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submitted 1 year ago by curt@beehaw.org to c/technology@beehaw.org

This article is on Medium, which has a paywall. I'm a member, but not logged in. I was able to read it so it may depend on how many times you've read Medium articles.

One point he made that I found interesting was:

So, in light of all of this, should Reddit even exist? Is there really a point to a web forum in 2023? Aren’t we past all that?

He thinks we are. I never thought about it before. Maybe in the case of some Reddit subreddits and other forums, but I don't think so in general. I've got a lot great information from forums.

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[-] NightOwl@lemmy.one 6 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Forums are pretty structured. Twitter and the new reddit are way less structured unless you’re talking about structured with ads built in. That aside, that’s a personal preference not a fact of the internet.

Yeah, when it comes to technical help a forum I found to be much more helpful, since relevant threads just don't die. When someone comments it gets bumped up increasing the visibility that some helpful person will see it and respond whereas on reddit/lemmy/kbin/etc types posts as a community gets bigger is pretty much dead and talking into the void after sometimes a couple of hours later. So that encourages having to post again leading to more reposting. It's just a much more quick rapid and temporary form of discussion. When you respond to someone those more modern takes on message boards the only one who'll see it is the person you responded to.

Forums by their nature don't need constant rapid activity of chats. Even on lemmy now as the activity has started to grow some posts are starting to reach the point that nobody will ever go back and read them as new content comes out. Compared to the beginnings where even week old posts people would comment on due to being visible. There's a place for both traditional forums and rapid modern post based message board experiences.

this post was submitted on 23 Jun 2023
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Technology

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