There is something wildly amusing to me about the fact that I’ve gotten more actual, human engagement with my posts in less than 1 week on Mastodon than I have in 13 years on Twitter. It’s almost as if monetizing engagement artificially shapes conversations. Or maybe I just got way better at posting overnight. It’s probably that second thing since the alternative means business guys are bad at people stuff and that capitalism has uncorrectable problems.
Question: at what point do folks consider themselves programmers? Or scientists?
I've written programs, but don't feel I've earned the title "programmer". I've used the scientific method to identify and resolve issues, but "scientist"? Not I. At what point do folks feel comfortable identifying themselves that way? Just wondering if anyone else is pondering what I'm pondering.
Some niche servers (a/k/a instances) I've bookmarked to peruse. A work in progress.
Journalism / Politics / Economics:
https://masthead.social/public
https://journa.host/public
https://democracy.town/public
https://mastodon.lol/public
https://econtwitter.net/public
Science / Medicine:
https://sciencemastodon.com/public
https://scicomm.xyz/public
https://mstdn.science/public
https://med-mastodon.com/public
https://sciences.social/public
https://fediscience.org/public
InfoSec:
https://ioc.exchange/public
https://infosec.exchange/public
The nice thing about Twitter self immolating is that folks who would otherwise never even look at alternative platforms seem to be kicking the tires and trying to make things work on other sites. Really helps with the chicken/egg issue. If Twitter -> Mastodon works, no reason to think there isn’t hope for Facebook -> Diaspora (or similar). At that point, only thing left to do would be to make friends to connect with. Exciting days ahead!
full of country goodness and green peaness