- cross-posted to:
- fediverse@kbin.social
- cross-posted to:
- fediverse@kbin.social
CalcKey adopts a new name, new logo, new site, and new project infrastructure. While the name is somewhat odd, this feels like a really big step forward for the project.
CalcKey adopts a new name, new logo, new site, and new project infrastructure. While the name is somewhat odd, this feels like a really big step forward for the project.
Also … a quick skim and I can see that it features friendica/diaspora (and hubzilla?) heavily … which totally tracks!
While those platforms all seem to be born out of a facebook model of social media (?), in terms of creating user empowerment and a diverse ecosystem, it does feel like the modern fediverse has a little bit of NIH syndrome. It’d be interesting to nail down if that’s true or not and if so why/how. Either way, that the whole fediverse is dominated by the Twitter/microblog model instead, does not feel like a positive phenomenon to me.
Thanks for the post!!
So, the short answer is: different platforms were developed at different times with different goals in mind. It just so happened that something OStatus-based (now AP), with a focus on microblogging, became the popular thing. And basically everything else in the space had to build compatibility for the way it did things.
Digging in a bit more, there are a few things that really contributed to Mastodon’s success over other efforts at the time:
Up until this point, every attempt failed at one of these three things. Diaspora had an okay interface, and great word-of-mouth, but no support for mobile. (They also had other problems in development, but that’s another story). Friendica had an ugly interface, a brilliant backend, and a very small hobbyist community. Mike Macgirvin also has a habit of spinning off new projects from old ones, to chase some wild hair he’s got regarding how to do something new. So, you have kind of a fragmented community of “kind-of” supported platforms and no marketing.
Anyway, to the point: while the fediverse does have some NIH going on, many of the foundational technologies are shared, like Webfinger and ActvityPub. Contrast this with Tent, which really threw the baby out with the bathwater, and tried to do everything from the ground up with just two guys building it. It didn’t end well.
Anyway, sorry, rant over. 😛
No no … great rant!!
If we had some sort of microblogging feature set here I’d boost. Though I guess one could post a link to this comment as a top level post, just like a quote-tweet or something … hmmm.