Not really, to be honest. Whilst I understand why it's happening, I find the fact it's happening at all really damn depressing. The fact some of the largest communities have to literally cease operation for a website riding off of the success brought by those same communities to listen (if they do, that is.) is beyond sad. Really speaks to the direction the internet as a whole is going.
Chat
Relaxed section for discussion and debate that doesn't fit anywhere else. Whether it's advice, how your week is going, a link that's at the back of your mind, or something like that, it can likely go here.
Subcommunities on Beehaw:
This community's icon was made by Aaron Schneider, under the CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.
Agreed. This is depressing as hell. Apollo is a joy to use. There are so many niche communities on Reddit that I enjoy, and even if Lemmy or other federated things like it take off, those communities are largely going to die. This is a tragedy, no matter how you look at it. We are losing.
I also agree, that it is extraordinarily sad to say goodbye to my top used app (RiF); but I would say even sadder still is Reddit's decisions proving how little they value their user base.
I, myself, was likely not a high value user; but the way Reddit is treating its mod teams who have spent countless hours performing a relatively thankless job for free, is simply egregious.
Makes you wonder how many absolutely awesome things that society has lost, or would otherwise have, if capitalism and greed hadn’t absolutely fucking ruined things. It’s tragic that we can’t have nice things just because they’re nice, someone has to make a buck in order for a thing to exist.
Overall I'd say it feels bittersweet. It sucks that reddit is being screwed over, but it could be really good for lemmy as a whole as long as we get through the growing pains. I like our community but it could use more people posting/commenting and driving up the engagement. Some communities are just too sparse right now.
Just takes time, i just jumped from Reddit, I'm sure more will
I'm both excited and terrified to be quite honest. While I expect the fediverse to grow quite a bit as a result, I also expect plenty of bad shit to happen as a result and I hope we can survive the load.
I'm excited for it to grow, but as an instance admin I know what's coming. I can have community creation turned on right now and feel fairly safe in it, but it's only a matter of time until assholes start coming in
Yeah, I have the day off so I plan to be browsing the whole day to help report people not be(e)having
I really think we need like a one image description of how to make an account. Something that could be posted and cross posted to Reddit, all the steps, what an instance is, what the communities are, how to sign up for the iOS and Android apps!
I was thinking about this last night; maybe a sort of phone-scrolling poster-style guide (not dissimilar to the API changes effects banners on Reddit the past week) with a quick guide to Lemmy/Kbin. I’m not totally new to the Fediverse having used Mastodon on and off after the Twitter migration, but I’m no pro when it comes to writing the content for one though.
Should probably be under a Creative Commons license as well.
(edit: grammar)
I wouldn't necessarily say excited myself, it feels more bittersweet. On the one hand it like sucks for folk on a personal level who might have really enjoyed being part of a certain community, or all the work people have put into moderating, posting content or their work on a third party app is just going up in smoke in a snap.
But on the other, it feels like sweet sweet delicious karma for the stupid bullshit Reddit's leadership have done over the years and getting to see the birth of something new and better to come out of the ashes. Hopefully this place sticks around because its felt like a breath of fresh air honestly.
I've been looking for an alternative for a while, and the communities follow the people.
Yeah I was pretty much a mega lurker by the time of the great migration, just using Reddit more as the most tolerable site I was willing to put up with compared to the others rather than out of love for it. Was pretty much itching for something new and better and well here I be now :p
it will probably be good for lemmy (if onboarding becomes less vague), but horrible for reddit. given the amount of subs straight up shutting down on the 12th i feel like that'll lead into a butterfly effect? i also wonder what spez will do. probably something that seems specifically designed to make it worse for reddit