I think communities run by people who wish to mod them arbitrarily should be allowed to exist.
I think communities run by people who wish to mod them arbitrarily should be allowed to exist.
I recently switched from jerboa to Voyager, how do you do it?
I think about this a lot. I’m so grateful I had the experience of messing with the windows registry and other phenomena of the 90s.
I spent most of my time on Reddit in the learn programming subs, so I’m glad at least that demographic has moved here. I’m almost 34, don’t work in tech but want to, don’t use Linux but want to (and if the rumors of windows adding ads to the OS are true I will switch to Linux full time except for gaming). I wasn’t really that invested in the reddit API changes but I liked reddit when it was more under ground and wild west. I used to spend a lot of time on rcsources (those days are behind me regardless, though). So I wanted to see if there was still room on the internet for the outlaw tech cowboy shtick, and Lemmy stepped up to the plate.
I have a couple of thoughts.
I dont need or want Lemmy to appeal to the mainstream. Frankly, I already get all the mainstream ‘culture’ I can stand, and frequntly more.
I think it’s a mistake to consider Lemmy a one-to-one repacement for Reddit. I hope the fediverse can leverage the whole, y’know, federation thing. I think topic-driven instances that function similarly to the old phpBB boards is a good paradigm. It’s not about a monster site that has a board for everything. It’s more answering the question, ‘What if I could post on gamefaqs from my metal archives account?’
I guess I just think we could do better than trying to out-reddit reddit, when it comes to having a vision for the platform.
Signed, a linux using socialist.