Not sure if that counts but I decided to spend some time posting and encouraging people to participate in the very inactive Lemmy Journaling community.
I have not posted much so far (started yesterday, with two posts) and, if you're wondering, I am not the creator of the community, not even an admin.
It's just that I have been journaling for many decades myself and I know people could gain a lot by journaling themselves. So, it makes me feel somewhat sad to see no activity going on in our community, with not that many subscribers either, while at the same time there are almost 2 millions subscribers to our reddit cousin r/journaling and, quite obviously, a lot more things going on there ;)
Frankly, I have no idea where this will go or if it will go anywhere at all. I just want to try to do something and so, for the time being, I will do my best to regularly post new content, hopefully encouraging other members to participate as well, and then encouraging new members to join and share whatever questions/doubts/ideas they may have too.
I am not a marketing pro, but feel free to come visit the Journaling community, and, by all means, to post stuff on your own if you're also a journaler (digital or analog, it should not matter). The more of us, the more various content we start sharing, the more likely we are to welcome new members.
Also, if you know of any other like-minded community feel free to share a link.
Not sure if that counts but I decided to spend some time posting and encouraging people to participate in the very inactive Lemmy Journaling community.
Hey there!
I felt compelled to chime in and add that you may want to consider creating a new community that you're able to moderate rather than trying to revive an existing one that never made it out of infancy.
@downtide@sh.itjust.works is the sole mod of the community you linked and (from my account/instance anyway) doesn't appear to have been active for around a year. Maybe that isn't a problem now but if the community takes off I'm sure you'll wish you were able to deal with spam posts and trolls.
Have you considered creating a new community? Lemmy also has some weird stuff about how reports are sent that makes it more reliable to moderate communities from the same instance the community is hosted on, so there's a benefit to keeping it hosted where your Lemmy account is based. You may want to check if you can create communities on your home instance.
No matter what you decide to do you may also find it beneficial to announce you've started/revived a community at !newcommunities@lemmy.world since a lot of people seem to watch it. Good luck!
Thx a lot for the insight! I had not thought about any of those points. My only idea was, a bit naively I am afraid, to not create a new community since there was one existing already. But everything you said is very true.
As a downside, creating a new community would imply even less members participating, a lot less, at least to begin with but it may still be preferable if it means being able to shunt any troll.
Here is what I will do: I will ask the question on the existing community, ask members what they think would be best. If I get no answer, well, I'll fell less... wasteful by creating a new community from scratch. I will also ask the admins on my instance if that would be OK to host it as we're mostly speaking French, but I think they should be OK to host an English speaking community, at least I can ask.
Last year i visited Ghibli museum in Japan and as tickets they give you really nice cardboard tickets with a small pice of cinema film in it and if you look against some light source you can see what is on that film so i am designing and 3d printed stand for it that will have some leds to illuminate it when you slide it into it so it will have a microswitch that ticket itself triggers and it will be connected to usb for power so electronicly it will be very simple just usb connector, microswitch, and leds with some resistor and hopefully nice printed case. If it will look nice i will put it on thingverse or something.
My RKGaming S98 has revealed its stock stabilizers are, frankly, defective. If you press too hard on the left or right side of a stabilized keycap, it will tilt down and get stuck. I've tried numerous different caps. I have been procrastinating on taking it apart and replacing the stabs, (which, even more disappointingly, are snap in, and not screw in, which I did not realize when I purchased the keeb). Other than that, I am loving it, although I also need to program some keys to do DEL, HOME, and END by default as well.