Just taking a shot in the dark, but I’m assuming if people were making the needed third party apps for Reddit before, they can repeat this task for Lemmy.
Thing about Lemmy is, since its federated, and fully opensource, even if it doesn’t right now, adding an accessible interface is trivial. Be it through forks/pull requests, separate clients or frontends, or as a full-fledged federated peer focused on accessibility
You are absolutely correct. Lemmy’s federated nature basically guarantees that free / affordable API access will always be available to app developers.
Just taking a shot in the dark, but I’m assuming if people were making the needed third party apps for Reddit before, they can repeat this task for Lemmy.
(Please correct me if I’m wrong though.)
Thing about Lemmy is, since its federated, and fully opensource, even if it doesn’t right now, adding an accessible interface is trivial. Be it through forks/pull requests, separate clients or frontends, or as a full-fledged federated peer focused on accessibility
You are absolutely correct. Lemmy’s federated nature basically guarantees that free / affordable API access will always be available to app developers.