sholio: sun on winter trees (Default)
Sholio ([personal profile] sholio) wrote2009-03-29 09:17 pm
Entry tags:

The exodus approaches...

First, before I type anything else - I just realized that I never thanked the people who nominated me for Stargate fan awards. So ... THANK YOU, wonderful people! I'm so sorry it took me so long to say so! *bows in your general direction*

Anyway, moving on ... Dreamwidth (new fandom-friendly journaling platform) has announced their open beta dates (accounts will be available April 30).

[Poll #1374680]

I've been watching my f'list abuzz with this, and feeling ... mildly conflicted.

Since 1995, a significant amount of my social life has been online. In that time, I can think of three different online "places" off the top of my head (a mailing list, a message board, and LJ) that I've thought of as "home" at the time. In all three cases, I spent years there, made enduring friendships and business contacts, shared major developments in my life ... and (except for LJ, yet) eventually moved on, as the group splintered and scattered.

I've also participated in, and sometimes run, dozens of mailing lists, message boards and blogs; I've had at least a half-dozen different message boards and blogs on my own webspace (none of which really took off, though some were pretty active for a short while).

So the thought never occurred to me that LJ would be permanent, any more than I expect the house I live in now to be the house I live in until I die. At the same time, though, I don't particularly want to move. I'm comfy, I have everything set up the way I like it, and most of my currently active online social circle is here. But I can feel the winds of change blowing; whether I stay or go or straddle both sites, I suspect that fandom (at least the corner of fandom where I "live") is about to split and reshape itself again. I've certainly been around long enough to know that this is normal and inevitable; fandom changes and reshapes all the time. I was kinda behind the curve on LJ fandom; I didn't really get active here until it was already going full-bore, so there was a (deceptive) sense of permanence to LJ fandom for me -- in Internet terms, it was ancient and rock-solid when I first jumped in, not to mention that I got in on the new, hot fandom (SGA) while it was on a popularity upswing. Compared to the Internet at large, it seemed monumentally stable and permanent. There were very few dead links, and lots of lively, active journals and discussions -- it felt like you could link to a story on an LJ journal and expect to still be there several years later, which is a sort of permanence that didn't really exist back in the days of personal Geocities homepages and mailing list archives.

Now I'm starting to notice growing numbers of blogs that are struckthrough in older comment threads; dead links leading to posts that have been privatized and journals that no longer exist; communities with tons of posts in their archives but not much activity now. I don't really get the feeling that LJ fandom is winding down, exactly, but it's starting to feel ... impermanent, in a way that it didn't before.

So ... I'm conflicted. Right now I'm leaning towards some combination of "maintain a Dreamwidth journal for reading purposes" and "let's see where fandom goes". I'm pretty much in it for the social life; all I really want is a journaling platform that'll basically leave me alone to do my thing -- and I know that LJ isn't perfect, but my own experiences with it have been good, despite some of the stories I've heard. I don't mind leaving -- like I said, I'm not wedded to the place -- but I'm in no great hurry to leave, either. I basically just want to be where the interesting discussions and the people I care about can be found.

[identity profile] livrelibre.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 06:09 am (UTC)(link)
I've never had a fandom place that's felt especially like home until I landed on LJ and that's mostly here because the community's here. I'm looking forward to a site I feel more investment in system-wise and wouldn't mind paying for so I'm planning on shifting to Dreamwidth but I'll be cross posting here, esp. since it's free and I'm betting that fandom won't leave LJ entirely. It'll probably spread out across here, Dreamwidth and IJ, which is fine 'cause hey OpenID. If it had fragmented back into individual blogs and archives and lists or whatever else that came along that wasn't so easily cross-compatible I'd be a lot more worried.
ext_1981: (Default)

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 06:52 am (UTC)(link)
It'll probably spread out across here, Dreamwidth and IJ, which is fine 'cause hey OpenID. If it had fragmented back into individual blogs and archives and lists or whatever else that came along that wasn't so easily cross-compatible I'd be a lot more worried.

*nods* Yeah, the interoperability is really fantastic, and I think you're probably right that the ability to interact cross-platform is going to do a lot to prevent a mass scattering.

I'm really curious now what the patterns of media fandom migration would actually look like over the last decade or two. The changes have been so huge, and many of the fans that I'm friends with now have been in fandom for 10 or 15 years or longer, but in different parts of it than where *I* was 10 or 15 years ago. And I've drifted out of touch with many of the people that I used to know in other fannish venues. LJ is actually one of the things that's kept me from losing touch completely with some of the people I used to know; they left message boards for LJ at about the same time that I did, so even though we're in different fandoms now, we still have that way of keeping in touch.

[identity profile] livrelibre.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 12:37 pm (UTC)(link)
Mmmm, yeah, and I have to say I love the smell of research project in the morning:)
ext_150: (Default)

[identity profile] kyuuketsukirui.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 06:11 am (UTC)(link)
For the time being, I plan to treat it like I do IJ. I will crosspost there and read my flist there, but still consider LJ my main journal. However, while IJ is a step down, DW is a step up in many ways (ways I'm really excited about), so it may be that I'll start eventually considering DW my main journal and this will be the one I crosspost to.

