this post was submitted on 12 Oct 2023
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Technology
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This is not a post about technology.
Please elaborate on the technological advancement that was made here
I'm sorry but this community isn't just for announcing "technological advancements". The content here is anything of or relating to technology.
This news is as related to technology as a weather report citing rain in Silicon Valley is relevant to technology. It doesn't fit the sub.
I agree in relevance, but it's more "noteworthy" by measure of the poster. If Silicon Valley had a torrential storm that could materially impact these services, it would also belong in the [email protected] community. I suggest you compare how strongly related other posts in this community are to technology, for reference.
The other posts aren't very related to technology either, and that's my point. There was a time before Lemmy, when /r/Technology was focused on delivering news about new technology. Not tangentially related news about pro climate laws. Not the politics of social media companies. Not Elon Musk spam. Technology. /r/Science was vastly different in the past as well. In general, these communities had much more substantiative content with nuanced discussions in the comments from experts in relevant fields. Lemmy was a bit like that as well in the past. But unfortunately bots like this one started reposting all of the drivel from Reddit to the main Technology community, drowning out content with more depth. I want communities that I can genuinely learn from. I want to feel hesitant to comment, because everyone in the room is smarter than me. I miss that version of the internet.
I've not used or liked Reddit in more than a decade so I can't empathize. Sowwy!
Yet you are, however, following a direct mirror of reddit right here in this community. Fully automated for your convenience.
Okay? And?
Just because you're not smart enough to get that other guy's points doesn't make him wrong, fwiw
I'm fully aware of this. I'm trying to figure out what the point they're attempting to make is in the first place. It'd be difficult for me to concede if the point is incomprehensible to me.
That's very clearly not the point being made by the message:
This is the message I'm not understanding the point of.
I suppose I do also have a "legitimate mental handicap" in that I suffer ADHD, but that's not relevant to the subject at hand from what I can tell.
You claimed not to use reddit but are using a reddit mirroring service. Whether or not you have been on reddit in years has nothing to do with the validity of his earlier point concerning the importance of keeping boards tied to the topic of intended discussion. Which of course were tied to reddit because reddit was the predecessor of this site...
Is it really that hard to read?
I'm using links that also appear on reddit reposted by a bot to a different service that is not reddit.
They're the one who focused in on that. I was simply saying that I can't relate to their experience with Reddit before Lemmy.
And?
I suppose it must be. Would you like to insult me more?
Why don't you just call me the R word or some other slur directly at this point? lmao
This is clearly unproductive. You also fail to acknowledge or respond to anything else I've said. I guess I'm just too stupid to understand.
Ok, let me go in depth, as that too stupid to understand conclusion is actually the one I came to.
Reddit mirroring, which was poor word choice on my part, refers to the fact that Lemmy is just a federated version of reddit. The UX is entirely the same. Whether or not you are a reddit user has nothing to do with this.
The community basis of Lemmy, the site we're currently on, comes from reddit as the other user was talking about. So does the importance of keeping the discussion boards to their topics.
Your relation to reddit is completely irrelevant in this discussion.
Was that simple enough for you? Or do you need pictures?
I don't think the UX is ultimately relevant to what the person I was responding to was saying. They were distinctly talking about the content, and specifically the content "before Lemmy", of which I have no familiarity, as I did not use Reddit at that time.
As someone who's been here since before the reddit exodus in June, it's hard for me to agree with this. We've had someone of an Eternal September, but the community is based on FLOSS advocates and communities.
"The importance of keeping discussion boards to their topics comes from reddit" doesn't really make sense and is non-sequitur, but even if I accept it, whether reddit did it or not is irrelevant. Communities here are often run and managed distinctly from how Reddit is. And as the person I was responding to pointed out and you conceded, this post actually came from Reddit anyways, so it's a moot point.
I'm glad we agree on this. My relation to reddit is largely irrelevant to this discussion, and only relevant insofar as to my familiarity with a particular era of reddit the person I was responding to wanted to see return.
It'd be pretty funny if you threw in some pictures tbh.
Nobody is gonna waste their time reading that. Just leave if you don't enjoy. Very simple.
Actively contributing to this community being dumb and irrelevant I see. Trust me, I've already left. Eternal September has arrived.
Bye