Whenever I post a question in reddit or stackoverflow that doesn’t get a response, I usually delete it and post it again the next day. Because posts that don’t get any attention soon after being posted are definitely not going to get it days later. If it’s allowed people are going to do it here too. To avoid it I was going to open an issue asking for bumping as a feature but I’ve read that @dessalines doesn’t like necrobumping.

In the issue, I was going to say that bumping could be set by the admins on each instance, with numbers for the days and 0 being not allowed.

Dessalines
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73Y

The active sort allows comments to bump posts, but limited to 2 days.

The recent comments sort allows necro bumping, and is basically a forum sort, probably what you want.

@ajr@lemmy.ml
creator
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1
edit-2
3Y

So it’s already a feature for recent comment sorting? I haven’t seen a way to bump, besides commenting on the post, but that’s messy.

you can also cross-post to the same sub, if you want to start a new comment-thread.

Dessalines
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23Y

There’s no “bump button”, just new comments, which indicate new activity.

Maybe we could add an option where recent upvotes bump posts? That way people don’t have to comment generic stuff just to keep the thread alive.

Dessalines
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03Y

meh, not even discourse or github have such a thing as a “bump” button.

mekhos
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23Y

Nah, there’s not thaaat much content on Lemmy yet, if people aren’t interacting with content they just are not interested and bumping it will just be annoying.

The 24 hour lifespan of posts is definitely a weak spot of reddit, from numerous angles… Poor moderation and cowardly shadowbanning exacerbate the issue… And locking posts within like 6 months… terrible platform

It makes sense that a post could maintain a pace for more than a day, or regain activity

weex
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-13Y

You mention some quite different kinds of sites. Reddit and Lemmy are more social in nature. The value is less in searching the history for answers to common questions than in hanging out, joking around, sharing ephemeral links.

StackOverflow tuned their platform to the Q&A use case so I feel like they should have discouraged reposting in some way. If the question is a good one, many others will search for it later and some will have solutions to add.

Sounds like it’s kind of handled with Dessalines comment but given what I wrote above. No, unless…

Here’s where taking a more expansive and experimental view of open source can come into play. If you want toallow necrobumping, then I would ask what problem it solves. If that is a valid problem, then by all means fork Lemmy, add that as a feature to your instance and try it out. If it works, then you’ll have proven its value or lack thereof with its chances of being added upstream either bolstered or rightfully crushed.

Everything about Lemmy; bugs, gripes, praises, and advocacy.

For discussion about the lemmy.ml instance, go to !meta@lemmy.ml.

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