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submitted 1 year ago by meisme@lemmy.ml to c/lemmy@lemmy.ml

How do you feel about the massive influx of users?

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[-] Sponholz@lemmy.ml 51 points 1 year ago

I honestly can't say about the influx. Since I'm part of it.

But man....

This does feel like home.

I was already loving Mastodon.

Honestly, the real question is:

What took us soo long....

I was lurking on Lemmy for a long time now read only mode, not signed up, but never had the urge to actually making an account.

I try not to have so many feeds where I'm active at once, to try and better manage the time I spend on this feeds.

Twitter and Reddit were the ones I engaged the most

Twitter became Mastodon and Reddit became Lemmy on that matter, so that I can focus on being active and helpful whenever possible.

So, what took me so long...?

Definitely something I will be asking myself for a while, since so far the experience here have something that reddit just don't. The quality over quantity aspect.

Finally...

Thanks for having me here, I hope I can contribute the best I can to maintain Lemmy awesome as it is. I don't post or reply like a madman, but I like to participate on constructive discussion every now and then.

[-] bionicjoey@lemmy.ca 20 points 1 year ago

what took us so long

"Inertia is a property of matter" -Bill Nye the Science guy

What I mean by that is that it takes a force to move a large mass. People behave in much the same way. It takes a push to get people to move in large numbers from one place to another. I personally have been philosophically very pro-fediverse ever since I heard about it, but I was waiting for it to reach a critical mass before really switching over.

[-] Andreas@feddit.dk 27 points 1 year ago

That, and for Lemmy specifically, its history of being a tankie forum. Without the Reddit refugee migration, if you joined Lemmy as a single user, you would be alone among communists and eventually get bullied into leaving. Already in 2020-2021, Fediverse users knew about Lemmy, but they avoided promoting it because of its userbase. This Reddit situation provided the push to get many normal users over to Lemmy at once to drown out the communist users.

[-] bionicjoey@lemmy.ca 7 points 1 year ago

That's a good point. Personally I like when there's a diversity of political opinions that are able to have reasonable discourse. My favourite political subreddit for a while has been /r/stupidpol. It has lots of Marxists, but lots of internal variety in terms of viewpoints, and respectful debate has always been allowed there while also maintaining a lighter atmosphere.

[-] croobat@lemm.ee 6 points 1 year ago

Hey man, I've felt mostly the same than you migrating to lemmy. A while ago I tried mastodon but it really didn't click with me, how do you do to find people to follow and so? I was only getting recommended the same like 10 guys. I like gaming and programming if it helps.

[-] Sponholz@lemmy.ml 4 points 1 year ago

For Mastodon?

I use it the same as my Twitter, mainly googling mastodon lists of know profiles there, the I copy/paste in the search and follow them.

On Lemmy it's easier, just do a search for the communities you'd like to join, for example:

Gaming at beehaw.org is amazing. Subscribe to that if you didn't already.

[-] mobiuscoffee@sh.itjust.works 3 points 1 year ago

Sometimes understanding how to cross instances can still be a bit cumbersome though.

There is pretty cool support for relative links though! As long as your instance knows of a community, they'll work.

And if your instance doesn't know a certain instance exists, you just have to paste the url into your search bar to get it working: https://beehaw.org/c/gaming

[-] Ataraxia@lemmy.fmhy.ml 1 points 1 year ago

For me definitely laziness.

this post was submitted on 10 Jun 2023
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