I don't think I'll ever abandon this LJ altogether, because I have lots of people on my flist who are not part of media fandom, and some who are not part of fandom, period. So while I can expect that a good chunk of the media fandom folks might move over, I doubt these others will.

And like you, I've never had any problems with LJ personally, so I still feel a lot of love for this site and have been happy to pay for an account. If it weren't for the neat changes DW has made, I would be really reluctant to move at all (that's why I never seriously considered moving to IJ, just crossposting to keep up with friends who moved).
ext_1981: (Default)

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 06:58 am (UTC)(link)
At least in the beginning, I'll probably treat it similarly to how I treat IJ as well -- in my case, this means having a (mostly) empty DW journal for commenting and flist-tracking, but continuing to do my blogging over here. In the future, who knows? I do agree that DW looks good; you can tell the codebase was put together by people who use the service and care about what their users want from it. I'm going to have to play with it and see whether I like it well enough to make the switch. Since I'm mostly here for the social interaction at least as much as the blogging (I could run a blog on my own webspace easily enough if that was all I wanted), it'll probably matter a lot to me whether my flist drifts over there or stays put, though...

[identity profile] auburnnothenna.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 06:35 am (UTC)(link)
I'm so conflicted. I don't trust to any sort of permanence with LJ, I kind of dislike the way it's run, I really don't like that it is owned out of Russia, but I came into LJ when it was still invite codes, my first experiences of fandom pretty much coincides within a couple months of that, and I have this huge damn flist. There's the nostalgia factor and the inertia factor.

I have a permanent account at InsaneJournal. I like the way IJ is run. If more of my fandom and friends were on IJ, I'd probably not bother even cross-posting to LJ. Hell, I've even got JournalFen and Inkscribe journals, not that I do anything with them. But if a majority of fandom or even just the fandom I'm in went there, I'd at least have a presence.

When Dreamwidth was just a poll asking what people wanted from a journaling service, I'm pretty sure I commented that I'd buy a permanent account if it had everything. But I don't have the two hundred extra bucks right now. (Well, I do, but it's earmarked along with every other spare dollar for a new laptop which I need or posting and the Internet are going to be moot points anyway.) I am planning to buy at least six months paid time though.

When it comes to permanence, I'm sort of setting my hopes on the OTW and The Archive of Our Own when it moves out of beta.

ext_1981: (Default)

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 07:07 am (UTC)(link)
The longer I'm online, the more I want permanence and the less I feel that true permanence is really achievable. Of course, I've lived in two states and at least six different apartments/houses over the last fifteen years, and I've had a half-dozen different computers, so what is permanent, really?

I feel more optimistic about the OTW archive than I did in the beginning; it really struck me as one of those flash-in-the-pan projects that gets dropped when the principles move to other things, but I have been really impressed with the commitment and dedication that the developers have shown, and I like the interface -- I'm thinking about getting an account now when they're out of beta.

In the beginning, at least, I expect I'll probably treat DW similar to how I currently treat IJ -- I'll have a placeholder account for flist management and commenting, and other than that, I'll probably just follow the herd (moooo). I don't have any particular emotional investment in LJ other than having been here for several years and being comfortable with it (and used to all its quirky little ins and outs; I even find myself typing LJ code in my HTML by accident).

[identity profile] lavvyan.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 06:37 am (UTC)(link)
I'm comfy, I have everything set up the way I like it, and most of my currently active online social circle is here.

Yeah, ditto, and not all of them are part of fandom. I figure I'll see how I'm going to handle this - the Great Exodus to IJ turned out not to be so great after all, so who's to say Dreamwidth will fare any better? Plus, there's also the Archive of Our Own to consider; I guess change is coming one way or the other.
ext_1981: (Default)

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 07:10 am (UTC)(link)
Yeah; I actually have two LJ accounts, one of which is, obviously, this one, and the other is a personal account that I mostly use for keeping in touch with old college and work buddies -- that one, clearly, is not going anywhere, since my flist is almost entirely non-fannish and mostly consists of people who blog infrequently anyway. My flist here is entirely fannish, however, and I guess I'll just watch what they do.

You're right about the Great IJ Migration, though. There's really no telling what the shape of fandom is going to be a year or five years from now. The only thing I really know for sure is that it will still be somewhere.
amalthia: (Default)

[personal profile] amalthia 2009-03-30 06:55 am (UTC)(link)
I'm not exactly sure what Dreamwidth is yet or what it offers that's different from LJ or even the OTW archive.

But I'm kind of used to fandom moving and shifting formats. My main hope is the next shift is to a better story posting journaling system. LJ with the 10k word story limit kills me and is my biggest pet peeve about LJ. It's a great community place not a good story archiving place.
ext_1981: (Default)

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 07:13 am (UTC)(link)
LJ with the 10k word story limit kills me and is my biggest pet peeve about LJ. It's a great community place not a good story archiving place.

I definitely second THAT! I don't know what the limits are on DW, although I suspect it's probably been bumped up; I know the comment limit has gone way up (I think it's going to be 16,000 characters?) and one of the developers is an active fanfic writer who writes epics, so I would not be surprised if it's gone up a lot.

