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by shagie
2015 days ago
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I believe it has to do with the specificity of the forum, passion of the people contributing, activity of the mods to keep it "on topic." /r/homelab (I've dipped my toes into occasionally) has people who are passionate about their craft. The people who are interested in setting up a homelab are also likewise interested in investing (time and money) in it. This differs from things like /r/learnprogramming where the people posting are not invested in it (the community or the craft). Another difference would be the "who contributes new posts" aspect. With /r/homelab new posts come from people of all skill levels. With /r/learnprogramming they come from people who are at the very basic skill level. The implications of this is that /r/homelab has peers helping peers while /r/learnprogramming needs people who aren't posting questions to post comments and provide additional material. |
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