Discord is a poor replacement for forums. It's like hearing every conversation in a nightclub all at once. IRC, ICQ, MSN Messenger, and AOL Chat never killed forums, and I doubt Discord will either.
I hope not. I don't understand when people suggest discord as a replacement for forums or things like reddit. It's not really the same thing at all.
And that's to say nothing of it being pretty targeted towards gamers and gamer culture. I am a gamer and don't mind it but it's a barrier to adoption for people who aren't at all into that.
Slack kills me. A group of friends of mine from college use it to stayb in touch. Our instance has a dozen or so users, half of them mostly lurk to stay in the loop. For us active members it would definitely be worth paying 7.25/mo or whatever it is, but we don't want to lock out the others who don't really use it so often and they definitely wouldn't pay for it (and some can't really afford it).
I wish they had a tier below Pro for personal use (we aren't a business) that gave full post history and limited everything else and was maybe not per user billing but instead usage based. It's such a great, intuitive platform and works perfectly for our group of friends except that you can't go back to look at anything.
The best discord support servers have a wiki they regularly update with the solutions they've helped people solve, though sometimes by just including them in their how-to guides. At least, that's the case with certain console homebrew/modding communities.
You search for some rare issue 😐
You find a thread that might solve it 🙂
The person has exact same issue (just for a different reason) 😀
There's an accepted answer 😃
"You don't need to do it this way" 😭
There's a description field, could people please start putting a link to the original xkcd, i.e. https://xkcd.com/979/ in this case? It's not that hard.
Without attribution you're just doing copyright infringement (see also https://xkcd.com/license.html). And you're hiding useful and nice information like the title text, the title, an the xkcd number, which you can use to get a transcription and an explanation on explainxkcd.
I've had something similar happen, except the post that I found which fixed the problem was made by... me. Apparently I'd had the problem before, figured it out, and then posted an update about why it was happening and how to fix it.
No shit had the same experience some days ago. Felt incredibly smart for having the problem solved before and super stupid for not remembering that. I stackoverflowed my own solution. 🫣
This is my issue with redditors deleting all their content from reddit.
I agree with leaving because of the policy changes, but I think that adopting a scorched earth policy, mostly harms other users.
On some level, protest is about harming other people, at least mildly. Protests are frustrating. Protests are interrupting. Protested make it more difficult for people to do what they want.
This is by design. This is part of the point.
Protests that aren't inconveniencing people are protests that can be safely ignored.
It's all the better, though, when those inconveniences can be paired with a clear alternative for people to turn to to have their needs met.
The distinguishment needs to be made that inconveniencing people who cannot make the needed change makes the entire protest immediately irrelevant.
For example, protesting in the middle of a highway does not inconvenience anyone that has the power to make a change. Those politicians are far away from the protest and don't care because it doesn't effect them or their pocketbook.
For Reddit, making it inconvenient for other users directly effects Reddit. Less and less user traffic is a major inconvenience for a tech company attempting to IPO. And they have the power to change. However, at this point the damage is beyond rolling back, I think.
Indeed. I at least think they should repost the helpful information here to Lemmy so that users still have access to it, I understand driving traffic away from Reddit but we should keep that useful information open to the community.
I think many were just that disgusted still - but I do agree. Why I left mine if posted under technical subs - otherwise I removed mine by overwriting.
Yeah, personally I would have preferred keeping the content with some pretext like
[This user has opted to leave reddit because of changes listed (here) and (here). Their content will remain in case someone needs this answer in the future, but will be providing new content over at Lemmy).
The AI is already trained, deleting it didn't do much, or if the AI will continue to train hopefully text like that will start popping up in it.
TBH when I get this I usually question my request, am I asking the right thing? Is what I’m doing stupid or so bafflingly wrong that a simpler question might be answerable? Then I ask chatgpt and get the wrong answer…but at least it’s an answer