I haven't really posted a lot to r/selfhosted (or Reddit in general), but whenever I did, there was always someone who voted my post down in less than 30 minutes after it was posted. Maybe because of this (maybe because they were actually perceived as low quality posts), these posts never received a lot of engagement with their 0 scores. Today I've made a little experiment and posted the same article both here and to r/selfhosted. On Lemmy, it received a few comments and some upvotes, but over at Reddit, it was promptly downvoted to oblivion. I've never really used "New" on reddit, but I've decided to take a look at it, and it looked like r/selfhosted was full a lot of genuinely helpful posts all with 0 scores. What gives?

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About Reddit, Lemmy and self-hosting it on Kubernetes
  • "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearBE
    belidzs
    Now 100%

    Right, that's a good point.

    So far it's working quite well, however for a micro-sized instance it's no surprise. Worst case scenario I can do the same thing as the admins of lemmy.world did: create a dedicated scheduling pod using the same docker image as the normal ones, but exclude it from the Service's target, so it won't receive any incoming traffic.

    The rest of the pods can then be dedicated to serve traffic with their scheduling functionality disabled.

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  • "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearBE
    Now
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    belidzs

    fost.hu