• @[email protected]
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    1001 year ago

    What’s really baffling to me is that a bunch of nerds with too much free time on their hands basically stomped out a fully fledged Reddit alternative within a few months, including multiple frontends and apps.

    Yet Reddit spends millions on development every year, for no discernable improvement whatsoever, while still turning no profit.

    Where is all that money going? Seriously, Reddit is a very simple site. There’s nothing that hard about it. The amount of data is tiny, since the content is external, none of the resources are that time critical, a lot of content can be cached.

    What are the devs doing all day?

    • @[email protected]
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      71 year ago

      stomped out a fully fledged Reddit alternative within a few months, including multiple frontends and apps.

      what/who are you referring to? the reddit ceo or reddit users?

      • april
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        431 year ago

        They are referring to the lemmy developers

        • Brave Little Hitachi Wand
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          201 year ago

          The confusion for me was that when I stomp something out, it dies. That’s not the intended verb here, but context clues alone do not a language make.

          • @[email protected]
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            141 year ago

            Mistranslation of the German Idiom “(etwas) aus dem Boden Stampfen”, to create (something) from nothing (lit. to stomp (something) out of the ground).

            Easy mistake for bilinguals to make, I was convinced it was an English Idiom as well until I looked it up.

    • Frozyre
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      51 year ago

      What’s really baffling to me is that a bunch of nerds with too much free time on their hands basically stomped out a fully fledged Reddit alternative within a few months, including multiple frontends and apps.

      Oh so you’ve noticed that too? Yeah I thought Lemmy was going to be the difference maker too, the leader of alternative and the breakaway from Reddit. But I’ve got a bit of a conspiracy theory, I truly think a lot of shitty Reddit users got together and jumped on Lemmy to take a massive dump on it just to ruin it for everyone.

      I mean you could tell in moments. The downvote brigading. The report spamming. The snarky responses. Meme-esque posts everywhere. Yeah this was not Lemmy behavior, this was Reddit behavior and it got out of control.

      What did the Lemmy mods/admins do about it? Almost nothing.

      So now we’re in a place of the Fediverse where Lemmy has been fucked up, KBin.social is dead (or in a comatose state since it’s still somehow up) and what we have left now are scattering the users.

    • Johanno
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      511 year ago

      Lemmy wasn’t made in a few months. However development increased a lot once the api war started.

    • @[email protected]
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      71 year ago

      The ideas leading to Lemmy go back at least a decade, that I can remember. There are many little things that people figured out when developing distributed federated social media networks of this type. It’s a success story of collaboration over a long time with a shared goal of making Reddit and Twitter easy to replace with a superior product.

      • Echo Dot
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        11 months ago

        I’m surprised that nobody has tried to turn Facebook into a distributed service or perhaps they have and I just haven’t noticed.

        I’m not really interested in a Twitter alternative as I never really used the original. But I would like a less shitty Facebook.

        If somebody could basically just make Google plus again, but then actually let people use it, that would be great.