I don't believe a good criticism needs to offer a good solution, but I do think a criticism has to be good enough to recognise the problem being identified
I shouldn't have to say this but, but, but, mastodon is not perfect. But, but, but, it does not have a "boosting underappreciated communities" problem. That's a problem for a platform that boosts communities
and I shouldn't have to say this but, but, but, boosting communities is different to silencing communities
call me old fashioned, but "word of mouth" is the most genuine method of dispersion

I will never ask you why you don't offer a solution. I know that is what design is. Criticism identifies a purpose, design finds ways to satisfy it.

If you are going to identify a purpose, do it well.

always sucks to hear someone perfectly identify and articulate an obscure problem/purpose and then give in to pressure with a "if i had to suggest a solution..."

NO! It's ok to be good at cornering what's wrong, that's a skill

focus on making your criticism sharp. There is so much value in making an undeniable observation about how something is broken or how it could be much better.

If the designers* involved are genuine in their intent, they should not be able to ignore it.

*design is a process of purpose satisfaction, it is not figma or photoshop

there is a thing with DESIGN in the tech realm which is like the star wars trash compactor, slowly compressing it into a peripheral concept of (ugh) user experience, and usability, and UI design, which is *all* after the fact of a thing coming into existence
design needs to be fed with purpose. Purpose needs to be seen as a design problem. Design needs to be seen as a deliberative process of finding ways to satisfy a purpose, with the means being an infinite variable.

design should always be free enough to determine that the purpose is not satisfiable with whatever means is being imposed on the process

commercial constraints should be acknowledged as what they are. They are a layer of circumstance.

this was a mastodon rant that turned into a design rant
@fasterandworse always grateful for those!