[-] burgundymyr@lemmy.world 5 points 1 year ago

This is the key. Different products are intuitive for different people. Some people prefer less customizability with less barrier to entry. I recommend Apple products for a lot of users even though I strongly prefer Android/Linux/Widows. I also strongly prefer the Mac trackpad and gesture support. I use a Mac laptop for anything not work related because I hate the way trackpads work on Windows (even using the superior Mac trackpad).

All that said, if someone else prefers iOS, or Windows trackpads (or even likes those awful little buttons on Lenovos), then they should use them! Use what works for you!

[-] burgundymyr@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

100% I will only be using instances that don't federate with corporations.

[-] burgundymyr@lemmy.world 10 points 1 year ago

Funny, I immediately assumed it was an insecure guy

[-] burgundymyr@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Yea, exactly, I was looking for an alternative to r/nba, and there's nothing atm

[-] burgundymyr@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

I agree completely, Reddit screwed up. Huffman is a petty tool and he's running a lot of great communities.

My point is that it does hurt people who aren't Reddit/Huffman. Mods and community members who have created and curated tons of content. It's hundreds of hours of work to migrate that info, and not everyone will come with you if you do.

It was an easy choice for me because I'm not invested, but for those that have more at stake, moving platforms is a much bigger sacrifice.

The people who stayed aren't necessarily wrong or bad, they could have good reasons and harder choices than shine of us here who lose very little, or maybe even some who lose a lot.

[-] burgundymyr@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

There is one and I'm subbed, if you search communities for nba it's easy to find. Unfortunately the r/NBA community was heavily opposed to blackouts, and I'm skeptical we'll see much migration. It's a very different culture than the other subs I'm in.

[-] burgundymyr@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Yea, that's the hope. I'm subscribed, but a lot of the value is knowing I'm catching the latest news. If news broke in the last 5 minutes then it's on r/NBA. If I can't count on that then the value diminishes significantly. Hopefully the community will grow as will the activity.

[-] burgundymyr@lemmy.world 11 points 1 year ago

It's not just corporate reddit though. Consider the time and effort invested in these communities. Obviously I left because I don't want to support reddit (and because their non 3rd party interface is almost unusable), but there are mods of small communities that have put thousands of hours into building up these subs.

Ask Historians is a perfect example of a sub that gets punished by modified comments (and they have been highly supportive of protests). They are so heavily moderated that every comment is 100% on topic and each comment lost makes the hard work they put in less worthwhile. Now each person has a right to delete their own content, but it sucks to write a 3 page essay response with citations only to have the context be removed to spite reddit. The mods and contributors of the subs are suffering too, and at a time when maintaining the community is much harder.

[-] burgundymyr@lemmy.world 11 points 1 year ago

Is missing an active NBA community, which is/was at least half of my reddit traffic along with several other subs I frequented, so I that regard it's a let down.

The interface is already better on jerboa than anything reddit ever made, and I haven't had a ton of issues, just missing the communities.

[-] burgundymyr@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

This is a lot of work, I genuinely feel honored by the service of everyone involved. Thank you!

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burgundymyr

joined 1 year ago