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submitted 1 year ago by troyunrau@lemmy.ca to c/main@lemmy.ca

Now it's a matter of sustaining and slow growth. Hopefully. Best thing you can do to see Lemmy succeed is participate: comment, post, doomscroll All+Top Hou ;)

It'll take a while for some of the smaller communities to get critical mass. And that's okay, probably. Critical mass is here for the larger topics already. I'll do my best to help :)

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[-] ChocoboRocket@lemmy.world 13 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Honestly, I'm fine with Lemmy staying small for a good bit.

For me, Reddit and now Lemmy are time wasters. I come here to laugh at the memes, catch some news, and maybe see some bobs.

Sometimes news articles don't have any comments, so I'll just read the article and maybe add a comment, or just upvote and move on. Some more news content would be nice, and hopefully the local provincial/state and even city groups get some traction soon so I can leave reddit entirely instead of lurking local subreddits without signing in.

I am more than happy for reddit to become a lightning rod for bots and shills now that I have a basic understanding of this platform

I'd rather read a handful of genuine comments, discussion, and opinion/insights from real people on Lemmy than hundreds of divisive comments, bad faith arguments, bots, and irrelevant forum sliding jokes/tangential rants that have polluted reddit.

[-] DrTautology@lemmy.world 10 points 1 year ago

This opinion resonates with me, especially regarding the people on the other end. At this point I've nothing but positive experiences with folks here.

[-] Grimpen@lemmy.ca 2 points 1 year ago

For sure. The rate of development has skyrocketed the last month or so, and letting Lemmy mature a bit, as well as all the apps under development isn't a bad thing. I still think it's a little technical, and I don't want to sacrifice any of the utility provided by separate instances and federation, so letting things mature a bit should help make things less fiddly for less technically inclined people.

In the meantime, a self-sustaining, engaged, and quality community is better than a large community.

this post was submitted on 18 Jul 2023
253 points (97.7% liked)

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