I don't have any good "all about Dreamwidth!" posts bookmarked, though I know I've seen a few floating around. I think things will become more clear once the site goes live and fandom starts getting going over there.
amalthia: (Default)

[personal profile] amalthia 2009-03-30 07:17 am (UTC)(link)
Man, if it raises the posting limit I might be sold on that alone. :) But I'm still waiting for the OTW archive to get out of beta as well and see what all you can do with an account there....the good news is it looks like two viable archiving/community options are on the horizon. :)
rydra_wong: Lee Miller photo showing two women wearing metal fire masks in England during WWII. (dreamwidth fork)

[personal profile] rydra_wong 2009-03-30 08:07 am (UTC)(link)
Man, if it raises the posting limit I might be sold on that alone. :)

Guess what? *grins maniacally*

I don't know exactly what the new character limit is, but it's certainly way, way higher than the lj one.
rydra_wong: Lee Miller photo showing two women wearing metal fire masks in England during WWII. (dreamwidth typewriter)

[personal profile] rydra_wong 2009-03-30 09:10 am (UTC)(link)
I don't have any good "all about Dreamwidth!" posts bookmarked

Ta-da!

FWIW, I felt positive about it on the basis of the people involved and everything I've heard about it; after a day or so playing with a closed beta account, I'm thrilled.

Even in closed beta, there's so much that's already better.

I sort of thought that I'd just namesquat and wait for open beta before doing much, and then I found the importer and other cool things, and then ... oh hai i seem to be on Dreamwidth now.

I'm going to cross-post (by hand at the moment, but there's going to be a built-in crossposter), but. Yeah.

EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!
ext_1981: (Default)

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 07:36 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you for the link! :) *notes*

I seem to be in a sort of "wait and see" holding pattern right now. The interconnectivity with LJ and other blogging sites looks awesome, though; I think what I wanted most from a new blogging site was smooth connectability, and DW seems to be bringing that!
amalthia: (Default)

[personal profile] amalthia 2009-03-31 04:18 am (UTC)(link)
thanks for the link! will bookmark and read. :)
foxfirefey: A close up of my eye, upside down. (eye)

[personal profile] foxfirefey 2009-03-30 08:25 pm (UTC)(link)
A specific answer on the limits: LJ has about a 52,670 character limit for posts and DW will have about a 300,000 character limit.

A small selection of other things DW has done:

* Split "friends" into access and subscription, so you can subscribe to somebody without giving them access to your locked content
* If users have chosen 18+ for their content or journal, they're able to specify a reason why it has that rating
* Paid users will get to have Google Analytics

And DW is planning to work on other nifty things, like scheduled/draft posts and main/alternate accounts.
ext_1981: (Default)

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 10:51 pm (UTC)(link)
Ooh! Thank you very much for the info! (Scheduled posts, eh? I like the sound of that very much! It would come in mega-useful for ficathons...)
sheron: RAF bi-plane doodle (Johns) (02blue beast)

[personal profile] sheron 2009-03-31 02:41 am (UTC)(link)
>A specific answer on the limits: LJ has about a 52,670 character limit for posts and DW will have about a 300,000 character limit.


Wow! That will be AWESOME for fic. Finally people might start writing longer stories!
amalthia: (Default)

[personal profile] amalthia 2009-03-31 04:15 am (UTC)(link)
okay that's a big jump! :) I just hope people who migrate actually use it! :)


Thank you so much for writing back. :)
ext_3572: (Default)

[identity profile] xparrot.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 07:00 am (UTC)(link)
Hmmm, I actually haven't given it much thought. Since I've been on lj I've moved between multiple fandom; various anime, and then SV, and SGA, and now I'm poking around MUNCLE. In each fandom I've picked up a few people who become permanent friends, even after we change fandoms; others I drift apart from. (and then drift back together with, as you do in fandom, but that's been going on since long before lj; there's a few people on my lj now who I knew back in my Sentinel days!) So lj never felt that much different to me than mailing lists or boards, though I find it a simpler environment to navigate in.

Though this is partly because I use lj so strictly for fanning; I've never really gotten into blogging my real life, and so I tend to differentiate between fan acquaintances and friends (such as yourself), the latter of whom I keep in touch with on email and other places, so I'm less afraid of losing track of them. If my current fandoms jump ship to Dreamwidth, I'll move with them; otherwise I'll stay here as long as they do.

I am hoping the Archive of our Own achieves some kind of permanency, though, because putting aside the social connections, it would be really nice to be able to find older fics...!
ext_1981: (Default)

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 07:32 am (UTC)(link)
You're right that friendship transcends fandom -- or blogging platform! I suppose one of the big things that's making me dither right now is that if fandom *does* end up migrating en masse to DW, I will probably want to follow, and I'll want to take my journal with me (apparently they have a nice LJ-import tool). But that precludes using my DW journal for much of anything unless I want to blow it all away when/if I move the LJ. It's the whole "syncronizing the laptop with the desktop" problem (currently driving me crazy; I still haven't found a good way to do it, and one of these days I know I'm going to screw up and overwrite the wrong version of a file...).

