You are viewing a single comment's thread from:

RE: Update: Communities/Hivemind

in #steem6 years ago

@roadscape, this all looks good and sounds promising, and.... well, I'm with @surfermarly in saying that "connecting creators and curators" sounds great!

The reason that makes me happy is that it has often seemed like almost everything that comes from STINC is about developers and apps and SMTs... which is all good and fine, but there's a large population of us who live down here at what you might call the "retail level" of Steemit.

Our concern isn't what we can develop but how we can interact with the site, with the content, and with each other. The biggest challenge we face is that content discovery is difficult and often clumsy. We have few fundamental social content tools to make the curation process easier. Even on Farcebook and twatter, you can (for example) sort the people you follow into "groups" from which you can create custom feeds.

I feel hopeful that hivemind/communities will allow for better categorization of content... and NOT ONLY for those who speak fluent C++. php or whatever technical underpinnings run this place. We need tools on Steemit that work along the lines of "explain this to me like I'm a five-year old."

Yes, it IS amazing how far we've come with "primitive tools!" (Thank God I still remember how to speak HTML!) and kudos for that. On the other hand, to gain ANY sort of mass market following, this needs to become a slickly coded, user-friendly, intuitive user interface.

I hope that's at least PART of what's on the way!

Sort:  

Our concern isn't what we can develop but how we can interact with the site, with the content, and with each other. The biggest challenge we face is that content discovery is difficult and often clumsy.

I couldn't have said this any better @denmarkguy!

What you call 'retail level' is the majority of users :-)

I've done all my blog posts in HTML, too, since the editor would've never allowed me to professionally design my articles. That's completely fine - for you and me and a couple of more people. But it's a barrier for the masses.

The average user needs usability, guidance and tools to easily bring their content on the blockchain. They also don't want to search content, they want it to be offered.

But hey, we've been giving the same advices for months. In Germand I'd say now:

Let's nail jelly to the wall.

:-)

Absolutely.