@MeltedLiquid

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17 Following
10 Posts

Just a person, doing person things he/him

Frontend Dev, cooking enthusiast

@gamingonlinux so happy that over the past several years prey has gotten more and more recognition. One of my favorite games of the past decade. Hope this means even more folks will give it a try.
@nixCraft what I think smaller communities offer that Reddit etc can't are quality. It may be harder for things to go viral. But the content and engagement is far better. So you'll still get pieces that will break and spread to other forums etc.
@arstechnica hehe nice

After making the jump from Reddit. I keep seeing posts mentioning the #fediverse . Describing the fact there is more than just mastodon or lemmy.

Are there guides or accounts to help noobies navigating these varying options?

#RedditMigration #fediverse

What else will be left to IPO once every subreddit has gone dark?

https://reddark.untone.uk/

When you upset a community-driven platform, you always get your comeuppance sooner than later.

Reddark

An open source website to watch subreddits going dark

#starfield looks awesome I just can't be sold on procedurally generated content. It's what makes the difference in exploring a word that feels vast but hollow, and a world that feels small but exploding with character.

Im going to age, I'm going to not be here someday. The only thing I can really do about it, is make the most of what I got.

#ThingsIHaveComeToAccept

So,

the AMA that Reddit’s CEO Steve Huffman did today was a complete disaster for Reddit;

Huffman avoided taking responsibility for how the company treated Apollo’s developer, and the comments were a popcorn-flinging circus

*while also* being a parade of Reddit community who’s-who, all of whom told the execs participating, that this was not going to fly.

Every stakeholder feels gaslit.

This 6 week period of Reddit history will easily be taught as “How to crash and burn your startup 101”.

@stroughtonsmith Tale as old as time though, apple waits and waits, making their products as sleek and consumable as possible.

Honestly don't blame them, because it works like a charm every time.

Time and time again we relearn the lesson that private, for profit entities like Reddit and Twitter will always screw over their communities without a second thought.

Mastodon or Discourse might be more expensive or technical to run the way your community would like, but they can never pull the rug out from underneath you.