Did you know that: apart is actually the opposite of a part.
Sysadmin
A community dedicated to the profession of IT Systems Administration
No generic Lemmy issue posts please! Posts about Lemmy belong in one of these communities:
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Is the sysadmim reddit still used by people? Get them to switch on over. I don't get why they haven't already. Link this community in the sidebar on Reddit and pin a post saying we moved to Lemmy
It does not say that
It doesn't say "As far as growth goes, I think we need to get the word out. A lot of people just do not know that Lemmy is a thing."?
I don't get your point
Good. I can't stand the insane communities on Reddit. It's full of clickbait and grifters. There's small communities are what the Internet is about. We should be happy.
I agree that most of Reddit is like that. However, r/sysadmin is pretty good in my experience.
Except for the #reddit-sysadmin IRC channel. Gibby's always shilling his "fart in a jar" NFT.
Please for the love of God do not become the Internet door to door preacher trying to convert. It's obnoxious and a lost cause.
While this place is run by tankies and filled with 30 Linux thigh high photos you will never have a large community here.
The absolute only thing I go back to reddit for is the patch Tuesday megathread. I do dearly wish that info was here so I could cut ties completely.
I'm down to setup a bot
We'd just need to lure a few ~~suckers~~ testers on the order of Taco to expose all the gotchas.
I disagree. Merge with techsupport or even technology. Critical mass needs to be natural.
Yup I've thought about this recently and I think the big problem is people expect Reddit when Reddit evolved over time. Here you have hundreds of subs existing where the user base doesnt match the need for it.
Use Canada as an example. I'm sure on Reddit Canada started first then as it grew the need for provinces and cities. Here we have Canada and I'm sure provinces and cities. Everyone should just be in Canada. When the user base grows it will naturally splinter to smaller like minded communities.
We are trying to rebuild the wheel when the wheel is not needed.
I agree with your disagreement. One of the biggest mistakes was folks trying to create 1:1 analogs of every subreddit. A single big community can have a lot of varied interesting discussions. If it gets too big, folks can get together and start a separate sub topic community for whatever topic warrants it.
I agree with this.
Sometimes I've seen people complain about people using asklemmy for not askreddit style questions, but I actually think that's ok and I'm in favor of that as it means more discussion, content, and visibility.
Eventually asklemmy will reach "critical mass", and split into more niche communities.
Fully agree. I see this sentiment so often, "we gotta tell people from reddit how great it is here!" This might work with something like a meme community, but once it becomes a bit less mainstream you need people to make that decision themselves. It will look needy and annoying to try and "educate" them about how supposedly great it is here.
Removed