On average if I make a post on Mastodon whether I get a comment, and a continued conversation is either hit or miss.
On Lemy if I make a post it’s almost insane the probalility of actual comments, conversation and discusion with many users that can occur in a single post compared to Mastodon.
Is this because of the communities on Lemy making things more seamless and simple to find content I might want to consume and discuss as a user? Because say I join a Mastodon server, nothings really organized by topics or anything. Sure there are hashtags but, the user would have to know to search a specific hashtag and there’s the chance of even missing somes post that may be related even if the topic is similar to a hashtag searched for.
Who knows, what are Lemy users thoughts on this?
I know one thing, if you can make a good platform, then you can get great conversations in anything that people are interested in. It seems to me Lemy is the best at this for most users. While on Mastodon, while i’m not saying I hadn’t had people comment on my posts, it seems less likely then Lemmy. I don’t think I made a single post where no one has commented atleast something on Lemy.
Because microblogging is about shouting into the void and threaded fora are about conversation.
This is it. It’s the same as Reddit being better than Twitter for conversation.
But this is also why Kbin is the best technology, combining both platforms.
Are you sure about that? Because they way I see it, Kbin is lagging behind both Mastodon & Lemmy.
kbin has been vastly lagging behind lemmy because for a lengthy period of time development has been effectively stopped as the primary dev (ernest) was going through some bad real life issues which took priority. This led to a lot of people leaving kbin or blocking it outright because of spam and bots and lack of updates.
Ernest returned a weekish ago and is back to publishing updates (including several which have already killed the spam problem, being able to transfer community ownership and more) and daily posts dictating what he’s working on and pushing (including the API which should be within the next few days).
Lemmy at this point has had a huge head start and isn’t basically one person so kbin lagging behind isn’t surprising. Doesn’t mean their statement of ‘But this is also why Kbin is the best technology, combining both platforms.’ is any less accurate. Kbin does combine both platforms, Lemmy doesn’t. ‘Best’ can be subjective, but if that’s their opinion then there ya go.
I just like having the option to dip my toes in the micro blogging stuff. I still don’t know how to mine it for dopamine though.
A lot of the devs left Kbin due to the on-man-leadership problem and started their own fork Mbin which has been progressing more quickly. A lot of instances have moved to Mbin, including kbin.run which I am on. Either way, it is performing very well overall and does enable interaction with both Lemmy and Mastodon instances. I check Lemmy instances directly periodically and don’t see any advantage to returning when Mbin lets me interact with more content.
It’s lagging behind in terms of adoption, but it’s a better platform.
Can you explain this a little further? I was on kbin originally, but jumped to Lemmy after boost came out. From what I’ve seen they’re more or less the same experience, but I’m not super educated on the intricacies of the Fediverse
Kbin is a link aggregator with nested discussions (like lemmy, or reddit) but it also is a fully featured microblogging service (like mastadon, or Twitter).
You can microblog on kbin, engage with hashtags, etc.
Kbin is lemmy and mastadon rolled into one.
I had similar thoughts as OP then it took me some time to realise this. Microblogging is when you just need to say something but don’t care to have a discussion about it.