The culture on Hive discourages consumption in several ways. One mistake since 2016 was viewing those who don't post as lesser, lazy, noncontributing, useless members. Yet that crowd is why a Youtube video has millions of views.
The culture on Hive discourages consumption in several ways. One mistake since 2016 was viewing those who don't post as lesser, lazy, noncontributing, useless members. Yet that crowd is why a Youtube video has millions of views.
I agree. Especially being someone that don't post very often.
I also think that on InLeo this sentiment is changing/has largely changed with the introduction of microblogging and soon also the ability to give likes without spending voting power
I agree that approach could help separate engagement and support, then contributing to more of each. I like what InLeo is doing. But this always feels like I'm on a remote island, disconnected from the rest of the place.
perhaps being disconnected from the rest is what gives us a better culture
I’ve been working for years to change to a “like if you like” “create if you want” approach
Microblogging and the introduction of microvideo (shorts) last week are how we’re tackling this
Abstract the complexity and the layer 1 “blog post” and you remove this culture entirely
I would naturally disagree with the tribalism elements found in your first sentence. Doesn't make you better, it makes you different. It's even more inviting when individuals don't need to fit into a culture of sorts. Food for thought.
Disagreements are always welcome
Some won’t like this platform and that’s fine. They can go elsewhere
We will cater to the people who like our values and fit with our culture
Fair enough. It's yours.
Common side-effects include: limited reach and annoyed customers writing poor reviews. "You either like my cooking, or you get out," said the struggling chef.
many of the best chefs in the world also would say the same
The middle is a place of mediocrity
Think of how out of place you feel on vacation when you don't speak the language. And how you're recognized as an outsider while visiting something like a remote island. At times I've felt that way here.
This Is pretty common when you enter any new culture/friend group, etc.
Meeting and interacting w new people will always carry an element of the unknown
Embrace uncertainty
I get it dude. I also recognize the fact "tokenized communities" are a new invention. Something I enjoy studying, and there's still a lot to learn.
First, I'm happy to see you. Been awhile. I hope you're well. Off and on, I've been been seeing the progress. Can be easier to see change when one isn't there all day every day. One critique incoming, can't fit entire thought please hold
great to see you again too!
Oh I'm feeling it.
I got support from the big boys when I was posting every single day for 6 years. I take a few months off, and poof...lol
I get out of sight out of mind, but it's crazy how quick you are forgotten lol
I'm definitely not one of the big boys, but I still remember for what it's worth. I never was very active in your livestreams, but I was a regular listener of Cryptomaniacs for years. Happy to see your name whenever you happen to stop by
My experience was quite different. Look how rarely I posted on Hive. Support would always roll in, and the engagement was "high" consistently, by Hive standards. Now I don't post and would like to hang out and consume/support. Not useless.
well yeah, because you had fantastic content and actually stirred conversations. Myself on the other hand, just spewed random insanity lol
Throughout that whole experience and even looking back, I still don't know how I managed to do that. Never once expected it. I thought I was "random insanity" lol.
lol maybe it's everyone here lol
Noticed over the years plenty have a unique energy (hard to describe) that isn't found so often in one place. Wasn't the culture propelling that. Just people actually being people.