I also keep thinking about a couple of unsuccessful attempts that I've seen in the past to move a community from one platform to another -- the inevitable result in both cases was that the part of the community that survived the move was only a fraction of the original, and much less active. I'm not sure if that'll happen with DW -- there's a lot of enthusiasm about it in fannish circles -- but I don't really want to repeat the experience I've had in the past of following what I *thought* was the herd, only to find that the herd had scattered along the way.
ext_3572: (Default)

[identity profile] xparrot.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 11:00 am (UTC)(link)
You could always make 2 DW accounts? Cross-post to "friendshipper" on lj & dw, and then start a new dw account if you want to do something different with it? At least for me, I might just cross-post to lj and dw...(at least when it comes to fic posting, I'm pretty shameless about putting it out anywhere I can get readers, lj, ff.net, AOOO, whichever!)
ext_1981: (Default)

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 07:31 pm (UTC)(link)
See developer's comment below yours -- I had just been assuming that it blew away existing content, but it actually does not; new entries shuffle in with existing ones. And you can import multiple times. :D
ext_3572: (Default)

[identity profile] xparrot.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 07:38 pm (UTC)(link)
Oooooh, I didn't realize synecdochic was one of the dev's - that makes me feel more comfortable with dw already! it's always nice to recognize names in these things (it's one of the reasons AOOO excited me from the get-go; I know how serious many of the OTW folks are.)
rydra_wong: Lee Miller photo showing two women wearing metal fire masks in England during WWII. (dreamwidth fork)

[personal profile] rydra_wong 2009-03-30 07:50 pm (UTC)(link)
[livejournal.com profile] synecdochic is one of the founders! *g*

You can read about the whole project pretty much from its inception here:

http://synecdochic.livejournal.com/tag/dreamwidth
synecdochic: torso of a man wearing jeans, hands bound with belt (Default)

[personal profile] synecdochic 2009-03-30 06:47 pm (UTC)(link)
The importer will not replace the contents of your account -- it'll just shuffle the entries in alongside any ones you've already made, so you can safely and comfortably import as many times as you want and not worry about losing things. (You can also import multiple accounts into the same Dreamwidth account.)

(here via [livejournal.com profile] pingback_bot)

rydra_wong: Lee Miller photo showing two women wearing metal fire masks in England during WWII. (dreamwidth fork)

[personal profile] rydra_wong 2009-03-30 07:07 pm (UTC)(link)
*is dead from niftiness*
synecdochic: torso of a man wearing jeans, hands bound with belt (Default)

[personal profile] synecdochic 2009-03-30 07:16 pm (UTC)(link)
Well, correction, a bug means you shouldn't import multiple accounts into the same account yet. But we're fixing that. :)
ext_1981: (Default)

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 07:28 pm (UTC)(link)
oooooooooooo! Thank you so much! That sounds *ever* so much better and more useful than what I had been imagining. :D

(And thank you very much for all of your hard work on this!)

[identity profile] lavvyan.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 10:31 am (UTC)(link)
I'd say the Archive of Our Own is pretty much there to stay. Knowing some of what's going on in the background and how it's organised, it's clear that this isn't just another flight of fancy. People are organising the shit out of that thing. :D
ext_3572: (Default)

[identity profile] xparrot.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 07:43 pm (UTC)(link)
I've taken AOOO pretty seriously from the get-go, because of the people involved. It's more that when I say permanent, I mean *permanent* - like, 20 years down the line. And the internet being what it is, I don't know if any site has that staying-power - but here's hoping! (just got my beta account myself, rather tickled by it, I must admit ^^)
ratcreature: RL? What RL? RatCreature is a net addict.  (what rl?)

[personal profile] ratcreature 2009-03-30 09:44 am (UTC)(link)
Some of the different and planned features of DW seem neat and I'd like somewhere where the new innovations go in directions that make more sense in how I use a journal than they do at LJ, but well, I won't have an account early on because I certainly don't have the $200. I figure once it's grown a bit someone will have an invite code to spare, and I'll set up for crossposting there and maybe import the old stuff if their importer works, and the x-post in three places (LJ/IJ/DW) like I do now in two. I'll make it my main journal if I like how it works and most of my f-list was there, but considering that I have a paid LJ for now, it won't be my main or only journal.

Whenever I post anything I put in multiple places anyway, because I never liked being only on LJ. Years ago I had a blog on my wesite I xposted to, that was actually what I had before an LJ, because fans still did blogging then, and it wasn't totally settled that so many end up on LJ, so I don't just mean LJ/IJ. Also that my recs go to my website, my art goes to my website, my art blog and deviantart and such, so one place more doesn't make much of a difference to me.
rydra_wong: Lee Miller photo showing two women wearing metal fire masks in England during WWII. (dreamwidth red)

[personal profile] rydra_wong 2009-03-30 09:52 am (UTC)(link)
I won't have an account early on because I certainly don't have the $200.

