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Wildly disagree.
You’ll have to pry my deep minimal organic afrotech from my cold dead hands.
Wildly disagree.
You’ll have to pry my deep minimal organic afrotech from my cold dead hands.
Their lighting app is a steaming pile of shit as well.
Word.
The average person doesn’t seek shit out. They wait until it’s fed to them and then may occasionally decide to participate out of fomo.
What really surprised me is that some of the communities I enjoyed pretty much universally carried on as if nothing happened. Maybe I’m weird, but I can’t support the bullshit they pulled. Thankful for the alternative and hope to see it flourish.
I’m not saying we need to blow up and get inundated with the masses, but sometimes it takes an event to kick things up a notch or two. Ideally a positive event, but something noteworthy to get people’s attention.
I don’t visit that site which shall not be named anymore, but I never visited it for memes or politics etc or because I had any particular affinity for the platform. I went there for the niche forums it had and if they exist here, they are empty.
I’m optimistic and I think we’ll have that event.
Now I learn this, 2 months after tossing that platform in the bin.
After years of wondering where the hell the breaking news went…
Anchor happened because Sapporo bought them.
Almost every single time.
I have a couple of important exceptions but I dare not mention them by name lest they be bought and ruined tomorrow.
We did it Reddit!
/s
I guess I beat reddit then.
That’s disgusting.
I feel like relying on the algorithms completely misses the human elements.
If I need an answer to something, I want my top results to be short and sweet. If I want a documentary or dj set, I don’t want a 3-10 minute version.
Agree completely. It just makes it all sound much more complicated than it is in practice. I’m used to the fediverse now and my eyes glazed over reading all that.
Another issue I have with the article is that he doesn’t even touch on third-party apps, which are abundant and pretty damn robust considering how new they are. The fact that much of Reddit’s self immolation was directly due to their treatment of third-party apps. At least worth a paragraph in my opinion.
Otherwise, nice write up.
These people have to deal with the public. People suck, so burnout happens pretty quickly.
Most people don’t want to do that job so your criteria for acceptance is relatively low. See post office or other public-facing gov work.
Edit: Huge shoutout to the woman at the DMV the last time I had to go who was the nicest person I’ve ever interacted with in any situatiin as a customer, not just at the DMV.
Tidal has been doing that for a while. The hi-fi option is/was double the price of the standard.
Formula: 2 away + 3 pollutions = counts
Meh, never seen it so less inclined, but I still like the idea. Thanks for the heads up.
According to the website, it’s been completely drawn and is done.
Either Lemmy is late to the game or ai knocked it out before we could contribute.
Never saw it and have no plans to.
Doesn’t even seem like it was that long ago that I’d be sitting at my desktop, 5+ tabs open. One might be Fark, Stumbleupon, Digg, etc for general shits and giggles, maybe some news. The others were the independent forums I visited every day for my interests where I actually got to meet and befriend some people, regardless of location.
The anonymity of Reddit (which I was cool with) definitely was a shift in what “community” actually meant online.
Consider it a much needed reset.
Exactly. It was dramatized and way more entertaining than reality but the premise was based on very realistic scenarios.