[-] carlnewton@feddit.uk 1 points 1 day ago

No, I haven't heard of this. But given that both of our projects appear to be about location, and both use Leaflet, OpenStreetMap and Symfony, I imagine that there might be some things I could learn from his. I'll get in touch with him! Thanks! :D

[-] carlnewton@feddit.uk 5 points 1 week ago

😀 that's great to hear! Thanks

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I'm Building Habitat (carlnewton.github.io)
submitted 1 week ago by carlnewton@feddit.uk to c/fediverse@lemmy.ml

cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/13769067

I posted a few months ago asking if there would be any desire for such a social platform, on which I had a lot of wonderful feedback from you guys. So I thought I'd write this post to let anyone that's interested know that it is being built, and you're welcome to lend a hand!

As this is a cross post, I should also point out that I got some great feedback from this community too!

75
I'm Building Habitat (carlnewton.github.io)

I posted a few months ago asking if there would be any desire for such a social platform, on which I had a lot of wonderful feedback from you guys. So I thought I'd write this post to let anyone that's interested know that it is being built, and you're welcome to lend a hand!

[-] carlnewton@feddit.uk 5 points 2 months ago

I hadn't heard of Yikyak, but it looks very similar to my mock-up. Thanks

[-] carlnewton@feddit.uk 4 points 2 months ago

Yes, it looks like this is a better comparison than Nextdoor in terms of features.

[-] carlnewton@feddit.uk 5 points 2 months ago

Hey! Thanks for the feedback! :D Regarding your point on whether or not it could ever take off, I've given this some thought over the last 24 hours, because I have received a lot of similar feedback. Initially it was one of the biggest things preventing me from wanting to actually attempting building it. I've come to the conclusion that if I can foster a community around it in my local area only, that would be a success for me. The nearby functionality would still work at a local level. If it grew from there, that would be even more of a success. I think with any network that's designed to be fragmented like this, there's always going to be places in which it doesn't take off or not enough people adopt it, but that shouldn't really affect whether or not it's a success at the local scale. So I've decided not to let that factor deter me.

I see your point on just using, let's say, an instance of Lemmy for my local town. This is a fair point, the solution might already be out there, but it uses a toolset that's designed for generic conversation, and not conversation around a location -- like, perhaps a specific location that I want to see or place on a map and talk about it. This is the functionality that I'm personally craving.

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submitted 2 months ago by carlnewton@feddit.uk to c/fediverse@lemmy.ml

cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/10422101

Over the past year or so I’ve been playing with the idea of a decentralised social platform based on your location. By putting physical location at the centre of the experience, such a platform could be used to bring communities together and provide a source of local information when travelling. Please let me know what you guys think.

[-] carlnewton@feddit.uk 6 points 2 months ago

😃 well, tbf I feel that we have plenty of solutions for finding like-minded people. Social platforms for hobbies etc. We're communicating on one right now, but a local platform would be for communicating with people that might not necessarily be like-minded, but would still have the same interest in mind. The interest of how much parking is, or what the opening hours are, or what this weird statue in the woods is all about. The interest is the place and that alone is what would connect people.

[-] carlnewton@feddit.uk 4 points 2 months ago

This is a really interesting point regarding road Vs actual distances, and large areas that are thinly populated being considered local. Australia certainly comes to mind. I suppose the right thing to do about the latter would be to give both users and owners control over search and area sizes.

The quiet feed point is my biggest concern to be honest. It worked out for Lemmy and Mastodon, but it took revolts from their privately owned counterparts to get them to the place they are now.

[-] carlnewton@feddit.uk 3 points 2 months ago

It's such a joy to read this kind of feedback, and to know that not only would it be enjoyable to have such a platform, but you can foresee that it would be useful. I think I might ask some developers who have experience with building decentralised platforms to see if they think there would be technical issues.

[-] carlnewton@feddit.uk 3 points 2 months ago

Thanks! I'll take all the suggestions I can get! This is interesting, and something I've never really considered for any local project. Is it common for libraries to take an interest in online platforms like this? Which country do you live in by the way? I'm not sure if it's a knowledge gap on my part or just something that libraries in the UK wouldn't get involved with.

[-] carlnewton@feddit.uk 3 points 2 months ago

I detail that the benefit of this idea is that you can do exactly this using the Nearby feed.

[-] carlnewton@feddit.uk 10 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

Hey, it's good to know that others have been considering this sort of thing.

My article does detail solutions to some of the issues you've raised here, but I'll go over them each just to see where our visions differ:

I can’t share the post with that friend very easily

All posts will have a publicly available URL. I don't think it would be good to create closed communities, only solutions that would show the user local posts.

If you don’t validate, the system will certainly be abused

I don't believe we should validate that people actually live in the community. I think administration of blocking malicious users should work just like Lemmy, but I don't think the potential for abuse is quite as high, given that the reward for a spammer would be to spam to such a small amount of people. There's less work in spamming to a larger group by choosing just about any other type of community.

Do you have to abandon your old account and start over?

You don't, just like Lemmy and Mastodon, your account on one instance could be used to interact with other instances. The Connecting Instances section of the article details how this could work from a technical point.

It doesn’t have to be one party running this entire system. That’s the point of the Fediverse, right

Distributed cost and administration is exactly how I see it. I would only care to host my local instance.

[-] carlnewton@feddit.uk 12 points 2 months ago

Hey, thanks the feedback.

That would be one of the ways that I'd use the home functionality, but the categorisation would allow for more niche subjects than just generic local conversation, such as treasure hunting games or historical photos etc. Also, the nearby feature would make it more of a utility for travelling and sightseeing.

I think you're right in that uptake would be a challenge, but I personally think that would primarily be due to the paradox of not joining a community because it's empty. It's something that I mention in the article. I don't know if it's something that can be overcome, but I wouldn't mind giving it a go.

147
submitted 2 months ago by carlnewton@feddit.uk to c/fediverse@lemmy.world

Over the past year or so I’ve been playing with the idea of a decentralised social platform based on your location. By putting physical location at the centre of the experience, such a platform could be used to bring communities together and provide a source of local information when travelling. Please let me know what you guys think.

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carlnewton

joined 2 months ago