Newbie here. My keyboard just completely crapped out (it’s been a long time coming). I have a wishlist of features that I was hoping to run by one of the techy communities to see if anyone could recommend a model, but none of the communities I’m seeing are geared toward those kinds of questions.

I can search communities, but if I don’t guess the correct title then I’m SOL… Is there a directory that doesn’t just list the communities, but actually categorizes them so I can more effectively find a hit?

Also is it worth posting in a ‘dead’ community? Unsure if a new post will have any visibility in places like /all if the post itself is in a community that no one frequents.

Learning the ropes here.

Thanks all!

  • nocturne@slrpnk.net
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    6 days ago

    Posting in a dead community will put the post on all, unlike Reddit. And anyone whose instance sees that community and does not have it blocked could see the post. But a heavily populated community is going to be better.

    !pcmasterrace@lemmy.world may be a good place to try.

    • TheTechnician27@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      Not only that, but sorting by ‘New’ on Lemmy is a viable strategy for finding worthwhile material, so I assume at least some people do (and I could stand to more often).

      On Reddit, if you’re a real human person, you’re probably either doing that in a specific subreddit or, if you have nothing better to do, searching for a gold nugget in a pile of manure.

    • Murse@slrpnk.netOP
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      6 days ago

      That kind of illustrates the struggle though: a bunch of hyper-specific results not suitable for general questions, or communities that have only seen a handful of posts, ever.

      Per other posters though, that last bit doesn’t sounds like it’ll pose the issue I feared.

      • TranquilTurbulence@lemmy.zip
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        6 days ago

        This highlights one of the main problems. Lemmy communities tend to be small or dead. With numbers like this, it’s hard to compete with Reddit.

        • electric_nan@lemmy.ml
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          6 days ago

          Lemmy isn’t “competing” with Reddit. It isn’t trying to “earn market share”, or make a profit, or sell data, or train AI, or manipulate the public discourse. It’s user friendly, rather than antagonistic. As far as content: it builds slowly. If you have a niche interest that you’d like to see more of, then create or join a comm and make regular posts.

          • TranquilTurbulence@lemmy.zip
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            6 days ago

            That’s true, and I totally agree. However, many people don’t see it that way. When someone leaves Reddit, they tend to look for a drop-in replacement.

            What they find here is a smaller place with early Reddit vibes, which is good and bad at the same time. They would like to hang out in a niche community with thousands of like-minded users, but they’ll only find a community with a hundred users and two posts a month. Market share isn’t really an indicator of quality, but it does tell you something about the amount of activity.

  • Rhynoplaz@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    Go for the dead ones! I’m subscribed to things that haven’t had a post in forever, but I’ll still see it when someone eventually does!

  • alakey@piefed.social
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    6 days ago

    On the off chance one of your desired features is gamepad emulation - Wooting is the only one that has a full proper implementation of it via xinput emulation. Keychron has partial support and Razer has full support but in a different manner (don’t remember the specifics).