this post was submitted on 03 Jul 2023
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Technology
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Like Drew got no clue said, the issue is that the author can't handle the tiny amount of friction encountered during the process. IMO, it keeps out those that wouldn't be contributing anyway.
Edit: Our -> out
I disagree strongly with this view. One of the truly valuable elements of reddit is/was the shared knowledge for a lot of things that are not techy. As a somewhat recent homeowner, the r/homeimprovement subreddit and the mildly related ones have been invaluable. It's populated by random homeowners of all types and experts in various professional and DIY fields. These are not people who are likely to migrate to Lemmy in droves and that's a loss, as far as I'm concerned. Maybe some will make it and smaller communities might grow to have similar knowledge wells, but they won't be as deep.
I'm all-in on the transition away from the social media giants, but there's a lot about the simplicity of a non-federated platform that won't carryover which will make the barrier to entry higher than many people want to navigate, and that is definitely a shame.