this post was submitted on 22 Mar 2024
5 points (100.0% liked)

PieFed Meta

329 readers
1 users here now

Discuss PieFed project direction, provide feedback, ask questions, suggest improvements, and engage in conversations related to the platform organization, policies, features, and community dynamics.

Wiki

founded 10 months ago
MODERATORS
 

I'm excited to see the new meme browsing interface feature in PieFed. I expected PieFed to be yet another Reddit clone using a different software stack and without any innovation. I believe there's an opportunity to take things a step further by blending the best elements of platforms like Reddit and image boards like Safebooru.

I wish there was a platform that was a mix between Reddit and image boards like Safebooru. The problem I have with Reddit is the time-consuming process of posting content; I should be able to post something in a few seconds, but often finding the right community takes longer than actually posting, and you have to decide whether to post in every relevant community or just the one that fits best. In the case of Lemmy, the existence of multiple similar communities across different instances makes this issue even worse.

I like how image boards like Safebooru offer a streamlined posting experience, allowing users to share content within seconds. The real strength of these platforms lies in their curation and filtering capabilities. Users can post and curate content, and others can contribute to the curation process by adding or modifying tags. Leaderboards showcasing top taggers, posters, and commenters promote active participation and foster a sense of community. Thanks to the comprehensive tagging system, finding previously viewed content becomes a breeze, unlike the challenges often faced on Reddit and Lemmy. Users can easily filter out unwanted content by hiding specific tags, something that would require blocking entire communities on platforms like Lemmy.

However, image boards also have their limitations. What I don't like about image boards is that they are primarily suited for image-based content and often lack robust text discussion capabilities or threaded comments, which are essential for fostering meaningful conversations.

Ideally, I envision a platform that combines the best of both worlds: the streamlined posting experience of image boards with the robust text discussion capabilities of platforms like Reddit and Lemmy.

I would be thrilled to contribute to a platform that considered some of the following features:

I would also like to see more community-driven development, asking users for feedback periodically in a post, and publicly stating what features devs will be working on. Code repositories issue trackers have some limitations. A threaded tree-like comment system is better for discussions, and having upvotes/downvotes helps surface the best ideas. I propose using a lemmy community as the issue tracker instead.

top 2 comments
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
[โ€“] [email protected] 1 points 7 months ago (1 children)

Lots of good ideas there!

I can see the need for tagging and it would make content from PieFed more discoverable on mastodon (which relies heavily on hashtags), too. Interesting idea to crowd-source the hashtags...

Ideally I'd like to use a PieFed community for discussion of ideas and feedback, and once some sort of decision/conclusion is reached move the tasks to the Codeberg issue tracker. At that point the idea should be solid enough that the only discussion that needs to happen is about getting the task done, which does not really need votes or a tree structure. I should get more structured and consistent about this process although it is difficult when there is so much else to do as well.

On Codeberg I've been using this kanban board to remind myself about the top priorities although in practice I tend to do a lot of other random stuff and other contributors submit whatever PRs they like. No one is getting paid so we just do whatever is fun or meaningful at the time. To bring a bit more coherence I'd like to eventually start having regular meetings with the other developers.

[โ€“] [email protected] 1 points 7 months ago

Just to chime in, https://lobste.rs/ also uses a tag system which is quite nice.