Even though there are 100k active users, it still seems slow. I know it’ll take time to change, but I have already seen improvement in the three weeks I’ve been here.
It’s slow, but I’d argue that the quality is better. So that kind of makes up for it a bit, imo. And being slow means more people can just browse everything Federated on the front page (of K-bin at least) and get into new stuff they wouldn’t have considered before.
Quantity is a quality of its own. While there is some great stuff here, there is also a lot that is missing. Many great discussions either don’t even start because nobody who see the intersting article to link it. Or in the few cases it is linked few are in that niche and get involved in the discussion.
This depends a lot on exactly which niches you are interested . Reddit has a lot of niches that each have a good number of intersting people adding to the discussion. Kbin/Lemmy has a few, and if you like the large topics everyone talks about has plenty, but the millions of small niches are lacking still . Heres to that changing .
but the millions of small niches are lacking still
Even Reddit didn’t fully solve that problem. When you go outside of the general topics it an be surprising how slow activity can be. That’s simply the nature of the niche.
There’s no real way to solve that without simply being that change yourself. Because those niches tend to have the 2-3 same users posting half or more of the discussions or links.
Reddit is supposed to have 52 million daily active users.
So yea, with < 0.2% of the users compared to reddit it is a bit slower.
I think it is best that it is organic. Lemmy (the software) is still in alpha/beta state so it still in its infancy. And a large sudden influx of users will ultimately overwhelm instances.
You’re in a kbin magazine, kbin is alfa at best :). But things are changing fast because of the rapid increase in users.
I’m starting to come around to the idea that kbin/Lemmy doesn’t need to experience massive amounts of user growth in order to succeed, and I’m not certain that we’d even want anything approaching the userbase that Reddit has. Similar to how not every city needs to be NYC, and some people prefer living in a smaller city.
I suppose there’s a happy medium between “wow this place is dead” and “the cacophony of voices makes posting here feel like shouting into the void” that we’re shooting for.
I think the problem is finding communities that are what you actually want. The killer feature of reddit was that you could find a subreddit for basically any niche.
1% of reddit users would be fun, that would be about a 10x increase in current daily users?
2 days
There really are dozens of us!
We need to figure out how to tap the mass migration. There’s nothing proprietary about an internet forum that should lock people to subpar platforms or corporations.