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I think most all of us here on Lemmy are people with technical background. Most of my professional contacts remained using Reddit, Twitter and even excited when Threads launched.

If you are non-tech background, please comment and share what you do for life.

If you have tech background, upvote this to help promote this post so that we can find more non-tech users on Lemmy.

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[-] pseudonym 9 points 1 year ago

Interesting question. I'm a software developer, but I just wanted to point out that reddit also started out very heavily skewed toward tech workers. The non tech people came quite a bit later for the most part. Even today from what I can tell, software developers are overrepresented on Reddit.

[-] tal@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Most of the early discussion I recall on Reddit was around programming languages. Some startup stuff. Was probably partly the Reddit team themselves posting stuff they were interested in, and partly intake from Slashdot -- I found Reddit from Slashdot -- and Slashdot had a tech bent.

Here's an early snapshot of Reddit:

https://web.archive.org/web/20051202065421/http://reddit.com/

I also think that a factor is that people who can host their own instance are particularly interested, because you can't do that at all on Reddit and the Threadiverse suddenly lets you do that. For them, it's not just "Reddit is doing something that I don't like", but "the Threadiverse has the network structure that I wish Reddit did". That'll slew towards techies. Like, @selfhosted is pretty active, even on non-lemmy/kbin stuff.

this post was submitted on 20 Jul 2023
1189 points (98.2% liked)

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