I like that I can follow people from my niche hobbies list+pros from the field I want to be active in. Averege users are so jaded and will complain for every network error they encounter. Don't get me wrong, people flock where the action is, they will learn how to do stuff on the fediverse just as they learned fb or other social media. I kinda dread those times, but I refuse to just gatekeep.
Mastodon
Decentralised and open source social network.
I just don't use Mastodon because I never cared for Twitter.
Well, In 10+ years, I've never managed to understand how Twitter works, so I guess there's nowhere to go but up?
Honestly, how hard is it to understand the 'multiple websites working together to sync their contents' part?
Meanwhile, when you sign up for Threads your timeline is nothing but shitty influencers for the first few days, yet somehow they manage to press on through that without getting the vapors or whatever.
I still don't even know what the servers on lemmy are, each "subreddit" is a different server?
They tend to portray everything new and/or different as bad or complicated
I had to get used to it, but then again, I never really used Twitter. I'm not a big fan of Mastodon (the format) but I really do like kbin. I was a reddit user, and this is much more familiar. Nice that it's all really just the same thing just presented in different ways and of course, no single entity controls the whole thing. 😊👍
To be honest, I'm not tech illiterate and still struggle with Mastodon. I struggle to search/find stuff to follow outside of my local server. I know it's there and doable, but it should be obvious on how to find what I want to follow. If I struggle even a little bit with this, the average casual user, which these platforms will need for long term success, won't even bother.
Every minor obstacle is a "quit moment" where you can lose people. A bit more hand holding would probably benefit the platform.