Good points, words of the wise, but in my opinion dev.to should be putting more effort into pushing down the repetitive low quality content (listicles and all that) and promoting high quality. But then again who am I - maybe that would simply not be in dev.to's interest, if "listicles" is really what The People want.
So in fact what we can conclude is, if you really want to be "popular" on dev.to then you might have to make concessions. I'm not willing to make those, so I simply accept that I'm not popular ;)
(funny analogy - it just occurred to me that dev.to has evolved a bit into "the Instagram of the developer world" - looks matter more than content)
Accessibility First DevRel. I focus on ensuring content created, events held and company assets are as accessible as possible, for as many people as possible.
I certainly agree that it would be great to promote higher quality articles, but the “how” is the bit that is very difficult without manual intervention.
Maybe some clever machine learning / sentiment analysis / post analysis could do this in the near future but as with anything in that sphere, the second you give a black box a set of rules it becomes difficult to control (look at Google, it doesn’t work well anymore for complex queries as it has self optimised for the 90% and the engagement vs quality problem DEV has is similar, hell we could write a whole thesis on trying to solve it!)
The team at DEV are running experiments to try and fix the problem, but it is a very tough problem to crack, so that is why I suggest “playing the game” a little!
Right, but the question is if they even WANT to change it - many people simply like the listicles and the other dumbed down content. But, I do respect the people at dev.to, and I do believe they do want to promote better content more - I think they also see that if it's all getting too much dumbed down, then part of the audience will jump ship or simply check out (engage less).
And yeah I understand you, sometimes you have to be practical and play "their" game ... if you can't beat them then join them, lol.
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Good points, words of the wise, but in my opinion dev.to should be putting more effort into pushing down the repetitive low quality content (listicles and all that) and promoting high quality. But then again who am I - maybe that would simply not be in dev.to's interest, if "listicles" is really what The People want.
So in fact what we can conclude is, if you really want to be "popular" on dev.to then you might have to make concessions. I'm not willing to make those, so I simply accept that I'm not popular ;)
(funny analogy - it just occurred to me that dev.to has evolved a bit into "the Instagram of the developer world" - looks matter more than content)
I certainly agree that it would be great to promote higher quality articles, but the “how” is the bit that is very difficult without manual intervention.
Maybe some clever machine learning / sentiment analysis / post analysis could do this in the near future but as with anything in that sphere, the second you give a black box a set of rules it becomes difficult to control (look at Google, it doesn’t work well anymore for complex queries as it has self optimised for the 90% and the engagement vs quality problem DEV has is similar, hell we could write a whole thesis on trying to solve it!)
The team at DEV are running experiments to try and fix the problem, but it is a very tough problem to crack, so that is why I suggest “playing the game” a little!
Right, but the question is if they even WANT to change it - many people simply like the listicles and the other dumbed down content. But, I do respect the people at dev.to, and I do believe they do want to promote better content more - I think they also see that if it's all getting too much dumbed down, then part of the audience will jump ship or simply check out (engage less).
And yeah I understand you, sometimes you have to be practical and play "their" game ... if you can't beat them then join them, lol.