I dont know if this has been asked before or if this may be a little goofy of a question but I didn’t see anything relating to it and I’m kinda curious what the culture of Lemmy is like and what sort of common things people see. ive been paying attention to interactions but nothing is as good as just asking everyone.

      • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.ml
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        2 months ago

        I’m imagine people in tech are inherently over-represented on niche social platforms. Although, I do find that lemmy tends to have a political aspect to it as well that makes it attractive to people who might not care about stuff like open source.

  • FeelThePower@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 months ago

    Gen Z weeb from FL living in CA for a couple years now, almost went the IT route and finished trade school but ended up just working a part time service job to have more free time at the cost of being poorer lol

  • gregorum@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    Since lemmy is decentralized, the demographics are going to vary greatly depending on the instance. You’d have to create a pretty generalized poll and then post to most of the major instances to get anything close to even a general read.

    • jeffw@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      On Hexbear, for example, everyone shares their Russian heritage and, presumably, the same employer

            • Lemmeenym@lemm.ee
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              2 months ago

              Hexbear seems a little passive, they could be a little more aggressive in their interactions. Also they don’t include enough random spam and shit posting when they find a thread they want to interact with. What’s really sad though is that they only tend to engage with one or two representatives instead of sending every user on their server into the thread.

    • confuser@lemmy.zipOP
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      2 months ago

      at first I wasnt picturing how that would work exactly but then I realized you are a bit locked down into your own communities a bit unless you intentionally explore other areas or mainly look at the everything section

      • gregorum@lemm.ee
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        2 months ago

        Not so much. One has the freedom to explore and subscribe and participate in communities across the lemmyverse (mostly) regardless of what one’s home instance is.

        However, one’s home instance often has quite the influence on one’s… perspective and one’s exposure— even one’s intended exposure.

        For example, one will probably have a notably different experience if one starts from Lemmy.world vs lemmy.ml (or even lemmygrad.ml) vs lemm.ee. Or, especially Beehaw.org. And that experience may color how one views how one experiences external communities.

        My point is that it’s mor complex and nuanced than you’re giving it credit for.

  • j4k3@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    You’ll find a lot of FOSS developers on here. This is a general community and all that, but there is a large Linux and open source software interest here. Some people simply don’t understand things like the scope of FOSS software in terms of both users and developers, so that can create some tension at times. There are a lot of experts and radical thinkers in this space. You may or may not find help on super niche questions, but say something wrong or poorly, and you’re likely to find the experts soon thereafter. For instance, I am confident enough to ask advanced course computer science questions and get useful answers here. I find this place useful for second sourcing info from AI that I find plausible but sketchy. Like I got into fermentation but have no interest in the whole commercialized nonsense hobby junk. Almost all sources are poisoned by commercial interests and misguided nonsense. Just asking here gets lots of people with practical knowledge on fundamental techniques from long before it was some commercialized hobby.

    The group behind the fediverse is very diverse and that diversity is reflected in the user space here in Lemmy.

  • Dr. Moose@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    It’s mostly nerds who had the spine to migrate from Reddit rather than continueing to feed this machine that clearly brings no good for anyone.

  • Asherah@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I’m here because I got permabanned on Reddit haha. Chuds mass reported me multiple times and Reddit got sick of it, I guess. Probably for the best, the website is a true shithole nowadays and absolutely overrun with literal children.

    • grue@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      I was planning to leave with the mass-migration a year ago anyway, but Reddit conveniently suspended my account for “mod abuse” because the snowflake r/conservative mods were butthurt that I was reporting the misinformation they were trying to spread.

      (In other words, it proved to me that Reddit is run by fascists.)

  • Today@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Female, old, non-techie but in the one fourth of people in my office who can set up a printer.

  • dan@upvote.au
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    2 months ago

    I’m an Aussie in my early-mid 30s. I’ve been living in the USA for the past 11 years. I’ve been a software developer, mostly focusing on web development, since the late 90s personally and since the mid 2000s professionally. I was an early Digg user, moved to Reddit during the Digg exodus, then moved to Lemmy during the Reddit exodus.

    I believe that people on the internet should own their platform, for example run their own blog or e-commerce site, participate in decentralized services like Lemmy, etc. Opera Unite was something I found very interesting in terms of allowing people to easily run their own decentralized stuff, and I’m kinda sad it never took off. I self-host things like email and DNS.

    I’m a big believer in open-source software and released my first piece of OSS in 2005.

    I love listening to people that are passionate about something and get excited when talking about it. Doesn’t really matter what it is or if it’s a topic I’m interested in.

    • eldavi@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      I’m an Aussie in my early-mid 30s. I’ve been living in the USA for the past 11 years. I’ve been a software developer, mostly focusing on web development, since the late 90s personally and since the mid 2000s professionally.

      so your birth year would be somewhere between 1987 to 1993; you started professional web development when you were 14 to 20 years old? you moved to the us somewhere between 20 and 26 years old?

      i didn’t even start dating until i was 27 and my career at 26 while my first website was at 16 years old and i never truly left the country; you’re either very impressive or lucky af! i envy you! ;)

      • dan@upvote.au
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        2 months ago

        Right in the middle of that range (1990). I started learning about computers when I was around 8 years old. My mum bought an old 486 second-hand, and I spent most of my free time using it. We didn’t have a lot of money, and the computer was a great way to entertain myself without needing to spend anything. I had a bunch of shareware/freeware games, but something that really interested me was the Visual Basic system built in to Microsoft Office. In Excel, I’d record macros then look at the code to see how they worked.

        Eventually, I did some web development work when I was at school. I built quizzes for some teachers - back when Internet Explorer was used by practically every one, and code was often in VBScript rather than JavaScript. I learnt web development by looking at the source code of the sites I used - that’s not really possible these days due to how large and minified/obfuscated CSS and JS files are now.

        I’ve got a copy of one of my sites from 2003: http://www.dansoftaustralia.net/oldest/. Unfortunately a lot of the images are broken. I need to find a copy of them… Maybe in the internet archive.

        I went to university from 2008-2011, with a one year work placement (like an internship) in the third year. After I graduated, I started working again at the same company. In 2013, a recruiter from a tech company in Silicon Valley reached out to me over LinkedIn and asked if I’d be interested in applying. I didn’t think I’d get through the interview process, but I did, and moved to the USA. 11 years later, I’m still working at the same company.

        I’m sure there’s things you’ve done that I haven’t done. You should focus on things you’ve accomplished rather than things you envy about other people :)

  • Mycatiskai@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    I’m an early 40s guy who moved north to get away from the city and live a more relaxed life in a small town. I’m liking it so far except the country music that my new job has on the radio but I’m doing more physical work again which is better for my health than sitting on my ass all day as a manager at my last job.