this post was submitted on 24 Jul 2024
35 points (97.3% liked)
Fedigrow
595 readers
7 users here now
To discuss how to grow and manage communities / magazines on Lemmy, Mbin, Piefed and Sublinks
founded 6 months ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I feel bad because most of the people posting on [email protected] seem to be really good at it and I am pretty obviously nowhere near their level of skill. I also do not see many posts made by people around my skill level. But hey, at least it's Fediverse engagement and I do try to help keep that up. Writing this comment also made me think that perhaps a lot of Fediverse hobby communities have skilled people and beginners are perhaps too scared to post because they don't see anyone else just starting, so being the beginner asking for help might actually be valuable.
This is a GREAT point IMO, and I think it's good to never to forget it. Even as smashingly common as it is.
Because ultimately, we're going to make the Fediverse work because we pay attention to details like this, whereas Reddit is just sort of organised mechanisms at this point, mais non?
@[email protected], @[email protected], @[email protected]
P.S. And yes-- I doubt we're ever going to come close to Reddit (or other pop-mediums) in terms of total userbase and/or pop-engagement, but to me, folks who make sites like this work are preserving a sort of 'last chance for humanity to stave off corporate ownership.' Our last chance to deliver a nice little FUCK YOU to late-stage capitalism, if you like.
Sorry for my language, mateys.
Very true. We often feel we aren't very good at things. We'll always be behind some people, but we're also ahead of others as well, and we forget that. I always think I'm at a dead end in piano, and my teacher tells me to knock it off because I'm way ahead of where normal progress is for an adult student. So while I may feel I'm at a tough point, it's because I'm constantly challenging myself to improve, not just sticking at my current level.
Even with my Lemmy content, I knew maybe more than your average person about owls, but now after a year plus of reading about them every day, I feel much more established in my knowledge of them.
Hobbies are all about fun and gradual improvement. Progress pics can be an important part of that. As long as the community treats everyone nicely, beginner work should be complimented.
Even in something like knitting, I never got far at it and just made maybe a half dozen basic scarfs, but I got consistent comments about my ability to keep even tension, which kept me motivated.
In regards to overall growth of Lemmy, I look at us as the instances being the mom and pop shops vs the commercial conglomerates of Reddit and Facebook. I don't want or need to be that big to feel successful. I'm close to getting 3k subs, and that's more people than I ever imagined to have listening to me. We don't need to be all things to all people. We can coexist with other platforms. I imagine some might even prefer my rendition of Superbowl to the Reddit one. You get solid photos and facts, but you're not overwhelmed with too much stuff that you need to scroll and read forever.
Dude (hehe, sorry), you seem so young and smart (which you are of course), whilst I'm a tired, middle-aged man.
Excellent points, thank you for that. <3
Nay, I'm in my 40s. I'll take the smart compliment though! 😜
Oh yeah, it's always good to feel the neeiiiighhh!
I'm still your boss, though, see. SEE:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aLnZ1NQm2uk
Nah, I love your work. Please keep on, keepin-on! <3