Trying to make !graybeard@lemmy.cafe a thing, but so far allbymyself.gif. Was sort of looking to have it as a sysadminy discussion thing, but lemmy is too small for it, yet, so it’s just a bunch of links to The Register, Drew DeVault and a couple others.
The name might not directly say what this is about, which might limit the chances of someone stumbling upon it. Maybe !sysadmin@lemmy.cafe would make it more clear?
Maybe, but then I’m not aiming for generic sysadmin. I was hoping to get true graybeards to share their experience(s). It’ll get there, I think, but it will take a lot more than just a few tens of thousands of users to get enough people from the crowd.
As a beard (long past the pfy stage, still have a ways to go till gray status) I understand the desire to avoid the type of basic shit that seems to show up in sysadmin communities now. Way too much “I’m the only IT guy so they gave me a fancy title, but I’m doing Tier 2 helpdesk work at best” flying around in the admin spaces lately. The non admin spaces are even worse, with regular “sky is falling” articles about Windows features that are disable-able with a single click in a top level settings menu.
That said, if the space gets popular, it’s going to attract all types, including the newbies with inflated egos. Kind of a catch 22. You need it to be popular to attract any users, but you’re trying to cater to a specific subset.
I’d start with filling out the community description/sidebar, myself. Beyond that, you’ve got a new subscriber here.
Trying to make !graybeard@lemmy.cafe a thing, but so far
allbymyself.gif
. Was sort of looking to have it as a sysadminy discussion thing, but lemmy is too small for it, yet, so it’s just a bunch of links to The Register, Drew DeVault and a couple others.The name might not directly say what this is about, which might limit the chances of someone stumbling upon it. Maybe !sysadmin@lemmy.cafe would make it more clear?
Maybe, but then I’m not aiming for generic sysadmin. I was hoping to get true graybeards to share their experience(s). It’ll get there, I think, but it will take a lot more than just a few tens of thousands of users to get enough people from the crowd.
Good luck, seriously.
As a beard (long past the pfy stage, still have a ways to go till gray status) I understand the desire to avoid the type of basic shit that seems to show up in sysadmin communities now. Way too much “I’m the only IT guy so they gave me a fancy title, but I’m doing Tier 2 helpdesk work at best” flying around in the admin spaces lately. The non admin spaces are even worse, with regular “sky is falling” articles about Windows features that are disable-able with a single click in a top level settings menu.
That said, if the space gets popular, it’s going to attract all types, including the newbies with inflated egos. Kind of a catch 22. You need it to be popular to attract any users, but you’re trying to cater to a specific subset.
I’d start with filling out the community description/sidebar, myself. Beyond that, you’ve got a new subscriber here.
Then maybe try to promote it on !newcommunities@lemmy.world and !communitypromo@lemmy.ca ? That can help
I might have to. Feels weird advertising it, though. Maybe it’s just all in my head
It’s really okay with how difficult community discoverability is