• Nepenthe
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    1 year ago

    That, and the conversations move far faster there. Any remark about anything moves the subject further up, and you’re essentially subjected to reading the comments section of the entire sub all at once when you just came for the memes.

    Holding a conversation in such a large place would be near impossible from experience, no matter how many channels there are. It’s just not going to be pleasant because it’s not made for what they want to do.

    • @Strangle
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      181 year ago

      Very large discords don’t work for chatting.

      Discords with 100-300 people with around 20-30% active and 15% very active with 20% popping in occasionally for an hour or two and the rest just lurking seems like a good sweet spot for discord servers

    • tinawebmom
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      141 year ago

      I wad on a discord with 20 people. After ten minutes I left. How anyone had a conversation is beyond me

      • @axtualdave
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        101 year ago

        It’s a skill those of us from the IRC days cultivated.

        I’m glad I’m not good at it anymore.

        • @ElectroVagrant
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          41 year ago

          I think everyone really appreciates the occasional @everyone, helps folks remember they’re alive and all

    • Welch
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      1 year ago

      Discord has threads now, works just like Reddit.

      You can create a thread and people can comment on them just fine.

      Edit:

        • Altima NEO
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          111 year ago

          Yeah, discords a mess. Its a fine voice chat app, but for everything else, its like using a phillips screwdriver on a flat head. Yeah, you can probably muscle it out, but it aint gonna be pretty and theres better ways to do it.

        • Welch
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          41 year ago

          Understandable, it’s not for everyone. It’s a decent option for someone that already has a discord account and wants to leave Reddit, but at the same time doesn’t understand/want to joint Lemmy or kbin.

        • @JollyTheRancher
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          41 year ago

          As someone that’s used it for work, I don’t find it very different than the Lemmy UI at all

      • Nepenthe
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        71 year ago

        Fair point. I keep forgetting that’s a thing, because I’ve genuinely never seen anyone ever use it aside from one single time just to see what it did/harass another user. And then immediately everyone went, “Huh. Neat,” and lost interest.

        • Welch
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          21 year ago

          Understandable, it’s pretty useful in the IOS Beta community for being able to see new features or bugs without having them in a general chat group.

    • @paddirn
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      1 year ago

      They actually added a feature/channel type not long ago that’s supposed to make it more like forums or discussion boards, but it doesn’t appear to be in wide use, most servers just use the standard text chat thing and it’s a pain in the ass to find anything or keep up a normal conversation in there. I didn’t even realize it was a thing until a month or two ago when somebody else pointed it out to me. It apparently didn’t make a big splash at the time when it was released or they didn’t make a big deal about it.

    • Preston Maness ☭
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      01 year ago

      That, and the conversations move far faster there. Any remark about anything moves the subject further up, and you’re essentially subjected to reading the comments section of the entire sub all at once when you just came for the memes.

      It’s the difference between asynchronous and synchronous mediums of communication. Lemmy is much closer to async, and Discord much closer to sync. No medium is ever going to be able to square that circle. You can’t have both.