as to whether or not Lemmy can replace Reddit, the question really comes down to how well and seamlessly Lemmy can scale.

In a lot of applications, scaling beyond a server introduces what can be some pretty gnarly complexity around things like database consistency between nodes, and things like that. I’m sure Lemmy can handle that to a point by spawning new instances, but, right now, they depend in users having sufficient awareness to even know how to do that whereas Reddit’s sign up experience is pretty streamlined.

All of this is solvable, but at some point, someone will ask the question, “who is going to pay for this capacity?” and we’ll be back in a place where we have to either decide whether o pay a monthly fee, support ads, or see or data sold. Infrastructure and people to support it are expensive.

There will also ultimately be legal compliance needs (GDPR, CCPA, etc), tax compliance as a monetization model - even if it’s just to cover expenses- is established.

I do want to see Lemmy succeed, but there will be a lot of reality to consider eventually.

[-] astral_avocado@lemmynsfw.com 1 points 1 year ago

Does it really spread out the load? Every instance will want to connect to the larger instances and replicate their data, or the larger instances could hug the smaller ones to death if a popular post gets noticed. I am spitballing, but from what I understand more instances means inducing larger and larger loads on everyone.

[-] henfredemars@infosec.pub 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Yes, but there are shortcomings. It spreads out the load in the sense that for every user served by a small instance, that is bandwidth that a big server didn't need to spend for those additional users. It only needs to pass a data item to the small instance once instead of to each user as the clients interact with it, saving it resources compared to having to serve each user directly. I believe only actually subscribed communities are fully replicated, but I'm reaching my limits of understanding.

As for the hug of death of small instances that just posted something popular in their own local community, you got me there. Hope that server can handle the load. So far it hasn't been a problem AFAIK but it could become one.

[-] scottlowe@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

More instances may also introduce more database consistency issues. It all depends on how the application scales. It it’s designed to scale out, might be fine.

this post was submitted on 04 Jul 2023
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