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I never used Twitter and I don't use Mastodon directly because I abhor the idea of Twitter: forcibly shortened messages which emphasize nonsense and make it hard for people who actually have something to say to get their message across by having to split it in tens of threads. I've always hated Twitter.

So I can't compare the platforms at this level of detail but I have used Reddit and Lemmy a lot. And I think Lemmy is really great and just as good as Reddit. No issues with follows across instances following my mobile apps, having searches work etc.

And Voyager allows me to be signed into many instances (and in fact have multiple accounts on the same instance)

> - remember to follow people I care about, since otherwise there is no way to discover interesting posts outside my bubble

And this really is a feature for me, I hate algorithmic feeds. I just want to see who I follow and no other suggested or promoted stuff :)




I used to use both Twitter and Reddit (until they both succumbed to an Eternal September of their own, in my view, although for different reasons), and at least to me they serve very different purposes:

Twitter was great for following the updates of a given person/company/group etc. It allowed me to keep up to date with various topics of interest (cryptography, engineering, my city's public transit system etc). The 140 character limit was always a red herring, in my view: People can just link to their blog or start a thread (which I can both easily follow and ignore).

Reddit was more useful for researching and discussing a given topic. Discussions are way more meandering, and the tree-based interface made that both acceptable (whereas spamming somebody's replies would be considered rude on Twitter) and ergonomic.

In that sense, Reddit was always the spiritual successor to self-hosted bulletin boards, in the same way that Discord has replaced IRC for many groups. (What makes me sad is that it's now seemingly also replacing discussion boards, which sucks because it's not anonymously searchable at all, but that's a different complaint.)

In that way, Reddit seems like a very low hanging fruit to decentralize: Its predecessor already was decentral, in a way! In contrast, there was never a successful decentralized microblogging service before Twitter (and no, RSS doesn't count).

> I hate algorithmic feeds. I just want to see who I follow and no other suggested or promoted stuff :)

That's very fair! I believe this is what ultimately got me quite hooked on Twitter, but in the long run has made me very unhappy while there and prone to doomscrolling.


>there was never a successful decentralized microblogging service before Twitter (and no, RSS doesn't count).

You say RSS doesn’t count, but the way you describe your use of Twitter sounds exactly like the purpose of RSS.

>Twitter was great for following the updates of a given person/company/group etc. … The 140 character limit was always a red herring, in my view: People can just link to their blog

I don’t see how this is appreciably different than reading headlines and the first sentence in an RSS feed and clicking through to the blog that backs it, if it seems interesting.

Twitter always felt like RSS for people who didn’t know what RSS is. Hence its popularity, as most people don’t know what it is, but the concept is very useful. A lot of people use Facebook for the same thing.


> Twitter always felt like RSS for people who didn’t know what RSS is.

Yes, but that’s a lot of people!

Other than that, RSS doesn’t support commenting somebody else’s post.


> (What makes me sad is that it's now seemingly also replacing discussion boards, which sucks because it's not anonymously searchable at all, but that's a different complaint.)

An anonymously searchable alternative to Reddit's search function is PullPush, an archive site independent of Reddit.

It has full-text search and will even search through deleted and removed content.

Main site: https://pullpush.io

Frontends: https://search.pullpush.io, https://ihsoyct.github.io


That was in reference to Discord, not Reddit. Reddit is searchable ~fine via Google and its internal search (but I wouldn’t be surprised if they at some point break that in exchange for more forced signups and to prevent “AI content theft” like Twitter).




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