Dear Lemmings, how can we funnel reddit users to lemmy?

Please, help us to better understand how we can effectively funnel reddit users into Lemmy across all demographics, leveraging the average Lemmings advantages like expertise in automation, ai and bots?

What tactics/strategies do you propose? Can we automate the process? Can we somehow add ai to make it more fashionable?

PrivateNoob,

We could improve Lemmy’s features because this is an important factor in the next of content creation. For example: better sync, account migration, more intuitive UX, etc.

If you remember a ton of people left because for these reasons: Confusing sign-up (having to choose an instance), worse UX, having to use third-party sites to explore communities which aren’t local, suffering from defederation (my main gripe with Lemmy)

BigBlackCockroach,
@BigBlackCockroach@lemmy.world avatar

I agree wholeheartedly with what you (and others) have said. I wish there was a way to have one account but be able to use it on all instances. It would also be great that even though instances are decentralized, the content still was consolidated. So basically people from various instances visiting sort of fused/amalgamated communities.

livus,
livus avatar

@BigBlackCockroach we can already sort of do that? You're from lemmy.world, you're talking to @PrivateNoob from sopuli.xyz, and I'm reading both of you from kbin.social which also lets me follow people on mastodons.

AcumenDonor,

You can use an account on all instances but I think the lack of consolidation is the single biggest problem with Lemmy/KBin tbh (the lack of ActivityPub in some of the other Reddit alternatives also doesn't help).

Obviously there's a smaller userbase here, which is fine and expected but can make some communities feel a little empty. Having basically the same community in multiple places across multiple Lemmy and KBin instances makes that issue a lot worse though - ideally communities covering the exact same topic should be automatically consolidated in the way you describe. And ideally on an opt-out basis for the user - so you see the amalgamated page by default and can see the individual ones if wanted.

Chup,

I feel the very specific community topic split is already affecting Lemmy negatively. So I think having larger, broader community topics (e.g. ‘commuting’ instead of a community for every single option to commute by itself), with more diverse content, interaction and of course more visible activity, would also attract new users.

Right now some communities are so specific, that by its creation, it’s a filter bubble by design. And then of course you don’t get a lot of content or interaction, as only yea-sayer get accepted.

Interaction requires different approaches, opinions, options and of course people who upvote them even when disagreeing. The reply box is the correct option when disagreeing, not the downvote. That’s how Lemmy will sprout.

tl;dr Broader community topics for larger, more diverse and more active communities

otter,

Dear Lemmings, how can we funnel reddit users to lemmy? Please, help us to better understand how we can effectively funnel reddit users into Lemmy across all demographics, leveraging the average Lemmings advantages like expertise in automation, ai and bots?

This almost reads like an AI generated prompt from a company. Personally I don’t think it makes sense to coordinate something artificial because people will see right through that.

Lemmy and the Fediverse at large IS better than the other platforms. With time it will grow for that reason alone.


What tactics/strategies do you propose?

Post content about things you know about and follow. It could be stuff you see on other social media, local news, anything really.

If you want to get more involved, pick a specific community or subreddit type and see what it needs. How can Lemmy serve that topic as well or better than Reddit could. If it makes sense, see if you can work with the moderators for the subreddit to get an official parallel community going (link to eachother, update rules, add the subreddit mods as mods here).

Can we automate the process?

Only in some cases where it makes sense. Lemmit exists for those that want a feed from a subreddit. Otherwise Time sensitive content, such as deals/sales?

Can we somehow add ai to make it more fashionable?

I think the opposite is needed, don’t do any of the random “fashionable” things companies are doing, which actually end up making the experience worse. Areas where it might be nice to have AI might be:

  • improving the summarizer bot (it’s broken sometimes, not sure why)
  • local translations when content is in another language
  • can’t think of anything else?
brunofin,

Cross post from Lemmy to Reddit. But we must raise the question if we really want that. Reddit became toxic over the past few years, and I think people on Lemmy right night are in general different. Do we want to turn Lemmy into Reddit?

otter,

Instead of crossposting everything, maybe just do it for specific topics.

