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Reddit's DaystromInstitute

Posted: Wed Oct 28, 2015 8:03 pm
by 2046
If you follow my blog you've seen references to Reddit lately, and I have been meaning to gank ideas from there for posting here for our own discussion.

Suffice it to say, it is like having multiple 359s posting simultaneously, meaning it is one of, if not the, premiere sites for Trek Tech and setting discussion active today that I know of. The signal to noise ratio is decent, but I find the place too busy and too repetitve. You can get the same question or idea floated a dozen times, but occasionally really new gems (or really new stinkers) of ideas come out.

I actually haven't been there or here much in days, but it is one of my prime spots on geek rounds. Alas, there is nothing even remotely similar for Star Wars.

https://www.reddit.com/r/DaystromInstitute/

Re: Reddit's DaystromInstitute

Posted: Sun Nov 01, 2015 5:29 pm
by Mr. Oragahn
The Reddit format is just one notch about old school MySpace.
How did this forum become so popular? Was there a large amount of liberty given to users?

Re: Reddit's DaystromInstitute

Posted: Sun Dec 13, 2015 9:43 pm
by 2046
I can't speak to Reddit's popularity generally. The upvoting and downvoting is probably the biggest difference compared to other forum technologies, allowing for a "democratic phrenzy" to overtake unpopular views.

To my mind, it is basically a flat-page Boardhost message board (that's old-school) with voting on posts.

Re: Reddit's DaystromInstitute

Posted: Sun Jan 10, 2016 1:28 am
by Mr. Oragahn
The format is just to unbearable. I think the voting system was just an attractive way for all sorts of sycophants to act as generals upon other people's opinions. The terrible layout alone is a strong deterrent. I've skimmed several reddits and there's simply way too much noise.

Although at least they do have a lot of activity... :(

Re: Reddit's DaystromInstitute

Posted: Sun Jan 10, 2016 1:47 am
by 2046
Too much activity, for me. I tried keeping up for awhile but there's just too much, and it is so repetitive.