WARPed1701D

joined 1 year ago
[โ€“] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (2 children)

What a nice surprise. Loading this community on my home instance shows just 2 subscribers! I was wondering why no one was subscribing!

[โ€“] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Let's hope so.

I did just want to follow up my original comment with another saying a big thank you for creating this space, whatever instance it resides on. I don't want you to feel my words were a complaint. Just sharing of an observation and possible solution.

I hope that once my life calms a little (just moved apartments and downsized) I'll be able to contribute more to this space and help it grow.

[โ€“] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

I see it now. Nice. โค๏ธ

[โ€“] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Fair enough. I just wanted to put the idea out there.

Lemmy certainly has growing pains and that is understandable given it is still under development. I just felt that being on this instance in particular appeared to be amplifying those growing pains and hobbling the community, perhaps avoidably.

For me the only reliable method right now is separate accounts on multiple instances that house the communities I sub to. Then I can view and comment locally with up a full and up to date view of the posts. It certainly isn't a convenient or simple solution but it is the most reliable. I hope I can revert to a single account in the future and others aren't discouraged from migrating here as Tte Reddit situation certainly isn't improving.

 

Excuse the off-topic nature of this post but I am keen to see non-Reddit online communities succeed and wondered if others feel similarly.

Lemmy.ml was unfortunately a widely shared instance for Reddit migrants and became massively oversubscribed by users and new communities. I for one joined up here before I fully understood the nature of the Fediverse.

What I have noticed (and is widely reported elsewhere) is that lemmy.ml isn't federating properly with other instances, likely due to overload. The result is that users from other instances are missing huge chunks of comments or even entire posts from lemmy.ml based communities such as this one. Subscribe requests sit at pending perpetually. The result is a big barrier of entry to the community. The issue appears two way which communities form other instances not federating properly to lemmy.ml and lemmy.ml communities not federating properly to other instances.

Seeing this I recently created a new account on a different, quieter instance. On there my subscribes to non-lemmy.ml communities has been near instant. My subscription to this community and another on lemmy.ml is stalled.

Due to the nature of Lemmy, being on a popular instance provides clear visibility benefits to those who are users on that instance but at this time appears detrimental to those on others.

Is it worth considering moving this community to a less populated instance while it is still small so as to provide a more reliable experience for new users who otherwise may just quit due to tech frustrations and an apparent lack of content?

[โ€“] [email protected] 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I just see your comment. No picture.

[โ€“] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

It is Greg McKeown's book, and yes my burn out was a mix of minimalism, productivity, no surf books (Deep Work, Digital Minimalism, Stolen Focus, Year of Less. The Shallows, The Future is Analog, Getting Things Done). Tried some H.P. Lovecraft in between who is an author I've not tried before. Not entirely sure I'm that into his work but it provided something different for a while and provides some background to a few board games I've played with friends.

Already subscribed and participating at minimalism on lemmy.world. See you there.!

[โ€“] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Essentialism.

I started it once before and didn't really like it and gave up, but I had been on a minimalism/simple living reading marathon for a while at that point and was a bit burnt out and needed some fiction. I've waited 6 weeks for a copy to become available again at my library again so am starting again now.

[โ€“] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

My wife and I wanted to live on a boat. Sadly, it never happened, but as part of the preparation process we went from a 1200 sqft house to a 600sq ft studio apartment and got rid of a load of stuff to make it happen. It was great!

We did well for several years of keeping a small footprint, even after the dream of the boat collapsed, but experienced a slight relapse during the pandemic. Just now reducing again having moved from a two bedroom place to a one bedroom to offset unaffordable rent.

[โ€“] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

100% agreed!

[โ€“] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

As someone who did phone helpdesk, then deskside support, then server support over a 10 year period and then, after the 2008 recession, moved into programming for another 10 years I would agree that support was the more enjoyable and simple role. You had to learn new tech, but not at the rate you do in programming, plus each day felt different as you were presented with different problems/people. In programming it seems like same stuff different day and it gets old.

I will say that this doesn't have to be so black and white. A helpdesk role can have progression into desktop and server support and that brings fiscal increases and I didn't feel any of those positions were overly complex in my life like programming is.

Slight caveat though, I haven't had to interact people in a helpdesk sense for years now and with the advent of social media and the inflation of ego's and narcissism in general it might now be that such a role is now less enjoyable. Perhaps your experience is more recent.