I’ve been using Lemmy and learning the ropes of the Fediverse and I’m really impressed - especially using wefwef which has replicated my Apollo experience very well.

There are posts and everything, just a lack of comments to read for hours on end is the only issue I have, but I believe that with more users this really could be the replacement.

Are you guys thinking the same thing? Is there evidence yet that Reddit is slowly failing and power users are migrating?

  • @OsakaWilson@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I mod a 21 thousand member sub on Reddit and opened a similar one here. I put several relevant posts to get things started and let people on the sub know we are here with a tutorial on how to sign up and explanation on why it is good to have an alternate.

    I now have about 20 members, a few coming each day. However no one has posted or replied at all.

    Another community I created has a similar result.

    I know there is a threshold of activity that stimulates more activity, but so far its not happening. I’ve started many active subreddits, including one in the 1% with half a million subscribers. I’m not new to community building. I’m honestly concerned.

    I want to encourage everyone to post and comment in the little communities you have joined. You will be contributing to this whole project when you do.

    • @Waltzy@lemdit.com
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      11 year ago

      I feel like there is a higher barrier to entry for lemmy, it needs to be lower friction in the sign-up process, people don’t want to have to work out what instance they should sing up to to make an account!