- 6 Posts
- 16 Comments
sarahsquirrel@aussie.zoneOPto
Meta@aussie.zone•Error when subscribing to a community on another server
2·11 months agoAhh. Right. Thanks for bearing with me as a new user who is trying to figure things out.
Yes, I was on that community at lemmy.ml because I happened upon it by following links from lemmy.world I think. I clicked the big green Subscribe button at https://lemmy.ml/c/lemmy . I got a dialogue box “Subscribe from Remote Instance. Enter the instance you would like to follow this community from”, and entered aussie.zone

This process worked fine for other communities I subscribed to.
But for this one I got the “Server error” message. (I was later able to subscribe successfully by copy-pasting the community address into the aussie.zone search.)
sarahsquirrel@aussie.zoneOPto
Lemmy@lemmy.ml•Lemmy UX and usability. Where can I read up?English
1·11 months agoThanks! Yes Friendica is interesting, too! I took it for a quick spin and and yes, I think there are some opportunities to improve things for new and non-technical users that could be tackled with some user research and user-centred design! Are there places i should look if I want to contribute to Friendica or Fedilab? If you have suggestions for an active Friendica server I could try out as a newbie that’d be great.
Indeed, there are some UI differences between servers. But I think several of the Fedi services share difficulties related to high priority user tasks (sign up, logon, find posts / threads of interest, reply, post). I’m thinking some attention to users’ mental models and development design patterns might benefit several projects and many servers all at once, perhaps. Just a thought.
Thank you again.
Cool! For new users who aren’t familiar with Lemmy, I think it’d be great to see suggestions for communities to join when first encountering the home page. That’d help newbies understand what “communities” are all about, give them get a sense of what types of topics are discussed here on Aussie.zone and help them find and subscribe to some communities of interest.
What do you reckon? Would it be feasible to add a link to few of the most popular / flagship communities to the homepage sidebar, and perhaps a [See all Communities] link underneath? Perhaps there are cons I haven’t thought of. Cheers!
sarahsquirrel@aussie.zoneOPto
Lemmy@lemmy.ml•Lemmy UX and usability. Where can I read up?English
1·11 months agoI agree with your caution against moving fast and breaking things!
I think that user-centred design tools can be very useful for big projects and existing services as well as small projects in development :)
sarahsquirrel@aussie.zoneOPto
Lemmy@lemmy.ml•Lemmy UX and usability. Where can I read up?English
1·11 months agoThanks! It is useful for me to have more of a poke around there, for sure!
Of course, human-centred design and UX is more than just bug reports (sorry I’m probably telling you stuff you already know).
I am also interested to connect with other people thinking about the UX (end to end user experience) of Lemmy: find out what’s already been done in terms of speaking with diverse potential users, finding out how people want to use it, thinking about mental models and user stories, etc.
sarahsquirrel@aussie.zoneto
Australia@aussie.zone•NSW National Parks seeking feedback on proposed changes re. camping fees and bookingsEnglish
6·11 months agoI think it’s more that it’s very easy (and now free) to book a campsite and there’s zero incentive for people to cancel bookings they aren’t going to use.
Ghost bookings would be a labour intensive way to limit the number of people at campsites (ParkVics would have far easier ways to do that) and Bookings contractor commissions? On free bookings? That wouldn’t be very lucrative.
sarahsquirrel@aussie.zoneto
Melbourne@aussie.zone•Discussion Thread 🕹 Monday 14 April 2025
2·1 year agoYour org has a SharePoint structure? I’m very envious! At our place we have multiple SharePoint archipelagos and no map.
sarahsquirrel@aussie.zoneto
Overseas News@aussie.zone•Australian with working visa detained and deported on returning to US from sister’s memorial
3·1 year agoYep, the leadership have made it apparent that acting like a sulky 5yr old is in vogue. Kinda hilarious that they think it makes them look “strong” and “in control”.
sarahsquirrel@aussie.zoneto
Australian Politics@aussie.zone•Rightwing lobby group Advance says it makes ‘no apology’ for support given to anti-Greens groups
11·1 year agoLet the best arguments win
Unfortunately, it’s very hard for citizens to distinguish lies from truth. E.g. the “Children Overboard” scandal - a well timed lie can win an election. At the very least we need honesty in our election materials. Libellous electioneering is dangerous.
sarahsquirrel@aussie.zoneto
Australian Politics@aussie.zone•Australia urgently needs to get serious about long-term climate policy – but there’s no sign of that in the election campaign
1·1 year agoAgreed, we must direct a lot of attention to what’s happening in the US. But we have multiple government departments to work on concurrent crises (not one person with one phone).
sarahsquirrel@aussie.zoneto
Australian Politics@aussie.zone•Australia urgently needs to get serious about long-term climate policy – but there’s no sign of that in the election campaign
4·1 year agoYes, and systems thinking would encourage us to explore why that is: Starting with understanding the patterns, systems and structures, mental models that cause ppl (especially in Aus) to treat Climate Change like a less important problem than the rise of fascism.
sarahsquirrel@aussie.zoneto
Australian Politics@aussie.zone•Australia urgently needs to get serious about long-term climate policy – but there’s no sign of that in the election campaign
6·1 year ago“it’s not a priority for the electorate.” - it’s worth diving deeper here, rather than stopping at this surface level of thinking.
