This instance will need a little more traction to be useful. I’m thinking it may be useful to collaborate on a welcome message to post on Reddit. I was thinking that the r/Colorado subreddit would be a good test as it is a much smaller community than r/Denver.
Part of my thinking is that we should advertise not as a replacement for Reddit, but an addition, and an insurance policy of sorts. Basically not to oversell it, but also not to attract everyone, just those who are curious. If we can get that up, and some of us here can add comments and some updoots, it should give some much needed visibility and that logical Colorado landing spot for those who just don't know what to do.
I agree. The more familiar I get with Lemmy under the hood it's apparent they weren't ready for this level of users, and there's a lot of rough edges. I also don't plan on quitting Reddit cold turkey, so definitely see Lemmy as something that can coexist as an alternative until is gets polished.
Reading through the r/Denver threads about the blackout it's clear vast majority of users are annoyed by it and don't give a shit about the API stuff, so probably best to avoid that topic altogether. The angle should be the general direction reddit is heading and giving power back to the users and their communities.