@manton As someone who appreciates simplicity, gentleness and slowness I love the vibe of micro.blog. But it's a sharp contrast to the larger internet. Even though you've made great efforts to embrace the open web and federation micro.blog has the vibe of a cul-de-sac.
I often see threads and thoughts here, and again, a vibe, that oh, we don't need or want the stuff other networks have. A rejection of certain kinds of engagement and discovery. Those are things that many people want, that help make a network sticky.
On a daily basis I bounce back and forth between micro.blog and Mastodon. To compare...
Mastodon:
- Many clients to choose from. Generally they have more features and are fun to use. Whimsy.
- Boosts, likes are things people want and use often.
- Diversity. More people, more stickiness. It feels more interesting.
Micro.blog:
- Fewer clients. Very simple, dare I say, plain.
- No boosting or way to quickly like/appreciate a post. You and many here prefer that. That's fine but many want those features.
- A much smaller community here that feels cliquish. While inviting, it still feels small and closed in some ways.
I generally prefer the vibe of Mastodon because it feels more social, more lively, more interesting.
I don't know what you do, if anything to advertise or otherwise promote micro.blog. I don't know how often folks here share about micro.blog in other social media. But given so many seem to be content with the quiet, under the radar aspects of micro.blog it's not surprising that it there's no "buzz".
Calm and quiet might also be construed as plain or boring. Many people use social media because they seek "engagement" but again, that is sort of looked down upon here. Sometimes feels like: Oh, we're above that. We don't need those shallow forms of easy dopamine hits here.
You've built a service that is full of features and works very well and yet it does not seem to generate much excitement. It's laid back in every way. And so journalists don't think about it. If they know about it they forget about it because it's not being talked about.