erika: i believe in dreamwidth (dreamwidth)
[personal profile] erika
Signs you have spent too much* time on Dreamwidth:

*too much time on DW? is that even a thing that is possible?

Alternate Title: Things Dreamwidth Does Right, both as a company and as a community


Real Title: The Ways Dreamwidth Has Infilitrated My Brain Personally, Even Though This Is In Second Person




Companies that don't explain why stuff is broken or give any explanation for downtime confuse you and make you go elsewhere. Really, how can you trust a fail won't happen again if they don't tell you that they know what's wrong?

Open source just makes sense.* (*In my defense, I've always thought this, but it's definitely gotten 'worse'.)

You're happy to pay for things done right, and you quite possibly spend more money than is really "required" to pay for services because you actually like the company.

Speaking of which, you now consider whether you actually like the company's business ethics before you make large purchases. Or small ones.

You have seriously changed your diet in any of the following ways: vegan, organic, cage-free, free-range meat, gluten/allergen-free. Perhaps you experiment with subscribing to a CSA, starting your own garden, contributing via a community garden, preferentially purchasing cruelty-free cosmetics [or ONLY doing so], and similar. This can be partially attributed to the fact that you didn't really know this stuff existed before you hung out online with people who were more aware in general.

You seriously contemplate whether you should split an email thread to include a trigger warning in the new subject, but eventually decide not to because sometimes the first line of the email is auto-displayed ANYWAY. This makes you sad, because you don't want to upset the people you're communicating with.

You get frustrated and possibly angry when your great suggestion about [Idea|Product|Company] is not carefully & lovingly considered, then discussed and/or voted upon by the people who actually use [noun], and, if software-based, entered into a feature/bug-list on an publicly-accessible codebase for implementation where you can contribute to it yourself should you be able to do so.
Instead, your beautiful suggestion appears to disappear down a black hole and is never heard from again. This may also make you sadfaces.

People who respond to your gentle noting that they are openly supporting problematic opinions, language, or actions with "fuck you, I'm not ______" seem like not only assholes, but also completely out of touch. Seriously, dudeperson, are you back in 2008 or something? Examining oneself for internal prejudice and publicly apologizing when you cross a line? That's like, so in.

The supposedly 'runaway unexpected success' of Kickstarter surprised you not one bit. (I was reading an article about this in Newsweek at my endocrinologist appointment today. It was hilarious because the entire article was written in this tone of OMG PEOPLE ACTUALLY WILL STILL PAY FOR CREATIVE ENDEAVORS THEY WANT TO SUPPORT. Um, yep...?)

You actively try to contribute to the economic betterment of people that you know are in need, and in your opinion, Modest Needs doesn't go far enough as a charity. (And you note that they seem to be pandering to the "boot-strap" theorists out there. >_>)

You have no impairments that would ordinarily make it difficult to use a computer, but you still spend a larger amount of time than "none*" thinking about accessibility (and/or implementing it in ways such as descriptions of graphics you post) regardless, because ... duh, of course people should be able to get what you're saying, no matter how they're using the Internet.
*None appears to be how much time MOST sites think about this. ... yeah, rolling my eyes too.

Wait, women and/or people who are new to programming but demonstrate interest in learning to program aren't typically actively recruited as programmers? Why?! A convert is the best evangelist!

Okay, seriously, why would anyone choose to spend a lot of time online somewhere where they can't directly reach the head honchos or at the VERY LEAST someone who can help you with whatever problem you're having? (See: reddit, 4chan, facebook, etc. <_<)

You can't remember the last time you read your LJ friends page as like, a LJ friends page. You just go to the journals of the people you like there that remain extremely stubborn.

Subscribe and access make so much fucking sense.

You have converted at least one person to the point where they just gave up and deleted their LJ because everyone here is pretty much awesome.

You ran your own friending meme.

You watched a video on MRA/PuA hatetrolls attacking a woman blogger based on her size... because she dared to make video about not liking an oreo cookie. Basically, she was fat online and didn't appear to hate herself. (Sorry, I can't find the link, because I haven't slept like more than 9 hours in the last 48, but it was a big speech that was pretty moving.) And you think "God, I'm so glad I'm not afraid to read my own comments."

You no longer have to feel the need to read site updates obsessively to TRY to figure out how you're going to be screwed over next and then read the comments to see if some kind person has taken the time to explain how bad it really is and what they didn't tell you. (I'm not naming names here... I'm sure no one has any idea what service I might be talking about! Although, to be fair, this applies to... let's see, Facebook, Google, ummmm basically EVERY CORPORATION THAT WANTS TO USE YOU AS A PRODUCT...)




Feel free to add your own!

This entry was not crossposted for obvious reasons.
:P
(will be screened)
(will be screened if not validated)
If you don't have an account you can create one now.
HTML doesn't work in the subject.
More info about formatting

Profile

erika: (Default)
Erika

November 2025

S M T W T F S
      1
2 345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30      

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Sunday, March 22nd, 2026 09:43 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios