“Searching for a subject matter that interests you” in Mastodon/PixelFed is all about hashtags. If you’re interested in science fiction, try #scifi. You would do well to either sign up for an instance relating to your interests (for example a dedicated scifi instance, like what startrek.website is for Lemmy), or a general purpose one (mastodon.social) where you can get a better overview. If you find an instance related to your interests later on, consider moving there.
As you search hashtags, you’ll find interesting people. Follow them. You’ll see some interesting posts. Boost them. Adding a star to a post serves no practical function, but it’ll make the poster happy anyway (it’s the same as upvotes here).
Mastodon is based a lot around boosts - if you see someone boosting a lot of content of the type you’re interested in seeing, make sure to follow them and your feed will be populated by content curated by humans, not algorithms.
As long as everybody are federated - but they are not. The bigger instances tend to be federated with everyone, but the smaller/more specialized ones might not yet have federated with each other. Of course you can still follow people from anywhere (as long as they’re not actively _de_federated), but searching for hashtags might unfortunately be less powerful for discovery from a smaller server. If you’re on a smaller instance not specific to your interests, you might do particularly well to start out finding accounts to follow through some third party list.
The greatest advantage of being on a specialized instance is, however, in the feeds: The “local” timeline shows you anything posted by anyone on your instance, while the “federated” timeline shows you anything posted by accounts someone on your server follows. On a large, general server both these feeds will be extremely crowded with all kinds of content. On a specialized instance, it’s likely that both timelines will be somewhat interesting, and people might be reading it and discover your posts there as well. :)
Mastodon:
Pick a Mastodon instance.
Open it in your web browser, follow the prompts to sign up.
Search for people you want to follow, and add them. Maybe search for subject matter that interests you, and follow people who post about that.
PixelFed:
Pick a PixelFed instance.
Open it in your web browser, follow the prompts to sign up.
Search for people you want to follow, and add them. Maybe search for subject matter that interests you, and follow people who post about that.
To add on this:
“Searching for a subject matter that interests you” in Mastodon/PixelFed is all about hashtags. If you’re interested in science fiction, try #scifi. You would do well to either sign up for an instance relating to your interests (for example a dedicated scifi instance, like what startrek.website is for Lemmy), or a general purpose one (mastodon.social) where you can get a better overview. If you find an instance related to your interests later on, consider moving there.
As you search hashtags, you’ll find interesting people. Follow them. You’ll see some interesting posts. Boost them. Adding a star to a post serves no practical function, but it’ll make the poster happy anyway (it’s the same as upvotes here).
Mastodon is based a lot around boosts - if you see someone boosting a lot of content of the type you’re interested in seeing, make sure to follow them and your feed will be populated by content curated by humans, not algorithms.
Is that essential, though? As long as everybody is federated, it shouldn’t matter, except maybe it will take longer to see some posts.
As long as everybody are federated - but they are not. The bigger instances tend to be federated with everyone, but the smaller/more specialized ones might not yet have federated with each other. Of course you can still follow people from anywhere (as long as they’re not actively _de_federated), but searching for hashtags might unfortunately be less powerful for discovery from a smaller server. If you’re on a smaller instance not specific to your interests, you might do particularly well to start out finding accounts to follow through some third party list.
The greatest advantage of being on a specialized instance is, however, in the feeds: The “local” timeline shows you anything posted by anyone on your instance, while the “federated” timeline shows you anything posted by accounts someone on your server follows. On a large, general server both these feeds will be extremely crowded with all kinds of content. On a specialized instance, it’s likely that both timelines will be somewhat interesting, and people might be reading it and discover your posts there as well. :)