New Subscriber Growth
Sockpuppet Society [lemmy.ca
], up 202.6% to 115, (13 posts, 8 recent)
The PPShow [lemmy.world
], up 34.9% to 538, (77 posts, 59 recent)
The Church of Garfieldism [lemmy.blahaj.zone
], up 2.4% to 63, (16 posts, 10 recent)
Memes @ Reddthat [reddthat.com
], up 0.4% to 441, (48 posts, 3 recent)
Awesome AI [lemmy.world
], up 0.1% to 70, (10 posts, 7 recent)
Aqua Teen Hunger Force [adultswim.fan
], up 0.1% to 22, (20 posts, 5 recent)
Active User Growth (see comment about programming.dev)
Programmer Humor [programming.dev
], up 8347.2% to 7424, (417 posts)
Linux Memes [programming.dev
], up 2718.1% to 1305, (7 posts)
Godot [programming.dev
], up 2339.9% to 1365, (381 posts)
Programming [programming.dev
], up 1970.5% to 5130, (812 posts)
Software Gore [programming.dev
], up 1742.4% to 1024, (11 posts)
Programming.dev Meta [programming.dev
], up 1503.5% to 1095, (138 posts)
Game Development [programming.dev
], up 1070.4% to 788, (244 posts)
Linux [programming.dev
], up 750.3% to 787, (115 posts)
Android [programming.dev
], up 696.4% to 974, (90 posts)
Rust [programming.dev
], up 645.1% to 819, (478 posts)
Skeptic [lemmy.world
], up 622.2% to 67, (44 posts)
Linux Upskill Challenge [programming.dev
], up 352.1% to 89, (49 posts)
Python [programming.dev
], up 273.4% to 485, (272 posts)
Text Editors [programming.dev
], up 251.2% to 108, (13 posts)
Web Development [programming.dev
], up 190.5% to 203, (128 posts)
Git [programming.dev
], up 186.7% to 228, (93 posts)
C++ [programming.dev
], up 167.6% to 178, (134 posts)
Opensource [programming.dev
], up 167.5% to 153, (30 posts)
PostgreSQL [programming.dev
], up 136.2% to 119, (88 posts)
Bad UI Battles [programming.dev
], up 131.8% to 73, (10 posts)
C Sharp [programming.dev
], up 119.9% to 77, (39 posts)
Gamedev Showcase [programming.dev
], up 115.6% to 93, (9 posts)
Programming Languages [programming.dev
], up 112.2% to 104, (71 posts)
CSS [programming.dev
], up 99.3% to 98, (62 posts)
Arduino [programming.dev
], up 96.5% to 27, (4 posts)
JavaScript [programming.dev
], up 95.3% to 115, (52 posts)
Java [programming.dev
], up 92.7% to 134, (114 posts)
Community Request [programming.dev
], up 83.9% to 128, (96 posts)
Programming Books [programming.dev
], up 82.5% to 36, (8 posts)
.NET [programming.dev
], up 77.0% to 101, (78 posts)
Raku [programming.dev
], up 75.5% to 24, (107 posts)
Embedded [programming.dev
], up 75.5% to 24, (5 posts)
Golang [programming.dev
], up 67.8% to 103, (92 posts)
Pangora [programming.dev
], up 67.2% to 74, (14 posts)
commandline [programming.dev
], up 64.2% to 68, (36 posts)
Advent Of Code [programming.dev
], up 62.9% to 136, (13 posts)
marxism [hexbear.net
], up 61.8% to 105, (744 posts)
React [programming.dev
], up 58.3% to 38, (21 posts)
Accessibility [programming.dev
], up 55.2% to 68, (14 posts)
Powershell [programming.dev
], up 44.6% to 27, (32 posts)
Kubernetes [programming.dev
], up 44.6% to 27, (28 posts)
Neovim [programming.dev
], up 42.3% to 132, (54 posts)
Ada [programming.dev
], up 41.2% to 18, (8 posts)
Previously Featured in New Subscriber Growth
Food Crimes - Offenses against nutrition [midwest.social
], up 1.4% to 1098, (52 posts, 6 recent)
ISO - Incredible Solutions Only [lemmy.world
], up 1.3% to 321, (17 posts, 3 recent)
Open Course Lectures [slrpnk.net
], up 1.2% to 300, (26 posts, 3 recent)
Bertstrips [feddit.de
], up 0.5% to 1226, (81 posts, 4 recent)
About model trains and railroading. DIY or professional. [feddit.de
], up 0.4% to 38, (7 posts, 2 recent)
Buy it for Life [slrpnk.net
], up 0.4% to 2328, (27 posts, 3 recent)
Religious Cringe [midwest.social
], up 0.3% to 65, (29 posts, 8 recent)
OpenBSD [blendit.bsd.cafe
], up 0.3% to 38, (6 posts, 2 recent)
Movies and TV Shows [lemm.ee
], up 0.3% to 523, (184 posts, 17 recent)
graybeard [lemmy.cafe
], up 0.3% to 185, (51 posts, 4 recent)
Aneurysm Posting [sopuli.xyz
], up 0.3% to 500, (39 posts, 5 recent)
Military Porn [lemmy.world
], up 0.2% to 124, (101 posts, 12 recent)
Kickass Women [lemmy.world
], up 0.2% to 67, (40 posts, 9 recent)
Greentext [sh.itjust.works
], up 0.2% to 875, (162 posts, 18 recent)
FreeBSD [blendit.bsd.cafe
], up 0.2% to 47, (17 posts, 5 recent)
DALL·E [lemmings.world
], up 0.2% to 84, (14 posts, 2 recent)
It’s Called Fashion [lemmy.world
], up 0.1% to 371, (33 posts, 3 recent)
Forteana [feddit.uk
], up 0.1% to 204, (89 posts, 4 recent)
(Results are averaged over the past 7 days)
Good to see all the programming.dev communities federating properly again.
I don’t know much about federation issues with programming.dev, but I think the reason why there’s so many results from that instance is they’ve changed how active users are calculated for their communities. Instead of it being just users who post and comment, it’s now users who post, comment or vote on anything.
I saw a post about it yesterday (in their Meta community I think), and wondered how it would affect these lists. I’ll have to see what it’s like in the coming days (that instance will seem way more active than every other instance, but each community’s activity growth should stabilise, hopefully)
Ah, that’s interesting.
To be fair, I always thought votes should be accounted for active users. There are a lot of people who only read and vote, they should be accounted
yeah should hopefully calm down tomorrow now that the initial jump is done and since youre doing it relative to what the values used to be so the values themselves shouldnt matter
there might still be spikes from dead communities suddenly getting activity (since the increase from 0 is much larger those communities would go to the top of the list. Could artificially decrease large active user changes from the instance by taking the square root of the percent instead of the actual percent for percents above 100% (1) or something)
Taking into account votes is going to be how the active users is handled for any instances running pangora (lemmy fork)
Viewing the instance communities from another instance thats just using lemmy will show the old stats if needed though
I love seeing sockpuppetsociety grow lol
I put so little work into that one compared to the rest