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r/Lemmy Is A Bad Look

r/Lemmy right now is full of posts basically talking about how bad Lemmy is handling right now.

It’s a bad look and will probably hurt the migration.

I know we are moving off of Reddit but the Lemmy subreddit needs some positivity for people looking to migrate

59 comments
  • I don’t get the migration issues, at all.

    I’m literally an idiot and all I did was type ‘Lemmy World’ into Google, clicked the top result, created an account, and selected 50 or so communities to follow. Then I started posting.

    I don’t know what the Fediverse is or other instances or how it all works (and I don’t really care).

    This was dumb-shit easy to figure out - as easy as Facebook or Twitter or… Reddit.

    Source: am dumb shit.

  • How do you know those posts are by real people? Reddit is incentivized to downplay and damage its competition.

    Also, its not like reddit isn't without its glitches. Throughout its entire history, reddit has been plagued with downtimes, random 502/504s, and a myriad of other issues. I'd be hard pressed to believe they had more than two nines of uptime, and would not believe more than three.

  • Of course it will hurt the migration. Lemmy.world should've halted open registration and directed folks elsewhere until they were able to get their house in order.

    Instead, a migrant's experience was as follows:
    "I can't create an account, the site won't load".
    "Okay, now I have an account, but I browse anything because the site won't load."
    "Okay, now I can browse, but I can't make posts or comments because the site won't load".
    "The site's been wishy-washy for 5 days, I guess it's always like this".

    Most don't understand they should've joined a different instance. But hey, this QoL stuff affects all Lemmings, because the biggest communities are in the affected instances.

    So instead of a great Reddit alternative, migrants got a product that didn't work as advertised. And a message board, no less - a technology that's existed since the dawn of the internet.

    So, I get it. But I'm not upset because I understand Lemmy is an emerging technology that'll require a little patience. Replacing one of the biggest websites of all time is not going to be easy.

    r/Lemmy is going to reflect the layman. We should listen to their feedback, help them out and take criticism seriously. I'm of the camp that Lemmy needs as few barriers to entry as possible - which is why I'm loving the progress of some of these mobile apps. Some (like Memmy) have an onboarding guide for new users. We need more of that.

    • At least the issues with lemmy.world seem to have been resolved. While I'm sure some folks were put off by the challenges, I don't think that the migration is anywhere close to finished. What's key now is to ensure that Lemmy has good engagement and content for people to interact with. From what I've seen, a lot of users here were lurkers primarily on Reddit, but are contributing more here in order to help get things off to a good start. If we keep that energy and keep improving the experience, then it's entirely possible that Lemmy can be seen at a minimum as a viable alternative to Reddit for folks who don't like what they've got going on over there.

  • I disagree.

    Realism is better.

    Nothing worse than positivity "switch to Linux - you can do anything you like" gets followed up with "Now I installed it, and I can't make it do anything I want" leading to anger.

    Just invite folks to join, and patiently explain how stuff works...

    Better still, have a direct link to threads on Lemmy.

  • Just took at some of those threads. IMHO, some of them are pretty fair.

    The top thread is asking Ruud to pause lemmy.world signups to encourage people to use other instances. That doesn’t sound unreasonable.

  • I know we are moving off of Reddit but the Lemmy subreddit needs some positivity for people looking to migrate

    Because many of us already here, since some third-party apps can no longer be used

    And I rarely access reddit myself, they will find their own way to move to lemmy

  • It's like they say in gambling, "The House always wins"

    Trying to force a community on Reddit to be favorable towards one of its primary competitors is a fruitless endeavor. Historically, the admins, including spez himself, have manipulated comments, upvotes, and posts in order to get communities that they disliked quarantined or banned.

    I'd recommend having trust that the people we want to have over on Lemmy will look beyond a post on its competitor's website for fair and accurate information.

  • No-one cares what they have to say. We can not be struck with awe at how nice people are over here and care what the mouth breathers over there think.

    Turn your back at it and be happy in the Fediverse. Any kind of engagement with the cum rag of the internet will help it. Do not forget: It lives off of your negative feelings!

  • What they need isn't positivity, what they need is a tutorial. Right now, the barriers of entry for lemmy (and kbin and mastodon and other fediverse places) are too high for the common layman. They just want something that they can throw their names in and it just works. They don't want to know about federation and instances and how the fediverse works. They don't want to have to research the differences between instances and pick one that seems best for them, they are just going to pick a random one and expect it to see everything.

    I want to share my first experience with the Fediverse. During the Twitter Exodus, I heard about Mastodon and, being curious, decided to give it a go. I installed the Mastodon app and tried to sign up, and I had no idea what the Fediverse is or what these instances are. I was expecting a simple signup process like Twitter. I was confused through the signup process, wondering why do I need to "pick an instance", what's the difference, what am I doing. Even after I picked an instance and got in, I had no clue how to find people to follow, how to see everybody's posts (didn't help that I barely used Twitter in the first place and thus was unfamiliar with this sort of place), why is my feed full of devs and programmers (I accidentally picked a tech industry themed instance randomly). It took too much time and effort to learn (and I wasn't committed or interested enough), so I eventually abandoned it.

    Nowadays, I have a much better understanding of all this, lemmy is more comfortable for me, and thus I am having a much better experience. But for many who have no experience with the Fediverse, all of this is a lot, and it may be too much effort for them to dig in and learn how all this works. The general UX of lemmy needs to be streamlined and made, if not easier, then more approchable. Only then will more and more people be willing to join and participate in the Fediverse.

59 comments