I’ve been a lurker on reddit for the most part and it seems easier to talk on Lemmy. I guess because it’s a smaller community, or because your instance feels a little more private.
part of it may be that reddit has become so big it’s almost like shouting into the void.
Once a post has >300 comments, the only way to have a meaningful conversation is to add to the top-level comments. And soon the top-level comments are all nested with relevant and irrelevant comments.
that’s the thing - not all new comments are high-quality either.
There’s a balance between new and popular (so number of upvotes over time for example). But the problem is that you need to constantly change the scale with your userbase. For a site with 10,000 users, (number of upvotes / number of hours post was created) may work, but a site with 1 million users may need to use a factor of 10, a site with 100 million users may need a log scale, etc.
same! I almost never commented on reddit but I’ve felt a lot more comfortable being active here. Something about the size of it led me to always be of the opinion that ‘whatever I’m thinking, it’s already been said’.
I’ve been a lurker on reddit for the most part and it seems easier to talk on Lemmy. I guess because it’s a smaller community, or because your instance feels a little more private.
part of it may be that reddit has become so big it’s almost like shouting into the void.
Once a post has >300 comments, the only way to have a meaningful conversation is to add to the top-level comments. And soon the top-level comments are all nested with relevant and irrelevant comments.
Yeah, the comments here are far better.
Wouldn’t it be a better idea to sort by new instead of popular?
that’s the thing - not all new comments are high-quality either.
There’s a balance between new and popular (so number of upvotes over time for example). But the problem is that you need to constantly change the scale with your userbase. For a site with 10,000 users, (number of upvotes / number of hours post was created) may work, but a site with 1 million users may need to use a factor of 10, a site with 100 million users may need a log scale, etc.
Yeah, it definitely feels like there is less pressure in commenting
same! I almost never commented on reddit but I’ve felt a lot more comfortable being active here. Something about the size of it led me to always be of the opinion that ‘whatever I’m thinking, it’s already been said’.