Large subreddits are (and have often been) toxic. Niche interest ones are mostly fine

SorteKanin,
@SorteKanin@feddit.dk avatar

I don’t think we do no. Reddit (users) has long been known for its “know-it-all” elitist attitude. I dunno if that is a natural consequence of the voting system but we shouldn’t try to replicate it.

Socsa,

Meanwhile, my experience on Lemmy has been a whole lot of “you don’t like Stalin because you haven’t read enough Chomsky.”

It’s actually worse than reddit in many ways.

SorteKanin,
@SorteKanin@feddit.dk avatar

You’re on an instance that uses very few blocked instances. Perhaps you should sign up on an instance that blocks tankies instead? Remember that the instances that your instance is federated with also determines your feed since their votes are counted as well.

Tiritibambix,
@Tiritibambix@lemmy.ml avatar

Create content and participate to make Lemmy more attractive.

Aussiemandeus,
@Aussiemandeus@aussie.zone avatar

I never have anything interesting to say

christophski,

I think you just disproved your own point my friend, that was fascinating.

sock,

you think what all these idiots are saying is interesting?

just yap its more enjoyable that way

OsrsNeedsF2P,

Best I can do is talk about Linux.

netchami,

Then do that. There are many Linux communities on Lemmy, participate in them and try to make them a better place by contributing useful comments and posts.

PoopingCough,

He’s making a joke, because if you look at /all communities it can be like half posts from various Linux communities at times

Peppycito,

In German.

AnUnusualRelic,
@AnUnusualRelic@lemmy.world avatar

So more OpenSuSE, gotcha.

Valmond,

Je peux peut-être aider en suggérant une deuxième choix ?

Peppycito,

Un petite peu.

Thekingoflorda,
@Thekingoflorda@lemmy.world avatar

This is the way

Nath,
@Nath@aussie.zone avatar

That’s that Windows program the nerds use, yeah? Do you like it?

xigoi,
@xigoi@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

What’s a program? Is that a kind of app?

christophski,

That works for me

user224,

Which distro?

sounddrill,

Installing tumbleweed rn

gunpachi,

Great distro by the way.

sounddrill,

I wish 😭

It refuses to install… I got a dell vostro 3468 running on legacy BIOS. I’m coming from windows and there’s an NTFS partition full of data I’m trying to preserve…

The guided partitioning errors out(usually runs out of space, and no packages can continue installing so they throw errors), and using the expert partitioning throws a couple of grub errors at the end when it’s installing grub

It was really good when I last tried it on another device

gunpachi,

You can start out with something light, and then install packages as you go.

I generally do a barebones install and then install individual packages. By default a lot of packages are installed - most of them you don’t need.

And also checkout geckolinux . It is a lighter version of Opensuse and has the calmares installer. (Tumbleweed is the Gecko rolling version)

sounddrill,

The MBR layout was the issue

When I wiped the drive, everything fixed itself!

Loving tumbleweed so far

interdimensionalmeme,

NixOS, BTW

bobs_monkey,

The archetypical answer should be obvious

TheGreenGolem,

by the way

genoxidedev1,
genoxidedev1 avatar

All my homies use Hannah Montana Linux

pensivepangolin,

Real OGs peer beyond the *nix veil and graduate to TempleOS

genoxidedev1,
genoxidedev1 avatar

Baby's first OS. The actual OGs graduate back to SLS.

xmunk,

Slackware, forever Slackware.

JohnnyEnzyme, (edited )

In my case I found that creating a community that was missing here, then regularly populating it with content, has worked wonders. That it was not just a good way to get myself engaged here, as well as to grow the Fediverse, but to attract users from Reddit and other places given a bit of cross-posting.

Seriously, I’m not sure how many people understand that right now, given that new content is generated relatively slowly across the FV, that any new community putting quality stuff out there is going to get a hugely larger proportion of eyes on it. That’s compared to similar communities on Reddit, FB, etc, in which smaller / newer communities tend to get completely drowned out in the ALL streams.

My own niche community (Euro graphic novels) already has 350+ subscribers in less than 90 days. Even for Reddit that’s a nice jump-start and growth. Which is why I urge people to jump on this opportunity now, because eventually it’s probably going to dry up.

Indeed, maybe it would be good to get this message out to people on Reddit, FB, etc who always wanted to start a sub/community, but the opportunities were ‘all filled up’ already.

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