Azapa

joined 1 year ago
 

A neurodivergent friend sent me a link to this site and I thought it's worth sharing here for more folks to see.

Basically it's a TODO list that breaks down tasks in micro-steps using AI to make it a bit easier for people who have a hard time starting a task.

An example for "Clean my room":

[–] Azapa 2 points 1 year ago

Also a shout out to https://gg.deals/

Same purpose of finding good deals and deal alerts, but with a cleaner UI and less ads

[–] Azapa 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Made Stoofvlees despite not being Belgian after hearing about this dish and talking to a Belgian friend.

It's basically a beef in belgian beer stew, topped with a slice of bread smeared with mustard, served on fries.

It came out really good even adjusted for a pressure cooker! And it reheats really well as well (not the fries, just the stew part)

[–] Azapa 1 points 1 year ago

Can you give some context to what this is?

[–] Azapa 30 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (3 children)

I see a lot of comments here saying that the vision of being "Mainstream" is not something Lemmy or other Fediverses try to achieve so they discard the feedback about UX or user comfort and discoverability because "we're not trying to appeal to everyone or grow infinitely".

And while I agree somewhat that "growth" is not the goal, I do feel like a lot of people here miss the point that "Being available to Mainstream users" is also greatly about diversity.

If the user experience and hurdles a user has to pass are great enough to filter only tech savvy or people who the issues with Reddit/Twitter are big enough to take action on, you self select to a very specific population.

You should try to help introduce diversity of people, and any user experience pitfalls and extra requirements reduce that diversity. If the "fediverse" want artists, zookeepers, woodworkers, small business owners, hobbyists, lawyers and many other people with views and interesting content to contribute this is a really bad hurdle.

Part of the reason why so many places of community that downplay user experience trend towards the same population of open source evangelists with the same form of discussion and "hivemind" that already exists in many iterations of this same experiment in the past.

I feel like that's what the author is talking about more than "It needs to beat Twitter" when he's talking about mainstream appeal, and anyone ignoring that is potentially dooming this or any other "let's give people an open alternative to big platforms" to only serve their own specific subset of people and build another same-y echo chamber that could have been achieved using any self hosted forum system.

I know I'm a bit late to the party here with this comment, but I hope it someone helps change someone's mind about downplaying the concerns raised in this post.