Yes, I share your opinion. I prefer PieFed. It has some quirks you’re bound to notice once you use it. A few missing things here and there, like the ability to upload pictures in comments. And people keep complaining about the lack of an app (while I think the prgressive web app is perfectly fine). But we get lots of other features in turn that are missing on Lemmy. Like the topics you mentioned. We have initial support for Wikis and lots of other things. And I like the technical design. Seems the underlying framework is far less complex than what Lemmy is based on. Which makes PieFed relatively robust, easier on the resources(?) or at least easier to fix once something goes wrong. And the small community is very impressive in improving all sorts of minor and major aspects of the platform. It’s a bit difficult to compare both projects since they also operate on a different scale. We don’t know if Piefed would be able to handle the several thousands of users of an active Lemmy instance. We’d need to grow to that size to find out. All I can say is, it’s impressive and works well for what it is right now.
Yes, I share your opinion. I prefer PieFed. It has some quirks you’re bound to notice once you use it. A few missing things here and there, like the ability to upload pictures in comments. And people keep complaining about the lack of an app (while I think the prgressive web app is perfectly fine). But we get lots of other features in turn that are missing on Lemmy. Like the topics you mentioned. We have initial support for Wikis and lots of other things. And I like the technical design. Seems the underlying framework is far less complex than what Lemmy is based on. Which makes PieFed relatively robust, easier on the resources(?) or at least easier to fix once something goes wrong. And the small community is very impressive in improving all sorts of minor and major aspects of the platform. It’s a bit difficult to compare both projects since they also operate on a different scale. We don’t know if Piefed would be able to handle the several thousands of users of an active Lemmy instance. We’d need to grow to that size to find out. All I can say is, it’s impressive and works well for what it is right now.