Blaze (he/him)

  • 6 Posts
  • 59 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 22nd, 2023

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  • There’s typically a surge of posts which attracts users from /all and /new, but those users eventually filter out as the content slows down.

    We’ll see!

    Most people aren’t going to follow power posters to the ends of the earth, they’ll simply engage with the content that is most readily available to them, and they really don’t want to bother with splinter communities and moderation drama.

    There’s definitely several factors at hand. If only a few power posters move away, then the old community will probably stay prevalent. If there’s no more content, it will die. You mention All and New, and those are definitely where people see the new communities. It’s not the end of the world, some users might not even notice the community change and just vote/comment on the top posts of the day, wherever they are.

    But there is indeed the network effect. [email protected] is still the main Linux community, even though [email protected] and [email protected] exist.






  • they’ve still only gotten to around 20% of their original subscriber base.

    Not sure that’s relevant. They used to have 915 active users for the last 6 months on the old one, they just reached 937 for this month on the new one, so I guess most of the people interested moved. Subscribers numbers are inflated as a large number of accounts aren’t active anymore.

    Major communities (c/memes, c/greentext, c/news, even something like c/eurographicnovels) cannot be quickly rebuilt in such a manner, you inevitably have to start from scratch.

    Why not? The main issue with the first version of a community is to get enough people in the same place. Once this is achieved, you can just announce that you are going to move, point to the new community, and then post the new content on the new community.

    It even happens now with [email protected] which was created after some powertripping by the admin of [email protected]. In this case, it’s a bit different, as both communities are still open, but the fact that most of the people who posted to the old community switched to the new is enough to give the new community 2.85k monthly active users, while the old one only has 2.72k.

    No need to transfer the old content, give the votes, and all of that. People just want to be where the new content is posted.