justaweirdvivi

just 4 raccoons in a trenchcoat.

  • it/fae/she(/they)

(currently preferring it/its pronouns)
https://justaweirdvivi.neocities.org.


your local plural gay ace nb transfem genderfluid raccoon. (θΔ)
18 y/o. speaking 🇩🇪/🇬🇧. meows and awoos a lot.


as seen on the fediverse and the birdsite.


for DMs:
message me on matrix (@luna:fef.moe) or discord (@trenchcoatraccoons)


new pfp: toon me! picrew

old pfp: picrew #1322863

:3


atomicthumbs
@atomicthumbs

Cohost needs only adopt a more complicated addressing scheme to beat Mastodon at its own game. They have email-style usernames, sure. atomicthumbs@mastodon.social and atomicthumbs@mastodon.xyz can be completely different accounts and even people, sure.

But we can go further.

Cohost must immediately adopt X.400-compliant addresses for assured reference to users. Please use the following string to contact me, per RFC 1327:

/CN=atomicthumbs/OU=Users/O=Cohost/ADMD=Anti Software Software Club/C=USA

Thank you for your time. I look forward to the immediate adoption of this suggestion and the additional adoption of F.200 compliant Teletex terminals as a first-class access method. It's beyond time we upgraded from our outdated modems to a dedicated network.


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in reply to @atomicthumbs's post:

I know this is totally tongue placed firmly in cheek, but I do have some legitimate concerns about the way Cohost has intentionally designed their experience that I think is going to stunt my use of the site compared to Mastodon.

Most notable is that it is impossible to see any actual interaction numbers attached to my posts. Not that I care how big they get, but just that I can see that people are liking and reposting the things I put out there for people to see and enjoy and share, and the bigger those numbers are, the happier that I am that I made something that people like to share. I get none of that feedback here and it makes the place feel too sterile and disinterested.

This is one of the main reasons I think cohost is better than other social sites out there. The volume of likes passes through my notifications feed, but it's actively working to deprogram me from caring about the actual number itself unless I chose to count the likes directly, and it does this without reducing the real spread / reach of the content.

I think maybe some filtering options in the notifications page itself would be useful, since the notification page is a bit hard to navigate if one post is doing numbers among others that arent. But for having the actual numbers of shares and likes on a post itself, i don't believe that is something that serves to ultimately benefit us

We will have to agree to disagree on that viewpoint, then. To me, it makes Cohost feel sterile, disinterested, and unwelcoming. Hell, I'm literally getting more engagement on the in-character Mastodon toot that I made, that also links right back to the in-character post I made here as @theimperialtoy, as we speak, which is honestly a pretty stark and telling difference imo.

I love reading the comments and replies that I get, and I have fun responding to them if they're ones that I can respond to. I like to see that the stuff I share is doing numbers more than the numbers themselves, but I also like to see what kind of numbers they're doing because it's honestly kind of fun to see just how many people are enjoying what I share enough to like it and re-share it.

To have absolutely none of that here just makes it feel like idk what I'm spending my time and attention on here and that's when the social rejection dysphoria starts to kick in a little.

it is intentional, but with the goal that Cohost is less addictive.

Twitter's heavily addictive. I check the site all the time. I'm on there for many hours a day. I refresh and refresh even when there's nothing new. I watch my numbers go up. It's not healthy.

Cohost has a different feel to it; I don't find myself checking this place for the specific dopamine hit that Twitter gives me. I check it when I'm bored and want to see something new.

When I post my photography, I get a flood of like notifications and reshares. Sometimes someone will find something I made months ago and share it and it starts coming up in my feed again. I can't go back and check to see if people liked it; I have to remember.

I imagine you're at least a little addicted to Mastodon, in that way. I like how this place doesn't feel like a Skinner box I've willingly trapped myself inside. It's nice.

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