this post was submitted on 09 Jun 2023
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fuck u/spez

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For people who stay out of it.

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What do you guys think? Will many instances of these platforms intercommunicating strengthen or weaken our ability to converse?

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[–] dingus@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago (4 children)

Unfortunately(???) no. It's just too confusing for the average user to bother to attempt with it. I'm having fun stumbling through it a bit while I have the weekend off, but the average non tech savvy user is not going to sit down and figure it all out. Happy to be here, though. I think I'm finally settling on lemmy.world as my instance, as you can create your own community here (unlike Beehaw) and it seems pretty chill, but large enough to not just vanish. Hope everyone is well.

[–] XanXic@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago (3 children)

I don't think it's *super *confusing. I've been playing with it an hour and already feel ready to go. It helps that the first thing on Lemmy.World is an explainer for how communities and servers work. I had a bit of confusion coming from join lemmy to lemmy world.

Having recently taught my completely tech illiterate mother how to sign up and use Reddit I would say it's not any more complex at it's core to a low level user. 'Sign up here, join communities, off you go!' and just skip explaining the back end of it all. She still doesn't get Reddit as an aggregate service but she understandings searching for gardening, and joining the gardening sub gives her gardening posts on her front page.

I think improving onboarding on the Join Lemmy will go a long way to lowering the barrier for entry, offering up simple explanations will make it seem less intimidating. Like the time's people suggest using Lemmy I've seen they explain what it is instead of just being like "It's like reddit, sign up here {Insert server here}." To a low level user how it works won't really matter as long as their personal server continues to exist.

[–] dingus@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

People on the internet always over-estimate the attention span, effort, and tech literacy of the average individual. Most people are going to open the website, be confused at which website they are supposed to join and close the page.

I agree it's not hard at all once you get used to it. But the vast majority of people are NOT going to take the time to do so. It's not even that it's necessarily too difficult, it's that the average user is not going to put in the effort to figure it out if it's not intuitive.

Yes, you could sit down and teach someone how to use a website, but most users are not going to have someone doing that for them or be interested in having someone do that for them.

[–] joestaen@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

the difficulty is a feature

if they are legitimately too slow-in-the-minds to work out how lemmy works, then i dont want them here

[–] UnrealRealityX@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Just what I was thinking. I mean, yes, it means there will be less people overall, but I think that's a good thing. It reminds me of old school forums where it was a smaller crowd and you'd actually get to know repeat posters over time. A bonus of less people means there should be more quality posts and discussion instead of just repeat questions/posts, etc.

Reddit was just getting too darn big with too much "noise".

BTW, this is my first comment post. It already seems quieter and calmer here.