Does the Lemmy / Kbin (Fediverse) have more helpful content than Reddit?
Does the Lemmy / Kbin (Fediverse) have more helpful content than Reddit?
Pretty much the question, Does it have better help than Reddit?
Does the Lemmy / Kbin (Fediverse) have more helpful content than Reddit?
Pretty much the question, Does it have better help than Reddit?
No lol. Reddit has a near 20 year headstart.
Yeah 20 years worth of content helps, I really do hope we end up with it all on here and people prefer using Kbin / Lemmy in the future.
I noticed certain communities in lemmy can rival (or even more active than) their reddit counterparts. Maybe not much contents yet, but their users are very active and answer questions quickly. I'm sure other communities will also grow overtime.
I really do hope so as I haven't seen many people from certain subs / communities move across yet. I even got downvoted on Reddit for even mentioning the Fediverse on my Local Sub.
I could have said no. But I'll go with not yet.
That's a good answer, Just hope we can get it to have useful information bringing more people onboard.
For troubleshooting, I still turn to reddit. This is just unfortunate reality of:
But I am confident tides will shift to lemmy sooner or later. And if I am unable to find answer on reddit, I'm sure I'm gonna ask it here not on reddit.
I feel a lot of the times you get better answers here if only for the community being a bit better in quality. However, way more questions have been asked and answered on Reddit.
Yes, sort of: there are few comments but they are much more helpful.
No, sort of: there are fewer helpful comments because there are fewer comments in the first place.
But I prefer a small nice room than a large bad one.
I tried asking a question on both Reddit and Lemmy and got more helpful answers from the Lemmy post.
That's good to know, Guess a lot of the people who write helpful information has decided to use Lemmy instead.
Not until someone posts whatever answer you're looking for on Lemmy. You can help by asking those questions in the appropriate community lol.
You can also help by contributing good answers to others’ questions. This will attract folks who can answer your questions.
I'll try my best.
I could have said no. But I'll go with not yet.
Well Reddit has years of content by millions of users, it’s definitely better to find an answer to your question but that doesn’t mean that the fediverse can’t be helpful.
Does I find better help here? Definitely!
Thanks to fellow lemmings, for the past 2 weeks I have discovered a lot new solutions/apps/plugins! My workflow has improved a lot. So much so that now I spend more and more time on Lemmy, looking for new things. My productivity is almost down to zero. I'm loving it.
I thought your productivity was meant to increase, not go down to zero. :P What things have you found which you could recommend?
Notion.so has been something I've been warming to of late for planning, writing, noting things and whatnot, like a Google Doc but better organised for your personal stuff.
These are just a few of the new things I've added/discovered recently thanks to Lemmy:
autoload -Uz tetriscurses
, then run tetriscurses
. A whole afternoon goes away;These are the ones that I can come up with from the top of my head. Try them out. If you heard of them from me, know you are actually learning them from Lemmy.
Depends on your topic. Have a question about a specific video game? Still going to have to go to reddit to ask. More general purpose? Those we can field.
Thanks, Guess we need to grow our Gaming community more on the platform. Maybe I'll try and contribute to the current games I'm playing and find the communities for them.
Probably not yet.
Reddit has over a decade of content on it, from a much bigger userbase.
Had. A good deal of it is gone now, some of it forever.
If by a good chunk you mean <0.1% of their content, I agree. The majority of Reddit users did not care to migrate, and many that did migrate didn't delete their old content
I thought they only deleted chat content, not public posts.