Lemmy is surprisingly good for the small amount of people compared to Reddit. And even with all the Images the apps have to load, the consume less data than reddit.

This month (Ce mois-ci) the use of reddit was very limited and a bit of r/place to look at the amazing anti-reddit art. Lemmy : about 3gB Reddit : 2.33gB

Last month (Le mois dernier) it was only reddit use. 12.49gB

Tho there aren’t really many videos on Lemmy, which may explain a part of the difference.

And on reddit well there are the ads and the tracking.

    • @TibertOP
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      171 year ago

      This would be the biggest part. Right now Lemmy cannot be compared 1:1 but somehow I don’t really miss video content.

      Also reddit has a lot of ads and some of them are video ads which consume data just for displaying them.

      • @[email protected]
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        101 year ago

        I dont miss the amount of unnecessary videos. So many of them could have just been text that could be read before the video could even load.

  • @[email protected]
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    181 year ago

    Part of this may just be that Lemmy does not stream video through the app right? Also most Lemmy servers force very small image sizes.

  • @[email protected]
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    171 year ago

    Maybe you should switch from the Reddit app to using Firefox. Reddit’s app is very data hungry

  • @[email protected]
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    61 year ago

    /r/place was super bandwidth intensive. They managed to turn each individual pixel change into several KB of data.

    • @TibertOP
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      21 year ago

      I didn’t even place or follow r/place changes. Just go on there, look at memes and how the map has evolved since.

      But still just moving around is very bandwidth intensive.

  • @[email protected]
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    21 year ago

    Not necessarily the best comparison if it’s just aggressively caching. The real comparison to make is analytics tracking events and other evil things like random battery hungry background tasks

  • @[email protected]
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    21 year ago

    No video is fantastic method to minimise bandwidth usage and strain. Video astronomically scales up in file size compared to anything else, with audio (64kbps OPUS) and images (80% quality JPEGs or WEBMs or GIFs) being orders of magnitude smaller.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      GIFs are way bigger for the same length vs video because they’re basically just a series of full images, whereas videos include the diff between frames.

      But the rest is absolutely correct.

      • @[email protected]
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        -61 year ago

        Incorrect, GIFs have a lot less frames than 24/30/60 frames per second, and are usually 4-8x smaller than 1080p video resolution. In case you are referring to the smart frame-based compression in videos with H.265/AV1, those cannot be embedded into webpages to be played the way GIFs can be treated like JPGs. The web still relies on H.264 for video embedding due to its decent compression and no decoding effect on battery life of any device, no matter a Pi, phone or laptop.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          Yeah, videos don’t have that repeating effect that GIFs do, but if you don’t need that (and I personally find that annoying), H.264 videos are smaller and can have much higher frame rate. So H.264 video should be preferred unless there’s a specific reason to use GIFs