I saw some stats on this months ago, especially after the initial explosion. I’m curious if the growth is still continuing at a good pace and also how everyone feels about the growth/activity within their communities.
Definitely feels emptier than it was a few months earlier, but so far I enjoy the "I'm not just a pawn in an ocean of users" feel that Lemmy gives vs Reddit
That’s one of the drivers for me interacting more here. On Reddit I either felt like everything that could be said had already been said or that whatever I may have to add would be buried.
Isn’t Reddit currently messing up things with search? And yeah I’d agree with the stable users comment. We shall see what the next few months look like to tell.
I think that the adoption will mostly work in steps. Lemmy is currently functional, not pretty, not stable, not well moderated, not well integrated with federation, and poor discovery but it is functional.
Hopefully the next time a wave hits, Lemmy will be more mature and ready to take in more users who will already have communities set up even if they’re small.
I’m concerned though given the slower pace of updates that’s often complained about though.
I agree that quality matters, but when we have a number of active communities where the content is supplied by bots I don't know that I'd say we're winning on quality.
More users means more people contributing instead of bots.
With growth comes quality, though. Right now, almost every community/instance is supplied with content by only a small handful of users. This means less things to engage with on the platform, and more opportunity for people to spin a narrative with their content.
Hey, you're being downvoted for what I wanted to comment.
Seriously. We can have a nice space for us and people alike without the need to abide to the same rules the big platform do. I don't have a need for a 1:1 Reddit clone, I would just use Reddit if that's what i was looking for. We don't need to make it about the capitalist need for growth... But nice and growth really aren't the same thing. A few more people would be beneficial, but not by any means... I'd like if we focused on being nice and constructive instead. And do away with the dumping content here to make it seem more active without looking if it also generates engagement. Oh yeah and I'd like moderation and the tools available to get better.
In another situation, it would be grim, but having that downwards tendency right after a hype peak (Jul/2023, or Reddigg v4 the APIcalypse) is expected - plenty users who'd come with the hype would go back, and plenty instance owners would realise that running an instance is way more work than they planned.
Yeah, we had a massive inrush of people when the Reddit API thing happened. Things are settling since. I think (I don't know the exact metrics) it's been lots of inactive users anyways, because I can't feel activity decline in general.
Tbh it’s the reason I asked. I expected results to look about like this but I’m really interested in the graphs of posts vs active users.
Posting has exploded. I assume a good portion of that is bots. Bots posting news or reposting memes probably. However, a good portion of that must be users posting as well right?
I don’t think that retaining about half of the users that joined in the massive wave is bad actually, it’s the trends that come next where we see what happens. If that line keeps going down for the rest of the year, the platform is probably in trouble.
I don't know about the real numbers but I feel like there's sufficient interesting content to check it several times a day. So if stays stable I'm pretty happy with status quo.