You don't need to -- as soon as it goes into open beta, you can buy paid time (starting at $3 for a month, and of course you can still use the account for free even if you don't buy any more paid time), or get an invite code from someone.

and maybe import the old stuff if their importer works

I tested it out a couple of days ago, and it really, really does. *has glee*
ext_1981: (Default)

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 07:43 pm (UTC)(link)
I've become more and more LJ-centric over the last couple of years, due to laziness. Even my fanfic page on my website is turning into more of a list of links pointing to various communities where I've posted fic. I think one reason for my current nervousness regarding the state of LJ has to do with having narrowed my options too much and put all of my proverbial eggs in one basket ...
ratcreature: RatCreature as a sloth (sloth)

[personal profile] ratcreature 2009-03-30 07:56 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't produce a lot of stuff, so it's not that much effort for me to put in multiple places. I want to make it easy for people to find things, where they are likely to look, and journals (even though I tag mine a lot) aren't the easiest for people to find your old things, or to go back to and link and search. I think LJ is good to reach audience immediately, but unless you are linked a lot, it is easier for people to stumble over your things elsewhere.
ext_2027: (Default)

[identity profile] astridv.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 10:09 am (UTC)(link)
I clicked "I plan to have a Dreamwidth journal for commenting/reading, but LJ will still be my main blogging site." More accurately, I'll crosspost every LJ post to Dreamwidth but LJ will remain my main blogging platform until my main fandom moves over to Dreamwidth; then of course I'll do the lemming thing.

I'm very comfortable on LJ, too, and not crazy about moving. But it sounds like Dreamwidth will come with nifty features, and, more importantly, a good import tool. But what really compels me to make the switch is LJs past behavior towards fandom. The scans_daily affair showed once again that the LJ PTB will throw a fandom journal/comm to the wolves without hesitation as soon as a copyright holder says "BOOO!"... be it justified or not. That they aren't even willing to stop and listen to a possible fair use defense is a huge turnoff... every one of us is wide open to accusations of copyright infringement.
ext_1981: (Default)

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 07:45 pm (UTC)(link)
*nods* I know, and even though my personal experience with LJ has been good, I don't really trust them 100%. The idea of having my content yanked is a bit of a nightmare for me.

[identity profile] wneleh.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 10:39 am (UTC)(link)
It will be interesting to watch. One thing I get out of doing the media refs stuff is a sense of how little of the fanfic world is actually LJ-centered. It's annoying how much FF.net is looked to by outsiders as representative, but it's not entirely wrongheaded on their parts.

I just don't see how DW can be what it wants to be. I don't see fifteen-year-olds paying ANYTHING to post fanfic.

I plan to ignore DW. Of course I have no idea what I'll be doing in a year, but I'm just not feeling a pull away from LJ, or a need to add another blogging platform to my online diet.
ext_1981: (Default)

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 07:47 pm (UTC)(link)
I think that all communities get a bit insular and think of themselves as the center of the universe. :D Prior to SGA fandom, I really had no idea that LJ fandom even *existed*; my previous fandoms were focused on mailing lists, privately hosted archives and ff.net. Then this whole new world opened up to me, and now when I get into a new fandom, LJ is where I look for fic first. But the rest of the Internet is still out there...
ext_21:   (Default)

[identity profile] zvi-likes-tv.livejournal.com 2009-03-31 03:19 am (UTC)(link)
DW is fan-friendly, but it is not a fannish project (http://lists.dwscoalition.org/pipermail/dw-discuss/2008-August/000530.html). Also, the developers want to pull in enough money so they can make a living (http://synecdochic.livejournal.com/304699.html), not so much that they get rich and sell out to google. The costs are not as high as you think (http://lists.dwscoalition.org/pipermail/dw-discuss/2008-June/000025.html), and they plan to start out with an $80k war chest and control growth by controlling their invite code distribution.

I think there's a very good chance they can make it work, as long as people are willing to adopt the service.

[identity profile] wneleh.livejournal.com 2009-03-31 10:40 am (UTC)(link)
I think there's a very good chance they can make it work, as long as people are willing to adopt the service.

True of a lot of things in life!

I have RL friends who blog other places - 7villages, their own sites - and I just don't follow them because I'd rather write software than learn how to use someone else's. (And frequently do - Matlab is my friend!)

Anyway, I'm done knocking DW. If people find a platform they're happy with, great!
ext_21:   (Default)

[identity profile] zvi-likes-tv.livejournal.com 2009-03-31 03:01 pm (UTC)(link)
Sorry, sorry. I don't mean to turn into an obnoxious evangelist who just can't let people dislike her One True Way. I just don't want someone who is trying to backhop their way around to an understanding of what Dreamwidth is to come across misinformation and decide to not look it over because, for instance, they're not in fandom.
ext_1981: (Default)

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2009-03-31 05:27 pm (UTC)(link)
FWIW, I really do appreciate you (and Rydra) coming in and correcting misinformation or wrong assumptions on Dreamwidth -- I'm only tangentially watching it, so I don't know/don't notice a lot of this. :)

[identity profile] darkrosetiger.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 10:51 am (UTC)(link)
I'm going to have to keep both, because there are an awful lot of people on my LJ who aren't in fandom--including my non-fannish communities.
ext_1981: (Default)

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 07:51 pm (UTC)(link)
*nods* I tend to waffle over how much of my personal life to put online; this journal is almost wholly fandom-related, and if fandom shuffles off en masse to DW, then I'm sure I'll go along. I have a (rarely updated) personal journal elsewhere, which will certainly stay put, since it mainly exists to keep in touch with old friends from college and to maintain a reading list of writing/author blogs.
bratfarrar: A woman wearing a paper hat over her eyes and holding a teacup (school)

