I’m a nurse and reddit has a nursing subreddit I like to contribute to because they give good advice regarding my job, how to deal with arrogant doctors, bitchy coworkers… they know things a regular user in a generic channel couldn’t answer, because they don’t know the job.

I think asking in a channel like this for nursing advice doesn’t make much sense, because this is not a nursing specific channel.

Something similar happens to my workplace questions: there is an antiwork lemmy, but the one in reddit is much larger and they also have a work community, and so far I haven’t found anything like that on lemmy.

Another issue is size: For some problems, like violence in the hospital I need speedy advice and I get that faster when the communities are larger. Reddit is larger.

Simply replying ‘we don’t monetize’ while true and one reason why I turned to lemmy and don’t use reddit as much now, is not convincing enough for my particular case.

  • Otter@lemmy.ca
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    6 months ago

    It’s not one or the other, people have lives outside of the fediverse and community building takes time

    • auf@lemmy.ml
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      6 months ago

      Well, considering these downvotes, it seems that not everyone here is a zealot like me. I have deleted my account on Reddit. I once had two, but removed them all since they killed third party apps. I’m here with a purpose, to eventually and ultimately kill all those centralized platforms. In my opinion, alternating reddit completely with lemmy is feasible. YouTube must be the most difficult one because it requires very large infrastructure to stream high quality videos without stress.