I get time out on every single post I make and have to refresh the page, also every time I sign in.
Give it some time. Devs have had to go from a nonexistent community to tens of thousands. It will take some time to iron out the kinks especially with distributed open source developers. As for ‘soon’ I’d say probably a week at the absolute minimum. Growing pains of a new technology
True fact bud
the major issues I have with the platform are very minor things but are more QoL issues:
- up/down voting on a post or comment doesnt always happen - however, if I open the post or the comment thread in a new tab, I can see that it did occur.
- delays in displaying that a comment was successful. sometimes the above method works, other times it doesnt. sometimes the comment will just not go through and I’ll give up.
- notifications for new messages do not disappear from the top bar when I have read them, I have to refresh the page.
other than that, lemmy seems to be a very stable platform. hopefully 0.18 fixes some of these issues.
What’s funny is I experienced all of these issues on the reddit app too
In theory it should improve, but Lemmy.world getting slammed with a ton of new users all of a sudden really made things bad. It’ll take some time to figure out a good solution (e.g. Implementing a way to migrate users to other instances).
Just gotta be a little patient 🙂
Try other instances: https://github.com/maltfield/awesome-lemmy-instances
For finding communities I recommend lemmyverse.net over browse.feddit.de; the former is more consistent
Same here, although it’s only like 90% of my posts. I figured it must be on my end, but I guess not.
I know there’s been a spike in users but like cmon. Lemmy has been running for like 2 years. Hexbear has just migrated over and all of their users are already complaining that the site is terrible.
Sure it’s been around for a few years, but with a consistently small number of users. With the massive influx of people over the past few weeks, it’s going to take some time to scale up resources to match the new demand. Plus, the code base has never been tested under this kind of load, so I’m sure there’s room for improvement there as well.
Short term fix would be to join a less crowded instance, or start your own.
Heck, if people are willing to help fund it, I’d gladly create an instance.