π
I didn't. However, I read Lemmy until I run out of interesting posts, then switch to reddit until the ads make me angry. Then I do something productive.
top six hours page is very good
When the blackout started I deleted sync for reddit and a month ago I heard of lemmy, and now I'm back on sync, but for lemmy this time
I mostly have. However I do not spend anywhere near as much time on Lemmy as I did on reddit. When all the third party stuff started going down I really started to assess how I used the Internet and had to change things. I was using Sync for Reddit on Average 2.5 hours a day which is just insane. Over the course of a decade it was like a year of real time and was really eye opening how much time I was wasting.
Now I set an app timer for Sync for Lemmy for 1 hour a day I rarely hit it.
I do check reddit, but I do not have an app installed, it's mostly to check something specific rather than endlessly scroll.
I dropped reddit on mobile, but on desktop i still use it from time to time. Although i was never really a heavy user to begin with.
I use Lemmy to browse, and Reddit for search. E.g. If I want to checkout general online stuff people are discussing/sharing this is the place. If I want to look up frying pan recommendations I google "reddit le creuset"
i go through phases, around the blackout it was 100% lemmy, then like 25% lemmy, but lately i'm getting really fed up with reddit so it's like 90% lemmy
i only use Reddit for technical questions on communities that don't exist on Lemmy or are inactive. I'm not using Reddit anymore for browsing but I'm not gonna artificially limit myself from that great resource for some performative activism
I am read ~70% lemmy vs 30% reddit. In my opinion this is because community is important. And reddit-community still be a big and active π€·π»ββοΈ
This is actually an interesting question. First thing to note is that any estimation is by accounts, not by actual people (one person can have multiple alts on both). Honestly I donβt think itβs possible to have meaningful estimation.
That said, I think the first task is to figure out if we can estimate the number of accounts deleted on Reddit during the controversial period (letβs say April when the API change was starting) up til now.
Iβm not aware whether thereβs public daily data on it from Reddit, but there have been attempts at archiving reddit during this time and of course before. So one can theoretically use the archives to find out βallβ existing users. And check the links now via browser (or curl) to see if they still exist, treat that as a good-enough proxy for deleted account.
One may get an estimate of when they were deleted by checking the links in the archives if possible. If not, thereβs also Wayback machine that we may use to get a sense, but there are limitations of that.
Lemmy tracks account registration daily, I believe. I donβt know what stats one needs to run but maybe if we can line up the time series of account creation on Lemmy and account deletion on Reddit, we might have some sense of what a lower bound is for those who jumped ship forever.
I did. π
I did that too and don't regret it ;)
I changed my reddit link to lemmy but kept the snoo symbol.
I don't really visit too much, I will sweep by a few times a week or so. Reddit I only go to when Google takes me there, which is often enough thst I had to install the official turd of an app.
But I do t have a user over there anymore, so I am not logged in.
I'll follow a relevant search result, but I have not browsed it since coming over here.
Me and you can check my reddit account under the same name.
I'm Spartacus!
Some number, likely greater than 0.
I did. Haven't visited reddit since Sync stopped working. Should probably drop by and delete my account.
people_list.append("sour")
Not all communities I want to follow made the transition. I'm still on Reddit for HFY, and some smaller game communities.
But Lemmy has replaced a sizable chunk of my Reddit usage, especially around more technical topics.