Hey, I made a simple webapp, that shows you a random community with basic stats, description and top 10 posts of all time from this community.
You can use it without logging in, but for automatic following, the login is required.
All data is stored in your browser and code is open source.
Some info and issues of the app:
- I made it in a day, so bugs may and will happen
- It uses a json list of communities from browse.feddit.de
- It ignores all NSFW communities. I’m planning on adding a switch for that, but if you really want, you can change
nsfwFilter
property in local storage through devtools.all
is for everything,none
is for no NSFW andonly
is for only NSFW communities. - Sometimes it fails to follow a community. Maybe it’s because community is not yet “synced” to the instance you logged in from. Don’t know much about exact reason, because I’m new to lemmy from the tech side.
- There is also a planned feature to exclude whole instances. Currently only possible with editing local storage.
This is really nice; I second another person’s opinion that it resembles a stumbleupon just for lemmy. Some kind of “Not Interested” button would be a good idea, though I don’t know how feasible that is.
At any rate, it’s a really cool tool, and I appreciate your having made it. I’m excited to see if/how it develops.
Since for some people, the edit didn’t work.
This is the link https://stirante.github.io/lemmy-discover/
Federation is a bit weird sometimes. Edits, deletions, and mod actions don’t always federate very quickly or even at all sometimes.
I very much appreciate the effort, but is there any reason I should use this instead of the pre-existing Lemmyverse.net?
I wanted to focus a single community at once and make a sneak peak of it all which is some numbers, description and top 10 posts. This way it’s less likely to accidentally skip some cool community. Also this shows you random ones and not some type of list so you’re exposed to more niche ones.
Anyways I think lemmyverse is also cool, just a different approach to discovery of new communities.
It’s maybe an idea to filter out communities with less than 10 posts.
When I tried it, it gave me a community with 1 post and no comments (there’s a lot of dead communities on lemmy, so you might need to do something to increase the chance of an interesting response)
Just pushed an update, that will hide all communities with less than 11 posts. I will make it configurable later.
To see changes, force refresh the site.
Am I missing something? Or is the link to this tool not actually present in the post? I only see a screenshot.
The link is in the post after the first sentence
Where exactly? https://i.imgur.com/BRQ6AdB.png
Nope, wasn’t there for me. Still isn’t. The post was edited and the update haven’t yet came through.
Probably the edit somehow didn’t work for you (I forgot to post the link initially, but added it after like 2 minutes).
The link is https://stirante.github.io/lemmy-discover/
deleted by creator
The link still isn’t in the post.
When I try to follow while being logged in, it says ‘‘Could not find community’’ error.
Crazily unsecure I guess (you write your password into an unknown site) but crazily cool, it’s so hard finding communities!!
Cheers!
The code is open source, the build process is open on GitHub actions and it’s hosted on GitHub pages so you also see compiled site easily. The password never leaves your browser apart from going to the instance you chose when logging in. The password also is not saved, only the access token.
I tried my best at making it as transparent as possible.
Logins with 2FA aren’t working, is it possible to fix?
Just added TOTP support in https://github.com/stirante/lemmy-discover/commit/e590c6a5cff366060e3fb6202031442b8bfe7fc8
Thanks, can now log in! Which brings me to the next problem - if I hit “follow” I just get a “community not found” error. Can you trigger a search for the community if it isn’t found?
Good idea! I’ll incorporate something like this in my own Lemmy App.