Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by dsir 1089 days ago
Lots of communties on Reddit have started the process of migrating to different platforms. The federated alternatives like Lemmy have had recent success although I question the complexity of it all in terms of getting mass adoption.

Most of the alternatives seem to be missing the core idea of what Reddit really is (a community of communities). I think first and foremost it's the community aspect of Reddit that makes it appealing.

I've been building a platform called Sociables which is intentionally not just another Reddit clone. We are trying to create an all-in-one place for people to create communities first and foremost and not just posts.

Here's an example of a community:

https://sociables.com/community/Sociables/home

1 comments

> The federated alternatives like Lemmy have had recent success although I question the complexity of it all in terms of getting mass adoption.

It's a community by community thing.

Eg: Astro-nerds have places such as universeodon.com with 10K active users (more science journo's and tangential-astro than hard core gravitional physicists) which is one sub reddit equivalent.

With similar Fediverse clumps for various types of math, cyber security, alternative OS hacking, etc. things are happening.

Mass adoption might be missing .. but that can be a good thing, the charm of old reddit a decade+ ago was small groups of high quality.