jgrim of Sublinks

Site admin for discuss.online.

Founder of Sublinks

I’m a web developer, sysadmin, and entrepreneur by trade.

I do photography, PC gaming, 3D Printing, and maker projects for fun.

More here: https://jasongr.im

  • 4 Posts
  • 49 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 9th, 2023

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  • Java isn’t my preferred language. I did learn Rust to try to contribute but found the code base in less than ideal state and the process of contributing to risky. They don’t always accept all PRs. I also have low faith in the success of Lemmy due to it’s poor QA process and it’s major lack of features.

    I believe Java is the best option for this type of application, I almost did it in PHP. My goal was to attract as many people as possible to want to contribute. It’s worked, I have a ton of people contributing in some way, Sublinks roadmap is clear and organized, and we have a super-motivated and driven team.

    We won’t fail.








  • There is talk of having post types. This would allow for further fediverse integrations to function better.

    To answer your questions:

    1. Sublinks isn’t a copy of Lemmy. There used to be a greater focus on multiple post types, but now it’s not a main feature to work on. Sublinks is an alternative to Lemmy that adheres to the Lemmy API to capture the client base for that API. Sublinks has its API for its front-end and any apps being developed for Sublinks.

    Being long-term compatible with Lemmy isn’t a priority either. We set our first milestone to be parity with the Lemmy API contracts to allow for apps to work from the start. As we grow our footprint Lemmy would have to display it the best they can. We don’t plan to add support for Sublinks into other applications.

    1. Yes, we’re building our federation service to include as many services as possible.