More subscribers.. check More comment.. maybe check Quality content.. nah
I use RSS to get r/selfhosted post and I can guarantee that most posts are amateurs asking questions.
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More subscribers.. check More comment.. maybe check Quality content.. nah
I use RSS to get r/selfhosted post and I can guarantee that most posts are amateurs asking questions.
this chart (from your link) shows that the change has stifled the activity a bit. maybe a 10-20% drop in new posts per day. which is not insignificant. so maybe subscribers are rising, but the number of posts has dropped and plateaued (so far).
But i dont think it will ever go away, it was also my go-to place for a long time. Hopefully more of the posters and commenters head here!
It surprises me too on some level because it does seem very obvious.
I've also learned on multiple occasions over the years that I value different things and I value them much more strongly than a large swath of the selfhosting community. That may speak to whether or not people selfhost for ideological, practical, or other reasons that I am unaware of but, at the end of the day, I find myself disappointed that the version of the selfhosting community that I imagined and thought I was on the same page with is simply not the selfhosting community that exists.
What does the self-hosting community value, then?
Well… I hosted nothing myself, but now I host my own Lemmy instance :o)
The issue is I'm keen on following the self-hosting / server specific content but generally I've got nothing exciting to add. I can offer upvotes and kbin boosts 🚀
Why would you care about getting banned from Reddit?
Because Lemmy has about 0.something % of the users that Reddit has and I still find useful some subreddit.