I'd like my special interest communities to be a bit more active...
If any of you like wresting please come post on !squaredcircle@kbin.social
If any of you read fantasy books please come post on !fantasy@lemmy.ml or !fantasy@kbin.social
A community to talk about the Fediverse and all it's related services using ActivityPub (Mastodon, Lemmy, KBin, etc).
If you wanted to get help with moderating your own community then head over to !moderators@lemmy.world!
Learn more at these websites: Join The Fediverse Wiki, Fediverse.info, Wikipedia Page, The Federation Info (Stats), FediDB (Stats), Sub Rehab (Reddit Migration), Search Lemmy
I'd like my special interest communities to be a bit more active...
If any of you like wresting please come post on !squaredcircle@kbin.social
If any of you read fantasy books please come post on !fantasy@lemmy.ml or !fantasy@kbin.social
I quite like it not being as busy. Everything feels a bit calmer.
anytime I saw a thread on reddit with 1,000+ comments I didn't even bother to add my own view
I do like how pretty much any thread here on the fediverse is small enough that I feel like I can make a comment and participate
It’s not about being busy, it’s about being used.
Most subs are dead or just one person posting content trying to kick it off. We need more people for the niche communities to survive and thrive:
I think it'll come with time. As Lemmy (the software) and its userbase matures, the situation will be better for smaller communities.
Lemmy has cleared some early hurdles to grow from near-zero to 60k DAUs in a month. I’ve enjoyed talking to people over the past month in a more friendly and intimate way than on that other site. The main communities are fun and viable but the niche ones are mostly empty. I run a niche hobby community and despite having a few hundred subscribers <5% have ever commented, <0.5% have posted. I think Lemmy needs to be perhaps 10x larger than it is now to be self-sustaining for niche communities.
I guess in your case, people are maybe enjoying their summer in hikes and less on their phones/computer he he
I think it's just okay. I very much wish there were at least 10x as many daily active users.
I think natural growth will be either very slow, or negative, for the time being. But I also think future "events" will probably end up being more effective - because with each new influx of users Lemmy will be more mature as a platform, and have a larger pre-existing userbase to fill it with content that isn't just about Lemmy or reddit - which was so bad when I joined that I nearly quit.
I'm fine with how active things are. The most popular community I run (!bluey@lemmy.world ~750 subscribers) is receiving at least a post per day, sometimes up to five.
If another "event" happens, I'm sure we will get busier, but things seem manageable for the two of us so far. I'm not opposed to more traffic, however.
some communities do feel quite active, but I think sports as well as some niche interests could use a boost in activity here
For sports, isn't it break time? I know it is for european football
Baseball is in mid-season right now and it appears each team sub has a bot posting game threads and live updates. American football will be starting up in a few weeks as well.
Still the Women's World Cup, Leagues Cup, Asian and South American football! But yeah, !football@lemmy.world is sadly inactive.
I guess those three unfortunately don't engage people that much.
Let's see how it goes in September
Dam that's small the linux places i hang are thousands strong. Goes to show who uses lemmy
I usually always assume people here to be at least familiar with Linux
If for an event you refer to something like the Reddit API fiasco then I wonder how many people joined here not because of Reddit, but because looking for social news aggregators.
Maybe some folks come from Mastodon but before Mastodon for me the Fediverse (indeed I just thought it was a selfhosted Twitter and nothing else) was non existent, even when I knew about Lemmy (on Reddit) I didn't relate it with Mastodon.
I feel my smaller communities aren't as active as I would like, I suppose the best way to fix this is that we all lurk less and contribute more, that and share fun stuff from here to acquaintances, even through other social media.
I hope they would find a way to minimize fragmantation, instead of having one well maintained (lest's say) ABC community we now have an ABC community per instance (abc@lemmy.world, abc@lemmy.ml, abc@kbin,...) with one half active and the rest barely kicking off with mostly copy/paste content from other similar communities.
Some places seem to be gaining more members though. Maybe the current users are searching more.
Natural effect of people looking for content and converging to some communities
Few thoughts:
Best
sorting algorithm is in the works, which would rank posts by how popular/hot they are relative to their community, and might be a great way to surface interesting stuff from smaller communitiesBest
sort. All the news communities in one feed, sorted equally, eg. Could really be quite powerful IMO.I found Lemmy because I learned I could crosspost my relevant Mastodon posts to a Lemmy community. That's an easier way to get more posts, because I can get engagement from either Mastodon or Lemmy and it doesn't feel like I'm posting on a dead forum just to be forgotten about. Also I find myself checking up on that Lemmy community directly to see what other people are posting, because viewing the content from Mastodon is too messy.
Yep, this matches my impressions as well.
To illustrate how "not great" the interface is between lemmy and mastodon right now ...
Because mastodon is unlikely to improve anything on this front any time soon ... I think lemmy adding some sort of person-following blogging interface (as crazy or difficult as that might be), at this moment, could be an interesting idea for its future growth. I say that partly because I think momentum is growing behind the idea that the fediverse needs more than what mastodon provides. But also because I suspect a person-following interface really isn't a radically different feature set but rather is or could be an extension of what is here already.
I made a post about this (in !lemmy@lemmy.ml) asking for people's thoughts: https://lemmy.ml/post/2432594
Kbin?
Could Kbin be the UI for this use case? I currently keep the two worlds separate. But I wonder if I need a paradigm shift.
The other problem for me is that I am way more open about my identity on Mastodon (and post accordingly) but not in Lemmy/KBin - same as I was on Insta/Twitter vs Reddit.
Yea, kbin's great. Two thoughts though:
the sorting algorithms definitely need some work, I try to use 'Hot' but it constantly shows me posts from 1+ year ago
and multi-reddits were the only way I used that site once the feature was created so that would be a very welcome addition to lemmy!
It will probably take a big exodus from Twitter or reddit
I wish more people were interested in association football.
To be fair, we are in the off-season. Perhaps activity will increase when the major European Leagues kick off.
according to that same website, kbin activity has been dropping
down from ~57,000 average at the beginning of July to about ~32,500 active users now
https://kbin.fediverse.observer/dailystats
I know I've been having issues with federation from kbin magazines to my lemmy instance, so I wonder if this is part of it?