this post was submitted on 24 Aug 2023
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NASA
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Eh, I disagree that dusty, under-used spaces are a negative, when you're on a spiffy new thing like this that nobody has heard of yet. (and that still feels like alpha release software)
I subscribed here with the idea it would be slower and quieter than the generalist space subs, but would be where I could come to discuss NASA-specific missions if I wanted.
Like, if I find an article on a NASA mission, I'd post it to a larger space sub. If I have a question about that mission, I'd post it here and wait.
You’re just not going to get the same engagement here as you do on Reddit. I never really paid attention until all the spez nonsense but even small communities on Reddit have hundreds of thousands of people subbed. The bigger subreddits have millions of active users.
Sadly most people are simply too addicted to Reddit and there was just not a great alternative during the spez drama. But lemmy did get a boost and the groundwork is being laid for this place to have a solid infrastructure for the next go around. And make no mistake, spez will find a way to do it again in the future. When that happens if lemmy has great apps that are easy to use and a thriving small community it will be a totally different story.
It’s truly a shame though. A guy like that can just blatantly disrespect an entire community and they collectively go ‘welp we are fine with this please do it more’ . Pathetic.
Yeah.
Regardless, small niche spaces do have their utility. Genuine experts generally don't like hanging out with all the pleb fans, it's just too much of a pain in the butt. Just go take a look back at r/space and look at some of the answers people come up with.
Orbital mechanics is just not an intuitive thing. Yet people think they "get it" without having to put the effort in. When there's millions of them, it becomes overwhelming.
Here though, an expert can hang out, see one post a month, and actually engage if they want. I'd thus expect more actual NASA employees and experts to be found here than in a larger community. Because normal people are annoying.
It’s quite eye opening once you become experienced/ trained in something and listen to people talk about it on Reddit. There’s so many people that think they know what they’re talking about and are quite confident while being completely incorrect. I see it with things I’m familiar with, what about topics where I’m not experienced? It really makes you stop and think.
I’m all for a smaller community that has actual experts chiming in without the layer of edge lords that waste all their time on Reddit.
Yeah. It's a fairly well-known thing that the larger an internet community gets, the more diluted it gets. There's exceptions, like r/askhistorians was, but they're rare, and often rely on something like utterly draconian moderation practices to even remain functional at a high level of quality.
The easiest way to find the best communities is to look for the small ones though. Places like this.
It wouldn't always necessarily be this way either. If the sub exploded and acquired millions of users, the tone of the place would progress through several evolutions.