I totally agree with him. This will bring more people to the fediverse once they realize they can interact with their friends on Threads

  • Christian
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    1 year ago

    It’s irrelevant to you, but a community doesn’t have to be massive for it to be important to it’s users, it just has to be big enough for people to get something out of it regularly to keep the existing userbase engaged. Lemmy pre-migration is a great example. But if enough people leave in a short timespan it’s really hard to keep the remaining userbase engaged after that drop-off. XMPP is a good example of this actually happening, I had a bunch of friends on there for years. When google pulled the rug, a lot of users lost a lot of their reasons for sticking around. It’s a shell of itself now.

    • Dame
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      1 year ago

      XMPP was largely irrelevant before Google and went back to being that way after Google and a bunch of newer tech. It wasn’t directly connected to Google. Nothing outside of someone’s blog would even indicate that. I didn’t say it’s irrelevant to me. To me is not important. Globally and in terms of social media it is in fact irrelevant. Not even sure why you said irrelevant to me that doesn’t even match the context

      • Christian
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        1 year ago

        I had a community of people I would talk to on XMPP, the introduction of gchat brought more a lot more users we could IM with, gchat broke off from XMPP and most of my friends abandoned XMPP to stay with the userbase on gchat. I stayed logged on to XMPP for a while, a couple people did, but most of our discussions had moved to gchat. How can I come to any conclusion other than that this was connected to gchat?

        The person you replied to was talking about killing an existing social network by making it irrelevant. A community can definitely be alive while being irrelevant “globally and in terms of social media”. It dies when it loses relevance to its userbase.