Alexandrite is a Beautiful Web Frontend for Lemmy

Sean Tilley@lemmy.mlmod to Fediverse@lemmy.ml – 248 points –
429 Too Many Requests
wedistribute.org

Alexandrite is slick, gorgeous, and brings a lot to the Lemmy experience. I highly recommend giving it a try.

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Is there a way to use this as a total replacement for the lemmy-ui as an instance admin?

(dev here) I hadn't really considered it as a full replacement before, but hosting it alongside the instance like a desktop version of m.lemmy.world is something I think would be neat (at least one instance is doing that, with a custom Dockerfile because I haven't made one yet). I'd need to add some mobile support (which I'm not against doing in the future) and some admin tools probably before it could be a full replacement, both would probably not be for a bit still because I'm still working on feature parity for normal users. Also still waiting on a Lemmy issue to be fixed before I can add image uploading which is the most basic feature the site lacks at the moment.

Wefwef/voyager works well as a mobile interface. It only has an iOS style interface now, but it’s really good, and they’re working on an Android skin if that’s a dealbreaker

A beta version of the Android theme is already in as of 0.24.0! It's still a work in progress, but Wefwef dev seems to move along at an impressive pace.

Settings > Appearance > Device Mode

True, I've been using Voyager on my phone and it's a big improvement over lemmy-ui in my opinion.

I exclusively use Lemmy via voyager.

This is something I'd really love to see, as well. While I'd say that the default UI on Lemmy is "functional", in that it gets the job done...I would love if the backend could support alternative bundled frontends. This is something that Pleroma supports, and it's a great feature. It's something I wish more Fediverse software could officially support.

It's defeinitely possible with lemmy.

Check out endlesstalk.org, they have three frontends!

  • m.endlesstalk for voyager,
  • old. for the old reddit web ui and
  • new. for alexandrite.

Not to mention lemmy.world that also provide m.lemmy.world for voyager (formerly wefwef).

If it’s also intended for use on iPhone, it’s not ready. Renders too wide on my device.

it is clearly meant for use on desktop

While there are quite a few mobile apps on Android and iOS now, one interesting area gets overlooked: alternative web frontends.

As I said to the other person:

I assume you didn’t read the comment I was replying to, which asks if it can be used as a default ui on a server, which affects everyone, but thank for questioning my comprehension ability.

asks if it can be used as a default ui on a server

that is irrelevant. the point is, that this is considered desktop solution. it is expected that everyone uses some kind of app on the phone, so the fact that it renders too wide on your iphone is irrelevant.

“it is expected that everyone uses some kind of app on the phone”

lol ok

lemmy apps are still in development, don’t even reflect some server settings correctly, and the only version of lemmy that works totally as intended is the web portal, but we’re all expected to be using apps for everything?

sure, buddy

edit: also the point is that someone asked if it could be used as a lemmy instance default front end, which would only make sense if only desktop users ever logged in via a browser. How you cannot absorb this detail is beyond me really.

it is clearly stated this is a desktop solution, so keep complaining it doesn't work on your iphone. i am sure if you add little more sarcasm, it starts making sense.

The comment I replied to clearly asked if they could use it as a default instance front end. I know you want to cast the question I was responding to as also irrelevant, but it just isn’t, when plenty of people log in via a mobile browser, whether you like it or not.

oh. i think i finally get your objection, although it is still unbelivable to me. are all iphone apps that bad that you would rather use the web interface?

On Jerboa - probably the most developed/supported Android Lemmy app - text input is so buggy that it's practically unusable for me. Trying to edit the end of a comment will sometimes remove chunks from the middle, backspacing a few characters from the end of a word deletes the space in front of it etc.

lemmy apps are still in development and all are subtly buggy, so until those are updated and refined, sometimes the web view is the only accurate one. So yes, at times I prefer the browser.

edit: for another example, see the Reddit app. I entirely prefer the browser over it.

Just want to add to my comment that the #1 reason I sometimes prefer the browser over an app is that you can open content in multiple tabs, just like on desktop. I can have several tabs open, each dedicated to viewing one community. Easier to cut and paste urls and other content into other apps. I don’t like being confined to one viewport for everything. It’s nice being able to interrupt reading a discussion to go down a rabbit hole in another tab, then close it and pick up where I left off. Navigation in the apps can be generally unpredictable right now. Or you completely lose your place and have to go find it again. Lots of pros to using a browser for it.

I assume you didn’t read the welcome note

I assume you didn’t read the comment I was replying to, which asks if it can be used as a default ui on a server, which affects everyone, but thank for questioning my comprehension ability.

It’s intended for desktop use not mobile.

Which, again, is why I was pointing this out in reply to someone asking if it could be used as the default ui on a lemmy instance.

I get that. Thing is an instance can use multiple alternative front ends, so I don’t want to shut down the question, because it’d make sense to run one for desktop and mobile (voyager for example).

Or possibly just adjust aspects of the responsive design to correctly present for mobile viewports, but the point still stands that having it as a default for an instance is a premature notion right now due to anyone logging into that instance on a mobile browser.

Yea … All good.

I also backed up and now see what you meant about being able to have multiple front ends for an instance. I read that as being able to select a frontend, not as having an “instance.com” and a “m.instance.com” at the same time, but that would solve the concern I raised. Yeah, we’re good.

👍

Yea, lemmy.world have m.lemmy.world that provides voyager nee wefwef.

endlesstalk.org have three. m.endlesstalk for voyager, old. for the old reddit web ui and new. for alexandrite.

Kinda cool! I'm not sure many other fediverse platforms are doing it, in part, I'm sure, to the hard separation that lemmy has between its backend and frontend.

Interesting, I have a lemmy.world account but I don’t think I’ve seen the mobile view in my browser. At least, the url stays the same for me, it’s one of the reasons I didn’t consider that possibility. I’m used to seeing a m.domain variant on other sites. I’ll have to experiment and see if going to that specific url changes something.

edit: I’ll be damned, it does give me a whole different interface I never knew about.

edit: I’ll be damned, it does give me a whole different interface I never knew about.

Yea ... it's a completely different 3rd party front end!! Their community is at !voyagerapp@lemmy.world

Well now I have a new “app” to test. I could login with my reddthat account just fine, and it acts like a native app on iphone if I first open it in safari and then add it to the home screen. I can “close” it and it remembers my account just fine on reopen. TIL more things about lemmy.

Yep ... voyager is a PWA!

Personally, I much prefer all of the alternative WebUI frontends to the native apps.

While the native apps can be awesome, and all of their developers are doing great things for the fediverse, right now the fediverse is, IMO, best thought of as a web first ecosystem, just because of how DIY, volunteer/FOSS and non-profit it is. Alternative webUIs seem to me a better and faster way to get flexibility and user options across the fediverse.

They also avoid what I fear is a dark pattern with mobile apps, which is that the platform that gets a good mobile app all of a sudden has a significant advantage and "market inertia". But expecting the creator of a new platform to create two mobile apps is way too much. And so you have to wait for mobile developers, which is almost certainly a popularity contest with a pretty strong feedback loop. This seems to me contrary to the spirit, goals and even health of the fediverse at the moment, which is very much still in an experimental prototyping phase.

Plus, these PWAs work pretty well and seem to clearly be developed faster, and of course, are inherently cross-platform ... because you know, that's what the internet is about.

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