I read something recently that gave me food for thought. An alternative has to be 10x better for people to switch; and the core experience is what convinces people, not cool extra features.
I don't know how universally applicable it is, but I wonder how Mastodon stacks up in that. Personally I think it's 10x better, but is it really? Or more importantly, are we communicating clearly that it is?
@Gargron "10x better" sounds like BS, to me, because you can't actually quantify relative quality like that in any sort of measurable way.
Taking the question as "enough of an improvement for people to switch", it depends a lot on two things. a) the use case of the person who might be switching, and b) how steep of a learning curve they're willing to go through to give another service a chance. (1/2)
@InspectorCaracal Yes, but it's like when the SV crowd talks about the 10x developer or whatever. It's unquantifiable, but at the same time you get an idea of what is meant. That being said you're right, this may not be applicable to Mastodon. For all we know, people would use literal garbage as long as enough famous people were also using it.
@InspectorCaracal i mean i just really don't think that way personally and i don't really get the argument...you can continue using both websites at once its not like you can commit only to one social media site.
i just made new friends and called it a day
-, digital natives Show more

@dulcet ...are you a bot?
@dulcet okay I see on reviewing that you are not a bot, so I just wanted to let you know, that last bit with the Rolling Stone interview was for some reason a reply to me
That's uncharitable. It's easier to find people who have similar hobbies or interests on Twitter because it has a larger userbase.