A very strong work of original fiction that I enjoyed. "Archeologists find things they aught not" is a well-trod concept, but the implied future setting adds a sense of deep time. Our moment is not the present, but the past as well.

cohost! - "Aquazone - Expensive Digital Fish"
archived 21 Sep 2024 03:24:31 UTC
An essay on a virtual pet product, Aquazone, that was contemporaneous with my own favorite virtual pets, but which seems to have far less survival in its online presence than Petz has. Ahead of its time in the worst ways (paid DLC microtransactions), and yet so thorough as a fishtank simulator, in a quintessentially of-its-era way, that no modern equivalent scatches the itch.

Thoughts
Date: 2024-09-29 01:08 am (UTC)Re: Thoughts
Date: 2024-09-29 02:07 am (UTC)Funny thing - I'm a little more familiar with how things work here than most Cohost expats... because I was a Livejournal kid in the 00's! I migrated over to Tumblr because that's where all my fandoms (especially Homestuck) set up shop as LJ was imploding, but I never really liked it quite as much and always missed some of LJ's particular features and charms.
I've been helping explain how to use things like lj-cuts and communities to friends and mutuals setting up shop here to the best of my ability. XD One friend's actually has been making great use of the ability to inject RSS feeds into the reading-feed to keep up on webcomics, which was a feature LJ also had that I never actually touched!
The main thing we've wondered about is what to do if a primary interest (for example, table-top roleplaying) has a community, but that community's been inactive for years... it's not that it's hard to create a new community from scratch and try to get people to join, but I wonder what the best choice between that and trying to revive a dead community is?
Re: Thoughts
Date: 2024-09-29 02:29 am (UTC)That's a good thing. I still have my LJ. Most of my audience has migrated here though.
>> I migrated over to Tumblr because that's where all my fandoms (especially Homestuck) set up shop as LJ was imploding, <<
Check out
>> but I never really liked it quite as much and always missed some of LJ's particular features and charms.<<
Yeah, each platform has its own pros and cons. I need somewhere I can have lengthy, threaded conversations.
>> I've been helping explain how to use things like lj-cuts and communities to friends and mutuals setting up shop here to the best of my ability. <<
Thank you! I'm hoping that other folks familiar with Dreamwidth will do that, both in their own blogs and on communities like
>> One friend's actually has been making great use of the ability to inject RSS feeds into the reading-feed to keep up on webcomics, which was a feature LJ also had that I never actually touched! <<
Clever.
>> The main thing we've wondered about is what to do if a primary interest (for example, table-top roleplaying) has a community, but that community's been inactive for years... it's not that it's hard to create a new community from scratch and try to get people to join, but I wonder what the best choice between that and trying to revive a dead community is? <<
If you just want to post stuff in the void, or ask if anyone is still out there, then you can use the old one. Check its profile page and it'll say whether or not it's moderated and who can post. You can also look to see who else is subscribed to it. However, you won't have the moderation tools available and DW will not appoint a new moderator in a dormant community.
If you want an interactive community, however, start a new one. Then you'll have all the tools available to you. That makes it much easier to reach out to people, make stuff happen, and solve any problems that may pop up. You can always post about the new comm on any older ones that are relevant. Advertise your new comm on
Also, if you're starting a new comm, check for any dormant ones. DW won't close them so a lot of names are used up. You can switch it up by using a verb form, a slight tangent, plurals, _on_DW, etc. That's how I wound up with
Re: Thoughts
Date: 2024-09-29 03:57 am (UTC)One of the main things I missed soooo bad from LJ; I was very glad Cohost had them. I remember when a lot of people moved to Twitter in the late 00's to early 2010's, and I immediately broke out in metaphorical hives from how antithetical it was to my preferred blogging and conversation style. Give me teal deer or give me death, I say!
Alas, I was never really much of a shipper. u_u; My fandom interests have always leaned more towards meta! I like analyzing character motivations, themes and symbolism, world-building and lore, how older media's influences relate to the work... and for ongoing series, theorycraft and speculation about what will happen next. I ate good during the early 2010's, between Homestuck, Gravity Falls, and Steven Universe...
I did theorycraft for Undertale/Deltarune in the mid-late 2010's, too. But right now the Deltarune theory scene on Tumblr has stagnated in a way I'm not a fan of, and I'm waiting for fresh material to shake up the current theory paradigms.
I also had a lot of fun doing theorycraft for Deca-Dence in 2020, despite it having a microscopic fandom that died pretty much instantly after the show was over. I swear, newer series' fandoms die too fast... but if you like slash/yaoi shipping and don't mind reading for a show you've never watched, I can always show you my friend's MinaKabu fanfics on Ao3. 👀
The main thing making me shy about starting my own communities is that I don't think I have what it takes to be a moderator... ^_^; thank you for the information, though! My current strategy has been to see if a dead community's moderator is active, then message them asking if they'd be ok with new people posting... it just seems like the polite thing to do.
frillsofjustice's mod said they're ok with new people posting, so me and one other person from Cohost (
stepnix) decided to join.
Re: Thoughts
Date: 2024-09-29 06:19 am (UTC)Yeah, Twitter is unusable for me.
>> Alas, I was never really much of a shipper. <<
That's okay, not everyone is.
>> My fandom interests have always leaned more towards meta! I like analyzing character motivations, themes and symbolism, world-building and lore, how older media's influences relate to the work... and for ongoing series, theorycraft and speculation about what will happen next. <<
We need meta too! I enjoy reading meta.
>> I swear, newer series' fandoms die too fast <<
True. There are many reasons. One is that earlier, there wasn't as much material so people were motivated to become attached and stick with favorites. Now there's such a glut, they can binge one and then binge another tomorrow. And bingeing contributes to the problem because when you go through something fast, you don't have as much time to form a relationship with it and think about it.
>> The main thing making me shy about starting my own communities is that I don't think I have what it takes to be a moderator... <<
Not everyone is, and that's fine.
>> My current strategy has been to see if a dead community's moderator is active, then message them asking if they'd be ok with new people posting<<
Good idea. I've tried it but it hasn't worked often.