Reddit is terrible as a website. But it still has the communities that developed there over years, and they are an invaluable resource. They are definitely positioning themselves to pull a Digg, but until the Reddit-killer comes along with a mass exodus (and it doesn't look like it's gonna be Lemmy unfortunately) access to those communities will entail dealing with reddit.
Digg (a link aggregator very much like Reddit) started pulling similar shit and everyone left for the alternative, which was Reddit at the time.
After everybody left Digg, Reddit became the default and after about 15 years they are doing the same things that drove people away from Digg
And even now that they kind of have a form of* threads they're still hard to access and not indexable. Whenever someone recommends discord as a reddit alternative I wonder if they really understand why we're seeking an alternative in the first place. I have no interest in setting up camp somewhere I'll have to abandon in a few years again.
lot of subreddit doesn't move yet.
Move a communities is not easy.
If the community is your business (game, company specific, or fandom, movie, ...) moving is lot more difficult.
Leave Reddit. Why is anyone still there.
Reddit is terrible as a website. But it still has the communities that developed there over years, and they are an invaluable resource. They are definitely positioning themselves to pull a Digg, but until the Reddit-killer comes along with a mass exodus (and it doesn't look like it's gonna be Lemmy unfortunately) access to those communities will entail dealing with reddit.
I still look at Reddit from time to time, but I don’t see a need to sign in at all. There’s no use contributing anymore
Don't bother even giving them your traffic, just use a redirection extension to LibReddit or use Stealth
what does "pull a Digg" mean?
To rapidly lose your userbase to another platform, due to controversial changes to the website.
Named after Digg, which lost most of its userbase to Reddit and is now a shell of its former self.
Digg (a link aggregator very much like Reddit) started pulling similar shit and everyone left for the alternative, which was Reddit at the time.
After everybody left Digg, Reddit became the default and after about 15 years they are doing the same things that drove people away from Digg
Professional communities, local communities, niche hobby communities, each of which don't have critical mass here (yet)
I'm doing my best to grow stuff here, but I recognize that there's still stuff there that people find helpful for other parts of their life.
Decades of solved programming issues.
I don't post there anymore, though.
r/locksmith
r/lockshop
r/[local area]
r/sw5e
These communities either don't exist or don't have critical mass here.
And if you recommend Discord as an alternative, it's not the same
Also: Search results that take me to Reddit threads with actual answers
I keep seeing people recommend discord as an alternative but it's just chat rooms, If it's an alternative for anything it's ICQ.
Right!? gO To oUr DiScOrD. Like bitch please, I've got ADHD, i will never find what i need in a discord chat
And even now that they kind of have a form of* threads they're still hard to access and not indexable. Whenever someone recommends discord as a reddit alternative I wonder if they really understand why we're seeking an alternative in the first place. I have no interest in setting up camp somewhere I'll have to abandon in a few years again.
r/sysadmin
Also the people there are not nearly as crazy or extreme
lot of subreddit doesn't move yet. Move a communities is not easy. If the community is your business (game, company specific, or fandom, movie, ...) moving is lot more difficult.
Because you can search it with google