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h14h @lemmy.world
Posts 1
Comments 6
POLL - Will you stay on lemmy?
  • I don't know about Lemmy specifically, but I'm definitely all in on decentralized, ActivityPub-based social media.

    Feel like we're about to see an explosion in ActivityPub interfaces, and if that happens, it's probably inevitable someone makes a UX novel or innovative enough to pull me away from Lemmy or some other 1:1 reddit clone.

  • Juste received this love letter from reddit's admins
  • Reddit: "Subreddits are for the community of reddit users who rely on them."

    Community of reddit users: "We think the sub should stay private, and if you force it open, we'll spam sexy John Oliver and porn."

    Reddit: "wait no not like that"

    This message is mind-blowingly tone deaf.

  • main @midwest.social h14h @lemmy.world

    What region is the midwest.social server running in?

    I've been pretty intrigued by regional communities in the fediverse era, since knowing your users' likely location allows you run your server nearby to maximize performance.

    Having just learned about midwest.social, that got me curious -- what region is the server running in?

    9
    Slashdot -> Fark -> Digg -> Reddit -> Lemmy
  • Digg -> Reddit -> Lemmy

    After experiencing the death of two "power to the people" platforms due to profit-driven VC-backed corporate meddling, here's hoping the third platform is the charm Lemmy & the fediverse.

  • so, which Big Tech company do you think is going to shit the bed next and popularize its Fediverse/FOSS equivalent in the process?
  • That's certainly what it's feeling like to me.

    I remember when I was a kid and the Web 1.0 stuff was popular, things like IRC chat and forums were too intimidating/confusing for me to get into. My introduction to being an internet "citizen" was Web 2.0 and the MySpaces/Facebooks/Reddits of the world, where I had a UX approachable enough not to intimidate my teenage self.

    The shift towards the Fediverse feels like a blend of many of the best aspects of Webs 1.0 and 2.0 -- I have a UX that feels familiar, but one that comes with a bottom-up, decentralized grassroots feel that is reminiscent of the early internet.

    I'm bullish for sure.