[personal profile] bratfarrar 2009-03-30 11:13 am (UTC)(link)
I haven't decided yet, but I'd probably at most wind up cross-posting, with LJ as my main platform and DW as backup/there for people who hate LJ. Or something along those lines. Unless my flist moves, I don't feel any personal reason to shift--I've finally gotten my LJ pretty much broken in and comfortable, and I've got other uses (lots of 'em) for my time than setting up a third online journal account.
ext_1981: (Default)

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 07:53 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, I'm content where I am; on the other hand, I'm not content enough that I'd necessarily balk at moving to a new journal if I end up liking Dreamwidth better...
aelfgyfu_mead: Aelfgyfu as a South Park-style cartoon (Default)

[personal profile] aelfgyfu_mead 2009-03-30 12:08 pm (UTC)(link)
I bought a permanent account here! That was probably poor planning; I'd heard of Dreamwidth already, but I didn't know how far in the future it was. Still, my friends are currently here, I have a permanent account, I have fifty icons (and 142 more spaces I can fill!); I figured I'll probably get some kind of Dreamwidth journal, assuming they have some free basic level, to read those of my friends who move, but I like LJ, even with its faults.
rydra_wong: Lee Miller photo showing two women wearing metal fire masks in England during WWII. (dreamwidth fork)

[personal profile] rydra_wong 2009-03-30 12:24 pm (UTC)(link)
assuming they have some free basic level

Yup! Though you'll need an invite code from someone; they're using the invite code system to limit the number of free accounts and ensure that the service can be sustained without ads.

Or if you really just want to use it for commenting and reading, you can set up an OpenID log-in, which will let you comment, let friends give you access to locked posts, and e-mail you notifications of replies to your comments (if you validate an e-mail address).

(No, I have no official status, I'm just all a-squee *g*.)
ext_2351: (Default)

*butts in*

[identity profile] lunabee34.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 11:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Just to make sure I understand what you're saying, the OpenID would allow you to engage in all the reading and commenting functions of DW without actually having a blog there where you make your own posts? And for free?
foxfirefey: Fox stealing an egg. (mischief)

Re: *butts in*

[personal profile] foxfirefey 2009-03-30 11:53 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes. LJ allows this, too, actually, but it's been a pretty neglectful feature and there are lots of bumps and glitches and not-so-easy-or-pretty things involved. We've made it a lot easier to add, view, and manage OpenID accounts from both ends, as well as making sure that OpenID users aren't hammered in add ons. For instance, people can now add OpenID users by typing in the OpenID URL (ie, lunabee34.livejournal.com) instead of having to figure out what the equivalent username (ext_xxxxx random number at the end) is. We've also retooled the menus to be relevant to OpenID users.

OpenID users can keep a reading list and be given access to locked content by others. They get 6 icons, just like free users. I think their main shortcoming is that they cannot join communities, and yes, they can't make posts.

OpenID accounts are free, and in fact, you can log in right now and have one.
ext_2351: (Default)

Re: *butts in*

[identity profile] lunabee34.livejournal.com 2009-03-31 12:05 am (UTC)(link)
I don't know why, but that link is not working for me. :(

Thank you for all the information though. I really, really appreciate such an in-depth answer. :) Since you seem to know what's going on, I will ask you another question. *g* Would having the OpenID change the way I do things at lj any? And if they can't join comms at DW, can they *read* posts at comms that are public?

Again, many thanks for talking with me about this.
ext_21:   (Default)

Re: *butts in*

[identity profile] zvi-likes-tv.livejournal.com 2009-03-31 03:21 am (UTC)(link)
It was a malformed address. Try http://dreamwidth.org/openid/
ext_21:   (Default)

Re: *butts in*

[identity profile] zvi-likes-tv.livejournal.com 2009-04-01 05:30 pm (UTC)(link)
You're welcome.
foxfirefey: A close up of my eye, upside down. (eye)

Re: *butts in*

[personal profile] foxfirefey 2009-03-31 04:01 am (UTC)(link)
I run the wiki, so keeping track of lots of the information is something of my job! So, feel to ask any other questions you might be curious about. If I don't know about what you're asking, I should find out. Sorry about the malformed link, but it looks like somebody else already took care of that.

I don't think having an OpenID on Dreamwidth would change the way you did things at LJ any, no. You can't join comms on DW, but you *can* subscribe to them to read the public posts.

I'll also note that DW invites aren't going to be as constricted as LJ's were back in the day, if you are thinking about that, and will be given to the userbase regularly, so scoring one to get a full account with won't be as difficult. It's also only $3 to get a month of paid account time that will let you get an account without an invite, after which you can let it lapse into a free account.
ext_2351: (Default)

Re: *butts in*

[identity profile] lunabee34.livejournal.com 2009-04-01 01:18 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you so much for the info!

*appreciates*
rydra_wong: Lee Miller photo showing two women wearing metal fire masks in England during WWII. (dreamwidth red)

Re: *butts in*

[personal profile] rydra_wong 2009-03-31 01:54 am (UTC)(link)
the OpenID would allow you to engage in all the reading and commenting functions of DW without actually having a blog there where you make your own posts? And for free?

It already does! It's actually up and running now -- here's an example (this is [livejournal.com profile] siljamus's OpenID profile on DW, and I hope she won't mind me grabbing her as an example):

http://www.dreamwidth.org/userinfo.bml?userid=159&t=I

And lots of people are testing their OpenIDs on the Inaugural Dreamwidth Comment Porn Meme at this very moment *g*.

