This is just my basic perspective as a daily user since June 9th.

I was able to use just my subscribed communities feed up until a couple of weeks ago. I subscribed to a lot in the first 2 weeks of this thing exploding. Those initial communities are very engaging, but several have slowed down or are dead. I expected that. I’ve been using the “All” feed to try to engage with people and find new stuff. I’ve used it a lot, but there is a lack of engagement. I use the “new” sort priority to try to find active participants, but it seems lacking as viewed from .world. I have other instance made accounts, but I have not seen any differences. Anyone have suggestions about finding better engagement with positive people?

  • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I use the “new” sort priority to try to find active participants

    New is going to show you the posts with the least engagement… Seriously, that’s literally the worst way to go about what you’re looking for

    Because it’s post that literally just got made. This isn’t reddit where 10,000 people are online at once and things take off quickly. Browse by “active” and you’ll see the posts people are engaging on.

  • sbv@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    Yes. It feels like it has slowed down significantly. I’m posting, but there’s little engagement.

  • Apathy Tree@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 year ago

    I browse by new to help start the conversation (one comment is enough to get people to click it), but it’s not a good way to find it actively happening.

    If you sort by top of the last 1 or 6 hours you’ll probably have better results. Those are still pretty new but much more active conversation wise.

  • PriorProject@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I dunno how to hotlink, but if you scroll to the active users graph at https://fedidb.org/software/lemmy you can see there’s been like a 25% dropoff in active users since the peak in July. Lemmy has still grown 50x since May, and it’s much MUCH more active than it was then. But we’ve definitely crested a peak and not everyone who gave Lemmy a shot then is sticking around in a monthly basis.

    This isn’t necessarily bad. Lemmy is still young and has many rough edges, it wasn’t realistic to win all the users that tried it on ease-of-use in a head to head with reddit. And Mastodon has had multiple growth waves interspersed with periods of declining usage, but with the spikes has grown ie remained stable overall. Early-stage commercial social media have big ups and downs in engagement and growth as well, and just like lemmy those ups and downs are often externally driven… when competitors mess up, when a big global news story hits, when a major sporting event happens… these can all be catalysts for one-time growth. It’s not a straight line.

    Time will tell what user level we stabilize at in the short-term and what events spur new growth, but it’s normal to have a big expansion be followed by some degree of contraction.