For example:
- Why is concern about climate change and the environment less of priority in Australia than other highly educated, OECD countries?
- What is the role of our media environment; in particular, the narratives from dominant NewsCorp and Sky News?
- How has the Overton Window shaped what people pay attention to in terms of public policy and possible futures?
- Acknowledging that mining and extraction have played a large part in the history of Australia’s economic development but we now need to transition to renewables and cleaner industries, what changes do we need to make to policies, public discourse, science education, jobs-ready training, systems and structures?
- What narratives, systems and structures are favouring short termism and limiting our ability as a nation to address long term issues? Experts and government agencies are fully aware that the climate crisis already impacting (and will have massive effects on) global trade, the economy, jobs and growth, health, education, cost of living, home ownership. The Insurance industry is sounding the alarm already.. Impacts on communities worldwide through bushfire, flood and other natural disasters are just the starting point. So, thinking broadly, how might we improve our systems so that we don’t just keep throwing money at short-term fixes, and start to make change that will could massively change the future for Australians?
These are complex issues that need layers of analysis. Systems Thinking is a useful approach, rather than thinking about just the citizens, politicians, and industry in isolation
More about Aus attitudes to climate issues:
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-02-05/australia-attitudes-climate-change-action-morrison-government/11878510--- tps://interactives.lowyinstitute.org/features/australian-attitudes-to-climate-change/
Systems thinking and climate change:
“In the context of climate change, a systems thinking approach refers to understanding and predicting people’s response to the crisis by exploring the factors and vulnerabilities that influence them. It involves simultaneously seeing the overall climate picture and how it intersects with health, gender, livelihoods, and other sectors–this helps achieve a more comprehensive understanding of the issue.” https://idronline.org/article/climate-emergency/connecting-the-dots-systems-thinking-for-climate-solutions/
Short online course: https://www.futurelearn.com/courses/using-systems-thinking-to-tackle-the-climate-and-biodiversity-crisis
sarahsquirrel@aussie.zoneto
Australian Politics@aussie.zone•Australia urgently needs to get serious about long-term climate policy – but there’s no sign of that in the election campaign
6·1 year agoOK, so how can we create movement in the platforms of the big two parties? Here are some approaches I’m aware of, what do you think?
- preferencing The Greens and independents/ minor parties that prioritise the environment will put more pressure on major parties to change their policies
- asking your local candidates to commit to environmental issues you care about: e.g. more limits on fossil fuel expansion, more support for renewables, committing to the Great Forest National Park, more funding for endangered species monitoring and protections, protecting our forests and better enforcing laws against landclearing and pollution, putting a real price on carbon, making polluting industries pay through better taxes that foreground environmental impacts.
What else?
I’m confused. I mean, New York Times and Reuters are generalist news outlets. Politico is a politics news and analysis site. In what respect are the public broadcasters not offering what you’re looking for? I love The Guardian but I don’t see how it’s a better match?
BBC News and ABC News and CBC News services (podcasts or read online) are good for general and political & business world news and analysis, including US news. They have news streams, in-depth analysis pieces and a huge range of podcasts.
PBS and NPR have online news streams and podcasts on all of these topics also.
Check out The Conversation, too.
- https://www.bbc.com/news/world
- https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p02nq0gn/episodes/downloads
- https://www.bbc.com/news/us-canada
- https://www.bbc.com/news/bbcindepth
- https://www.abc.net.au/news/world
- https://www.abc.net.au/listen/programs/if-youre-listening
- https://www.cbc.ca/news/world
- https://www.cbc.ca/listen/live-radio/1-9-cbc-news-the-world-this-hour
- https://www.pbs.org/newshour/tag/business
- https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world
- https://www.npr.org/sections/world/
- https://www.npr.org/sections/money/ - e.g. Planet Money
- https://theconversation.com/global
- https://theconversation.com/topics/global-politics-519
What about the British broadcasting corporation, BBC, Canadian broadcasting corporation CBC Australian broadcasting corporation ABC? Also America’s own PBS and NPR are very much in need of support at the moment
Investigate local, community-run radio stations and independent news services, student journalism projects etc in your area as well. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_community_radio_stations_in_the_United_States


My hope that we can create an easy-to-use fediverse alternative to FB groups and events is literally why I’m here. Help me make this happen!!