10
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
this post was submitted on 19 Jun 2023
10 points (100.0% liked)
Moving to: m/AskMbin!
69 readers
1 users here now
### We are moving! **Join us in our new journey as we take a new direction towards the future for this community at mbin, find our new community here and read this post to know more about why we are moving. Thank you and we hope to see you there!**
founded 1 year ago
I'd have to disagree with the premise that the Twitter migration "failed", for a start. Of course with anything like this you get a big spike and then it trails off. But the question isn't "did we retain 100% of people who tried out the new platform?" it's "are there now more people on the platform and are they having a good time?"
I never actually used Twitter (yet somehow had about nine accounts but I kept telling myself this time it would stick). Now I have two active Mastodon accounts with two active feeds and am having a great time.
And the same applies with Kbin/Lemmy. It's not for everyone. Nothing is.
Why does anything else matter?
How dare you assume I’m having a good time.
While you’re definitely right I get OP’s hang up, more people means more content. I do wish more niche communities on Reddit made their way here.
I am btw
Lol sorry how rude of me.
I think niche communities are a result of platform size, and trying to force it too early doesn't really work. What we can do is make sure the slightly-less-niche-but-still-fun communities that already exist are looking nice and active and welcoming ready for whenever there's a new wave of users, and the niche splinter groups will come with time.
Very true, maybe we’ll see sites dedicated to these niche groups connect their own instances?