this post was submitted on 07 Aug 2024
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Oh cool so we're gonna get another wave of users joining lemmy, it's nice that they keep fucking up at such a regular cadence
I don't think there's really going to be some noticeable influx, but I hope so. Even though Lemmy isn't nearly intuitive as it could be, but it did improve atleast by some degree.
Voyager is pretty intuitive and can be used without even joining a instance
Voyager is the spiritual successor to Apollo and an all around fantastic application.
I'm an android man, and Voyager has my full support
Dayum okay that really slaps.
Reddit isn't really intuitive either. Most platforms have at least some learning curve. We have a great ecosystem of apps that help. I only wish a YouTuber would make a good explainer.
Here's one for the Fediverse that I saw recently: https://youtu.be/QzYozbNneVc
Well that's definitely true in some areas, like the search bar (it's just awful, not non-intuitive).
Well that's the problem though isn't it? If to use the website you need a literal tutorial, then something is fucked. I realize the irony of saying this on Lemmy, but the platform just isn't very user friendly at all. Hell, you could say the same about the whole Fediverse, it's an interesting idea and technology, but for the average person it's too much of a hassle compared to normal social media.
I can't think of a single social media platform that hasn't required me to search how to use it at some point. Twitter was like, "So I can send a text message to a website about what kind of soup I had for lunch? I don't get it." Facebook is regularly full of posts by people who don't understand the platform. The internet itself had celebrity ads, and morning news show explainers.
The Fediverse in general does require a different way of thinking. More importantly, it requires advertising (or publicity, anyway). That is one big advantage corporate media will always have - ad money. But the Fediverse has us.
Using Boost on both it's like I never left. Biggest differences are a bit less diversity here, duplicate communities from different instances, and the spoiler tags don't work.
It's funny because the demographics here remind me very much of old 2010-era Reddit—very techy and/or progressive types making up 90% of discussion.
I think about 2014ish is about the point where Reddit peaked in quality, so we're at least replaying from a good save state here. I fully anticipate lemmy will hit the same peak in a few years and hopefully continues on to surpass it
The duplicate community across instances could really use a solution, maybe like a multimunity?
There was some discussion about meta communities. You'd still need some curating because [email protected] and [email protected] really should be about completely different topics
We say registrations go from 1 or 2 a day to 14 (other instances saw similar upswings). Just on this news. If they do implement it we'll see another Rexxit with similar big numbers.