When old.reddit.com dies, how will Lemmy grab more users?
I don't see Old Reddit lasting long. They've cut beloved features before, and they're still calling New Reddit a "beta feature". After they've pumped enough resources into developing it, I'm sure they'll move past the "test" phase and just cut Old Reddit out entirely. That's probably going to be Lemmy's next big user surge.
Does Reddit suppress mentioning Lemmy? I remember for a while this past June 2023 there were a lot of auto-deletions for mentioning or linking to Lemmy. I was never clear on who was deleting things and where. I guess linking to the r/Lemmy subreddit (or a fediverse sub) could work as long as the subreddit doesn't get banned.
I don't really mind the "takes the whole screen width" - once you get wider than about 800 to 1000px it actually gets much harder to read a very long line of text than a smaller compact paragraph. Functional whitespace is a thing, although I do agree that they pushed it a bit too much. The padding and whitespace aren't the biggest problem, IMHO but how it's just very noticeably slower and clunkier to use.
there's lots of people who've joined after the redesign and haven't used old reddit, so it feels unfamiliar to them. some how mamy people were completely unaware of third party clients because they haven't been using reddit before the official app has been released.
Using boost after RIF went over to that authoritarian hell hole tildes...only time I'm on Reddit is using old.reddit as well. New reddit is just cancer.
Would not be surprised if they are being dishonest about how many users are on old. I recall over a year or two ago reading a highly upvoted comment about it being less than 5% of all users, it might of been an Admin I don’t remember. New users I’ve shown old.reddit to are always so delighted. I’m sure it’s almost all OGs still on old though.
Personally believe they are being dishonest about how many users are on old. I recall over a year or two ago reading a highly upvoted comment about it being less than 5% of all users, it might of been an Admin I don't remember. New users I've shown old.reddit to are always so delighted. I'm sure it's almost all OGs still on old though.
Honestly, I don't think users would migrate from Reddit to lemmy if they shut down old.reddit.
At this point, and after all that happened, users would switch to the new Reddit and continue using it.
Reddit has a massive amount of users and content there is generated at a huge amount. A lot of users would continue using Reddit even if they aren't happy with the interface, just for the content really.
This can probably be modeled off the Digg to Reddit transition. Digg made a couple bad decisions in a row and Reddit exploded. Reddit is making a couple potentially bad decisions in a row, so give it a year or two and the fediverse will come around.
Yeah except Digg was a significant competitor to Reddit.
Lemmy is good but not great. Having a crap ton of instances doesn't matter when people only use the top two, and then both go offline due to lack of redundancy.
If there was some good webclient that fetched from multiple instances and automatically handled a downed instance, it would probably give lemmy much more traction.
Just having multiple instance logins can be such a turnoff for people.
I used to think I'd move if old.reddit died, but I migrated here much sooner when the whole API debacle happened, and I don't know if many people who still care are still in there.
Yeah that's my hope. I don't think many people will switch because of the removal of old.reddit.com, but Reddit will probably become much shittier after going public. Hopefully that will cause more people to switch. It worked with Twitter, some people initially switched when Musk took over, but many other people switched later when the service became worse and worse.
I think that it will, potentially worse than the APIcalypse, even if there are less desktop than mobile users. They'd be messing with whatever was left of a sane interface, that even mobile users who don't want the app use. And the alternatives (incl. Lemmy) aren't just a bunch of ghost towns any more, they'd be reaching actual communities instead of a "make your own community" place.
The migration (if there is one) will happen over a long period of time ... Months or years.
Reddit initially had a huge growth period because there was no competition like it ... there were other platforms but none like Reddit at the time.
Lemmy is on the same path as Reddit but with one difference, it has competition, not just from Reddit but a whole group of new platforms that are like it, or similar to it ... so the community is fractured across Reddit, Lemmy and a bunch of other platforms.
The next two or three years will be an evolutionary period for all these platforms .... this is a bit like the Cambrian explosion (a geologic period where a bunch of new species just appeared everywhere all at once) .... all of them will fight one another and people will migrate one way or another, other factors will come in that we know about (finances, software, bandwidth, censorship, politics) as well as other factors we've yet to know about.
In a few years, some platforms will disappear and die out, others will linger and a few will dominate.
The evolutionary period may last a year or two or it may last longer but it won't happen any time soon and we also don't know what the outcome will be.
Going by past internet history it will be influenced by people's choices but it will also be influenced by corporate interests once they figure out how to monetize something.
What if we all go through our subbed reddits and make them here?
That's exactly what I did with a fairly niche community, and so far we've got 400+ subscribers in only four months. Pretty good for Lemmy, I think.
TBF, I think part of why it took off so well is because Lemmy's ALL stream is relatively slow enough such that small niche communities have a much higher chance of being randomly seen. Compare that to Reddit, where they'd typically be buried.
So there's a prime opportunity right now to start a community on Lemmy and have it take off relatively easily. That might not be so true in future.
I think the ipo won’t do well. I think it’s going to underperform drastically. I wouldn’t invest. Too much drama and controversy to draw my investment dollars.
I forget which bank but they already wrote off a large part of their investment.
When they removed old.compact shortly before the API debacle, which was really the only way to view a relatively functional site on mobile without a constant nag popup begging you to download the app, I knew the end was near. I had started looking for alternatives at that time. Chatter about alternatives really started to ramp up around then from what I could tell. I think everyone knew what was coming. I'm not sure there will be a surge, since most people that cared likely bailed long ago. Anyone still using old.reddit is viewing it from a desktop, and probably already has a Lemmy account.
The battle is already over. Reddit just needs to get to IPO so Spez can cash out with more than he got the first time. Then it's someone else's problem.
We could organise something to advertise Lemmy in Reddit, but I think that organic word-of-mouth is a better approach.
Instead we should make sure that the Lemmy experience is as good as possible. (Plus it benefits us "older" users regardless of any potential migration.)
The thing is a difficult intro, IMHO. Things like coding an instance, understanding the limits, etc. I honestly still don't know why I can't upload images to basically any community, but it prevents me from contributing.
Does Lemmy need to grab more users in the first place? I'd rather interact with people genuinely interested in such a model, not salty refugees seeing it as a compromise inferior to what they lost. Nah, I'm good as we are now.
Yes it does need more users. If you are not into Linux, Politics, Tech, and Cats, your feed looks much less populated. I'm not saying that Lemmy needs to have hundreds of millions of users, but it would be nice for most people if the userbase grew more.
Minor addition: Lemmy needs more active users. A lot of redditfugees seem to have created their own instances the moment they arrived here, only to expect other people to fill the communities with content and then abandon the site once they realised they would have to put actual work into their communities instead of just being squatters with mod rights. There are a lot of gaming-related communities here that I personally would be interested in joining if they weren't abandoned and devoid of content (like Cult of the Lamb or Spiritfarer for example).
It would be really nice if active Lemmy users would "adopt" a few of those abandoned communities to add content and pull in more subscribers. "Only" having more people overall on the site doesn't do much if this does not lead to more content / discussions / interaction.
On Lemmy, whenever I use the "back" feature of my cell phone web browser, the feed reverts to the default filter. It's probably a bug, but it prevents ne from clicking without fear that I'll lose where i was in my doomscrolling...