This reddit post likely has tens if not hundreds of thousands of views, look at the top comment.

Lemmy is losing so many potential new users because the UX sucks for the vast majority of people.

What can we do?

  • @BrianTheeBiscuiteer
    link
    English
    241 hour ago

    Using Boost for Lemmy and it’s almost like I never switched.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    629 minutes ago

    Gonna don my tinfoil hat here for a second…

    Was the monetization of the API a deliberate move to kick out the progressive and tech-literate long-time reddit users (myself included, with 16 year badge and centuryclub), to in turn make the site more of a Nazi, pro-Trump circle jerk?

    Because I really think it succeeded. The whole atmosphere shifted that day, and I’ve barely been back except when I end up there out of muscle memory or a Google result…and those often have the best answers removed by someone who went through and scrubbed their account.

    We all remember how Spez treated r/thedonald, right?

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    281 hour ago

    Wait wait wait… This implies people like new reddit… That shit makes my eyes bleed wtf

  • @MushroomsEverywhere
    link
    English
    252 hours ago

    I was on Sync for Reddit before going here, and checked out Lemmy as the devs switched platform. So the joke’s on them, my UX is basically identical.

    That said, sucks that people shy away because of complexity.

  • isaacd
    link
    English
    472 hours ago

    This is why email never caught on. Who wants to choose between Gmail, Yahoo, MSN, Proton, and Comcast? A successful email service would be one where you can only communicate with users of the same email service. /s

  • Luca
    link
    fedilink
    English
    8
    edit-2
    1 hour ago

    I found a beautiful web client for Lemmy that I wish was the default experience. It would surely help Lemmy in gaining popularity.

    here’s the link: https://phtn.app/

  • @maplebar
    link
    English
    452 minutes ago

    The fediverse being “endless wars about who is federated” is not really true, is it?

    Sure not everyone is federated with everyone else, but legacy social media is federated with nobody at all. Federation is the entire point of the Fediverse, you connect with people you want to connect with and you don’t connect with people you don’t. It’s as simple as that.

    Plus, do people really want to be on a single platform with everyone else in the world? Because that’s a big part of what broke the internet in the first place…

    99% of users are going to check out when you ask them what server to join.

    I’m so sick of this dumb ass argument…

    People who complain about “servers” need to tell me what they think “the internet” is. The existence of servers didn’t stop online video games, email or discord/slack from catching on with hundreds of millions of people, so why is it suddenly a problem when it comes to the Fediverse?

    Onboarding obviously needs to be better, but I’m going to be totally honest honest here: I don’t think these are legitimate, actionable or useful critiques.

    These are merely excuses from people who are addicted to legacy social media and who don’t give a shit that the internet is owned and controlled by a few rich corporations.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    233 minutes ago

    Tell them to download the thunder app (it’s very similar to many of the popular reddit apps) and just give them a list of the 10 most popular fediverse’s to pick from to make an account.

    I mentioned this like a year ago. Users will need their hands held to get them to easily come over.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    118 minutes ago

    but it feels like old reddit

    Yes, and that’s a good thing.

    There are lots of Lemmy apps that display posts in different ways. If you want “bells and whistles”, then find an app that gives you that.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    118 minutes ago

    I personally love Alexandrite.app as a UX. I’m so used to it that I get confused when I follow a link and see a default Lemmy instance, lol.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    112 hours ago

    It’s why my less “tech savvy” friends won’t join. They don’t understand what federation is, and No they don’t want to take 2 minutes to learn.

    It’s annoying, but it’s reality. People don’t understand the whole different servers thing, federation, and how to pick one.

    I realize marketing isn’t a strong suit (nor should it be), but I’m proposing two solutions (well maybe not solutions, but something to help):

    • A quick animated video showing the benefits of Lemmy and how this all works (if it hasn’t already been done yet)

    • A service that basically simplifies and centralizes the signup process to one screen. During server selection, users can see the most populated servers and click on them to learn the specific rules for the server, etc.

    Idk, maybe we already have all this…or this is just complicating the issue. Or maybe we only want people willing to take 2 minutes to learn about how it all works. Tbh that’s a pretty good natural filter for the types of users I want to be interacting and discussing with.

  • @mvirts
    link
    English
    292 hours ago

    Don’t over think it, the people who want to be here will be.

    • @ProtecyaTec
      link
      English
      92 hours ago

      Hard disagree. The entire point of Lemmy is to move away from Corporate run, Billionaire run, Millionaire run, social media (which Reddit is). Without attracting new users Lemmy will almost certainly perish. It’s goal should be a low bar to onboard new social media users coming from places like Reddit, Facebook, X.

      Saying “Not our problem” is a woefully shortsighted.

      • @UnderpantsWeevil
        link
        English
        71 hour ago

        Hard disagree. The entire point of Lemmy is to move away from Corporate run, Billionaire run, Millionaire run, social media

        Lemmy is a protocol for networking individual privately hosted social media instances. It is not a panacea for corporate control of social media infrastructure. You’re still hosting these sites on AWS / Azure / some other large corporately controlled private hardware setup. You’re still securing the URL from a private DNS. You’re still paying for these sites out of the surplus of a handful of wealth(ier) patrons and their friendly donors (or ending up like Hexbear.net, with a domain name up for grabs because it was mismanaged by part time broke amateurs).

        Saying “Not our problem” is a woefully shortsighted.

        There’s not a lot we can do about it individually. I would argue that the fractured - often openly hostile - intra-instance infighting on Lemmy feeds directly into OP’s image’s “this is too weird and scary” attitude.

        If popping into the Fediverse and just picking a Lemmy instance was as straightforward as selecting “Communities I’m interested in” on other bigger social media feeds, the onboarding would be smoother. But if you poke around and see people going whole hog frothing at the mouth “Everyone on <instance>.<whatever> is morally degenerate and has ruined the community at large!!!” reactionary in between instances, that’s an immediate turn off that I don’t think anyone within the Lemmy network knows how to deal with.

        Its the same intra-channel fighting we saw on Reddit, just ported into a more decentralized network. And it neglects the fundamentals of modern web hosting (we’re all at the mercy of the IANA / Cloudflare, etc / the major hosting companies).

        Lemmy is, itself, a shortsighted patch on a much larger and scarier problem. The instance infighting only reveals how shortsighted.

      • @krashmo
        link
        English
        32 hours ago

        If a small, one time pop-up designed to solve your problem makes you give up on solving your problem then you were never going to solve that problem.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      62 hours ago

      Unpopular opinion maybe but I like Lemmy and lemmy users and I’m glad that we’re a bit different from Reddit. At least in my experience it feels a bit different.

  • Arkhive (they/she)
    link
    fedilink
    English
    72 hours ago

    I’m going to be holding a teach-in about the fediverse. AFK I mean. Like the people I live with, and am in community with in meat space. They all want to ditch corpo social media, but aren’t sure how. I’ll hold a digital one too for my more extended community, but I want to start with the people I truly live with. I think word of mouth is a great way to onboard people as it allows for a dynamic level of handholding. This is essentially “grassroots” social media after all.

    I don’t really want Reddit to join Lemmy en masse. I want the people that see the value of pre-2010 social media, and the “local” internet, to understand and have access to these tools and spaces. I think that will be best done through education, not advertising. Advertising the platform is exactly what all the platforms we want to ditch do, and we are actively trying to not be those platforms.

    The sense of “needing” more users, to me at least, is a hold out of the “infinite growth”, capitalist, mindset. I don’t want infinite growth for my instance, I want the people it’s made for to find it, and enjoy communicating with the people they share it with.