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Are you a computer/tech person?

I’m a huge nerd, so the reason I joined Lemmy is because I was looking for a social media platform that conforms with my views on FOSS, moderation, and internet privacy. I would assume many other people are in the same boat, but is that accurate? Who’s just here because they looked up “Reddit alternatives?”

78 comments
  • Not a tech person. I'm a seamstress/tailor who will make you feel like the smartest person in the room when I ask questions about computers. Never knew so much about internet privacy before Lemmy, either. It's been eye-opening to learn about tech-stuff on Lemmy!

    I left R×ddit out of spite, then found out youtubers made videos reading out my posts and said goodbye to it forever. It became a free content farm ripe for mishandling, astroturfing, and paid propaganda.

    My stubborn ass will learn something beyond simple navigation because I'm always wanting to skirt injustice and do what little I can to not support rampant capitalism (I have no money!)

    I mean.... I learned Blender. I'm capable of pretty much everything!

  • I only used reddit through an app so when they closed the api that was the day reddit shut down for me, I came looking for meme pages. I forget about reddit, I have my memes and shitposts. Sure, fewer than the before times but I also see less guerilla marketing so that's nice.

  • Yes, I am and before you ask: no, I will not help you fix your grandma's PC.

  • I'm a techie and left reddit after the api-desaster. I won't use things when they have ads. Period. And I'm glad I found lemmy.

  • It depends on the community, but in general people on Lemmy love FOSS. The linux community is very helpful and friendly (although headstrong). Moderation depends on your instance (.ml is quite politically motivated). Privacy on the platform is non existent due to how the software works, but in general, people here do care about privacy related topics.

    • That is true but doesn't necessarily mean you're a tech person. I don't consider myself one, in fact I come here for help when I have questions or issues. I do appreciate foss and privacy but I'm not hardcore on either. I've certainly known a lot of people with even less understanding than me about tech, but I don't think I qualify as a tech myself and I believe there are many others here in a similar situation as me

      • True, I didn't actually answer the question. I suppose it's because yes, I am a tech person. I am a senior systems engineer and software developer with a career of over 20 years. I have run my own tech company for 10 of those years, and recently went back to work in a corporate setting as lead developer for a contact center software company.

  • I'm just here for the Reddit alternative. Being FOSS is a bonus.

    I'd say I'm more of a computer person than the average person, but less so than the average Lemmy user.

    • Same here. Reminds me that Reddit was mostly techy posts for the first while too.

  • I came to Lemmy just looking for a Reddit alternative. I think this is a superior forum system with user scoring and nested comments. But I do love that it is open and federated and I'm glad to be rid of Reddit completely.

    I am a huge tech nerd and love doing these things as side projects (but I prefer making hardware). I like making stuff so the things I've been making/setting up are:

    • Setting up a R.Pi as a retro gaming console
    • R.Pi Kodi media player
    • Putting together a hotswap keyboard from a kit
    • Migrating to privacy alternatives and degoogling my life
    • Migrating to Linux
    • Making a fight game controller from scratch
    • Making a custom keyboard with soldering and custom layout (and then again for having the same keyboard at work)
    • Building a new gaming PC
    • Getting a synology NAS and going down the Docker rabbit hole
    • Making another fight game controller.......or 3

    Now I'm planning making a DIY microphone for MS Teams meetings

  • I'm techie enough to be interested in federated social media networks. I'm techie enough to start using Linux. Ain't that enough techie?

    • crawls out of a gutter and sneers
      where's your collection of broken calculator watches that you swear you'll fix some day?
      scuttles back into sewer

  • I'm a bit of a FOSS nerd and care about privacy, but I'm much more an art and design person than I am a technical person.

    I use Linux, and I can write some very basic code after learning how in Highschool, but mostly I just like making pretty stuff. Especially anything to-do with UI/UX

    Like someone else said, I'm a technical person compared to the average population, but not compared to Lemmy, or the FLOSS community. I left reddit when the api changes happened, and have found I really love the Fediverse and very strongly believe in what it represents

  • I'm a little of both, I joined for escaping the reddit blackout shutdown, but I stayed for the advantages of the fediverse. I grew up working with a lot of proprietary software, and I've had growing pains as I've grown bitter about proprietary software over time. I've been self hosting, working on migrating my machines to Linux, and trying to find workable alternatives to everything.

    Edit: yes I'm quite techy, a DevSecOps/software engineer. I worked with Linux a long time through VMs and containers, but gaming and Adobe kept me from having a daily driver machine for more than a little while. I don't think I'll ever fully escape Windows because I'm a big .NET developer and work with a lot of legacy code, but I'm more than happy to leave that to a QEMU VM.

  • Like most people on this site, I'm a happy consumer who rejects FOSS (McIBM is enough for me thank you), hates moderation (spicy pickles on icecream is my breakfast), and routinely walks the neighbourhood naked because I think privacy is for prudes. I'm only here as a spy for Reddit and routinely report all activity to Sir Zuckerberg since I hope to start a romantic endeavour with him one day...

    ...what kind of answers were you hoping to get?

78 comments