• The Picard Maneuver
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    631 year ago

    You can feel the consistency of the current userbase, especially in the more active communities. I’m glad to see it.

    • @Carnelian@lemmy.world
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      271 year ago

      It’s been awesome watching things grow, and seeing the community develop its own personality, beans and all

      • CorganaOP
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        251 year ago

        Yeah for a while Lemmy kinda felt like we-have-Reddit-at-home but nowadays I’m reminded of how it felt in Reddit’s early days (ie: less exhausting), but older and wiser.

        • @agent_flounder@lemmy.world
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          91 year ago

          “Reddit at home” – felt like that until I started using a client.

          It’s pretty dang good here. If I forget that, all I have to do is go back to Reddit for five minutes and I’m reminded of how shit that site is.

          • @LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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            81 year ago

            Yeah, my participation was pretty sporadic until I found Voyager. It’s so much like Apollo was, I no longer pine for reddit at all. The only thing missing is robust mod tools, but I’m sure they’ll come along.

            Lemmy feels like vintage reddit now.

          • CorganaOP
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            61 year ago

            It’s my hope that decentralization and federation can help preserve much of the small-sub vibes while scaling up.

              • CorganaOP
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                31 year ago

                Yeah exactly I honestly I think that’s the single biggest factor in what makes the fediverse superior

                • @porthos@startrek.website
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                  4
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                  1 year ago

                  You can make a social network profitable or you can make it healthy for its users, but I am entirely unconvinced you can do both.

                  Maintaining social networks and moderating them should be a legitimate job where people are meaningfully rewarded for their effort, but that is different.

          • squiblet
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            91 year ago

            The circlejerkiness of downvoting has increased since I was first on here, when people were more likely to respond with conversation than just a downvote of disdain (or my fave, people who downvote each reply in a conversation as they reply back). But there’s less random downvotes of disapproval than reddit. Esp. on kbin which doesn’t federate downvotes from other instances, ha.

          • @CeruleanRuin
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            01 year ago

            If you still care about downvotes at all, you’re not internetting right. Complaining about downvotes gets an automatic downvote from me, dawg.

    • @crashoverride@lemmy.world
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      41 year ago

      The only thing that sucks that some of the smaller subs don’t really have them active user base over here, so I’m still forced to use Reddit for those

      • Khrux
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        11 year ago

        I often find that if I’m having an issue or want general answers about something, I still stick “reddit” at the end of the search, but I never just open it to browse niche subs even though I am missing the equivalent here.

    • @CeruleanRuin
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      21 year ago

      I’m so glad the Trek communities moved here from reddit. Whenever I go back there it just feels empty somehow, in spite of the still much larger userbase.

  • andrew_bidlaw
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    231 year ago

    So all people I reply to and see here are like one big village, minus alts and nsfw accounts. It’s not bad. For once, I started to recognize persons behind a half of quality risa posts, like I did with niche reddit subs before. That’s what I want from a community, too see it tight-knit and filled with dedicated posters. It feels healthy and encourages to participate.

    • CorganaOP
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      331 year ago

      36k is referring to daily active users, not total accounts, so the whole network is more comperable to a single medium-large subreddit.

      • smoothbrain coldtakes
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        211 year ago

        I’m happy with that, honestly.

        I have quality conversations with quality users because it hasn’t been diluted.

        • @RGB3x3@lemmy.world
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          61 year ago

          I miss the larger conversations on smaller communities that Reddit had, just due to its size as a site. For example, r/BeachHouse or r/HighQualityGifs or any miscellaneous game subreddit.

          But I’d bet Lemmy can get there over time. It’ll just be fairly slow-going at first.

    • @CeruleanRuin
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      11 year ago

      Which is weirdly ideal, if what you want is a sense of actual community.

      Once you get to metropolitan numbers, you get the same paradoxical disconnectedness that you find in a densely-populated city.