Of course, basic accounts at DW are also going to be free (you just need to get an invite code from someone), and obviously they let you post entries and join comms too.

But if you know that you just want to comment and read, then OpenID's an option.
ext_2351: (Default)

Re: *butts in*

[identity profile] lunabee34.livejournal.com 2009-04-01 01:18 pm (UTC)(link)
Okay, cool! Thank you so much for the information.

:)
aelfgyfu_mead: Aelfgyfu as a South Park-style cartoon (Default)

[personal profile] aelfgyfu_mead 2009-03-31 12:02 am (UTC)(link)
I hadn't thought of OpenID. I should probably set that up when I have the chance anyway; I think it would let me comment on some other non-LJ blogs where I haven't always been able to comment.
ext_1981: (Default)

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 08:17 pm (UTC)(link)
I'd dithered off and on over the past couple of years about buying a permanent account; decided not to because I wanted the option of going elsewhere if it became necessary. Still, it *does* pay for itself over time, and it means you'll always have it as a base of operations...
trobadora: (Default)

[personal profile] trobadora 2009-03-30 01:41 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm planning to open a journal on DW, but what exactly (and how much) I do with it will depend on how much of the activity I'm interested in will actually take place over there. And I'm too multifannish to tie it to any one fandom ... So there's really no way to tell. *g* I'm going to take my time deciding.

edited to fix typo
ext_1981: (Default)

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 08:18 pm (UTC)(link)
*nods* I started out with a rarely-used free account on LJ and eventually, over several years, ended up with a paid account that I use all the time. My IJ account, however, languishes in obscurity. It really just depends on how much you use it, and for what...
ext_2207: (Default)

[identity profile] abyssinia4077.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 02:18 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm more and more suspicious of the way the LJ corporation seems to be heading - they seem less and less interested in providing a service to people like me and more and more interested in providing a service to people who want MySpace. Right now I'm not leaving LJ, but I can see myself getting more and more dissatisfied as things continue (I mean, they *fired* their development team)

So I'm going to get a Dreamwidth Account (well, two) and crosspost for a while and use both and see how things go. I don't plan to abandon LJ yet, but I can imagine doing so in the future.
ext_1981: (Default)

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 10:44 pm (UTC)(link)
*nods* Everything new that I hear about LJ makes me less comfortable trusting them with the bulk of my online interaction. At the same time, though, I have a lot of -- well, inertia, I guess, built up at LJ. I know how it works, the etiquette and the tags and so forth; my friends are here, etc. I know that DW will be very similar in interface, but I definitely don't see myself migrating immediately; I will certainly get an account, but I'll probably be in a "wait and see" holding pattern while I watch what everyone else does and how the social circles form over there.

Lurker...

[identity profile] dragon-within.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 05:06 pm (UTC)(link)
My biggest problem with other journals other than LJ is that I forget about them. :( I have a Twitter, I have an IJ, but I never use them because the majority of my friends (both fandom and non-fandom) are here, or crosspost from their other journals to here.
ext_1981: (Default)

Re: Lurker...

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 10:45 pm (UTC)(link)
Heh, yeah, there is that too! I have an IJ but I never do anything with it.

I, for one, welcome our new DW overlords

[identity profile] spark-force.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 06:36 pm (UTC)(link)
I've got too many non-fannish communities here that I follow to ever truly leave LJ-- especially the pro-writing community, which seems to have only recently discovered LJ-- but I'll be buying a couple month's worth of an account over at DW to see whether or not I love it. And if fandom moves, I will of course move with it.

And in all honesty I'm hoping that fandom *does* move over to DW, so I can make a clean break between my fandom and real life identities. Back when I started this journal, I didn't care who knew about it, so about 50% of my flist here is people I know from real life. Heck, my mother reads my LJ. But in my old age (/sarcasm), for whatever reason, I've started getting more paranoid about connecting my online identity with my RL identity, so I'd like to separate the two out as much as possible. Or, at the very least, have a place where I don't need to worry about posting things my mother wouldn't understand.

Plus, I hate my current username...
ext_1981: (Default)

Re: I, for one, welcome our new DW overlords

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 10:48 pm (UTC)(link)
Ha, yeah; I went and created a separate LJ from my personal one for fannish purposes. The lines have slowly been blurring, and an increasing number of people who know me in RL now know about the fannish journal, but the original idea was to keep the two separate...

[identity profile] rheanna27.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 10:49 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm pretty enthused about DW, for a few reasons -- some of which, I admit, are extremely shallow! (For eg: I want to be [livejournal.com profile] rheanna over there, and I may hold my breath until I go RED if I don't get that username. ::grin::)

Initially, I was lukewarm about DW, because I thought, Oh, it's another LJ clone, and I wasn't very impressed by IJ or JF. But the amount of development they appear to have done -- improving the functionality of the basic LJ structure -- has really impressed me.

I've come to feel, increasingly, that we (fandom) are not LJ's core userbase. I don't think we ever were, really, we were just quite numerous. I don't know for sure, but my feeling is that LJ's marketing and growth strategy is probably focused on Russia, and I don't want to hang around on LJ until fannish journals and comms are in the minority, and the bulk of the site is aimed at a completely different market. So I like DW because it's very clearly been created for the fannish community with substantial input from the fannish community.

