When creating a new account we show a list of ~40 suggested follows (should be the same as explore -> for you on the web client). I'm debating just auto-selecting them (possibly with a “skip" button).

I don't want to be accused of forcing people to follow other users, but the first launch experience when not following anyone is pretty terrible.

My guess is that most will tap continue without even reading anything. So it's an auto-follow but for a good purpose...

Thoughts?

Since a few have asked. The list comes from the individual instance (mastodon.social in this case). The admin can make changes to the list, a user can opt themselves out of it. It's not separated by any kind of “category”. Outside of the two company accounts we just show what the server returns.

My gut says that anything short of having a diversely populated timeline on launch is going to cause most users to run the app once, delete it and then go complain on Twitter that Mastodon is too hard.

@paul You're probably right, but the bird site was much the same when I first joined—I had no idea whom to follow. In fact, I originally joined to have an easy way to gripe at airlines, train systems, etc. It took a while for me to start following a few friends and people they followed. (Learning whom to follow for bird sightings—obviously an important part of my life now—happened from a chance encounter in Central Park with another bird photgrapher.)