I like it because the structure and set up are professional, and aimed at long term stability and growth. This is my 10 year anniversary in fandom; I've come to realise that this isn't a phase or a fad, this is who I am -- I intend to be in fandom for a long time to come, and I want to feel that the architecture is in place to facilitate that. Like xparrot said upthread, between DW and the OTW archive, I feel like fandom has a good shot at establishing really a solid, permanent infrastructure on the net, and I want that for us.

I've just about been around long enough to remember usenet groups, which were replaced by mailing lists, and later LJ. The big shifts we've seen in the last 10-15 years have mirrored the huge changes which have occurred on the wider internet. The technology has developed at huge speed; maybe now we're hitting the point where the initial explosion of anarchic growth and change is about to slow down and turn into something more stable, which isn't a bad thing or a good thing, it's just a thing, a natural next step.
ext_1981: (Default)

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2009-03-30 11:54 pm (UTC)(link)
It does look like a very stable, solid place for a fan to nest. *g* I think your reasons make sense, and like I said above, I never expected LJ to be my permanent "home" (in fact, I'm surprised at how much of a "home" I've made for myself here).

Your last point, though -- that's really interesting to me! I guess I've just been assuming that something would eventually take over from blogs, just as Usenet and the old listserv-style mailing lists gave way to message boards and Yahoo group-type lists, which gave way to blogs. But now that the Internet's become such an institution (it's been a generation, almost), maybe the rapid change is starting to taper off; maybe we are, if not at a steady state, then at a point where we're likely to see refinement of what's already there more than the rise of something new and different. Hmmm...

[identity profile] rheanna27.livejournal.com 2009-03-31 07:10 am (UTC)(link)
maybe we are, if not at a steady state, then at a point where we're likely to see refinement of what's already there more than the rise of something new and different.

I think it's possible that's happening - although I'm no expert on technology and trends, so it's equally possible that the Next Big Thing might come along tomorrow and change the structure of how we interact all over again. But I do notice that after the wild explosion of growth that started in about 1995/98, there are now people around who've been consistently online and in fandom for 10 or 15 years. The people who were students or teens the first time they hung around on usenet are now in their thirties -- and those are the people we're seeing with the technical know-how, the real-world experience of large project management, and the connections to start setting up the really big projects which are now being implemented. Fandom's existed for a long time, but internet fandom's still pretty young, and I think the seismic changes of the last ten years -- and the current push, from a number of different directions, for stable, long-term platforms that won't go away overnight -- are indications that we're moving to a different phase. (I'm not going to say 'growing up', since we're all big kids anyway...)
sheron: RAF bi-plane doodle (Johns) (04red cardinal)

[personal profile] sheron 2009-03-31 02:39 am (UTC)(link)
I'm actually starting to warm up to LJ again in the last month. (Maybe it's spring? heh). But basically someone let me know that they've FINALLY fixed the stupid spapshots setting so that I can turn them off completely and after that I wasn't as mad at them anymore because at least they ARE fixing some things that I want. I'm giving them the next couple of months to convince me one way or another. If I am convinced they are reforming, I'm staying put, if not I may have to do the whole Dreamwidth thing more seriously.
ext_1981: (Default)

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2009-03-31 05:30 pm (UTC)(link)
Right now LJ is doing what I need it to do, and I'm happy with it. My time is paid through next February, so I probably wouldn't be seriously looking into moving somewhere else until then, anyhow. By that time I ought to have a good idea of what Dreamwidth can or can't do, though, and how much of my f'list will have moved over there.

[identity profile] blucola.livejournal.com 2009-03-31 04:23 am (UTC)(link)
I'm not leaving lj and I'm not taking in another journal. I've done that during the past lj flounces and I've decided that it's not worth my while, I never visit the other journals.
ext_1981: (Default)

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2009-03-31 05:29 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't think I'd call this a flounce -- more like creating an alternative for people who have certain problems with the existing service (and fixing them). Having said that, obviously it's not going to be for everyone, though. :)

[identity profile] blucola.livejournal.com 2009-04-01 02:20 am (UTC)(link)
I don't think I'd call this a flounce -- more like creating an alternative for people who have certain problems with the existing service (and fixing them). Having said that, obviously it's not going to be for everyone, though. :)

I've been a lemming in the past. Mind you, I understood the issues then, with journals being banned and deleted by lj. I ended up staying because I realised that most everyone (with a few notable exceptions) on my flist had remained behind. The only thing that might budge me, at this point, is if the service infected all of our computers with a virus. Or if they banned adult content in journals all together.

[identity profile] flingslass.livejournal.com 2009-04-05 03:36 am (UTC)(link)
I'm happy to see that you're concerned with maintaining your flist, I've managed to survive your culls :D I'm going to get a dreamwidth but it will probably be like yours at the moment. There to keep up with comments but who knows. I have an IJ and am on Inksome so will just have to see where fandom goes. I've got into LJ and my flist is important to me (I'm having enough trouble keeping up this year because of school but school's only one year :D) but the thing to me is I'm only paying for one account, I have a permanent IJ.
This comment might be a bit confuzzled but I've just ran a 6k fun run :D