• pyre@lemmy.world
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        41 minutes ago

        it’s not that it’s German (or whatever), it’s that it looks and feels like it’s gibberish. it’s incredible how little this is understood.

        Uber is an easily read, easily pronounced, widely understood, positive sounding trochee. it’s a perfect brand name.

        flohmarkt is 0 for 5.

    • Cracks_InTheWalls@sh.itjust.works
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      5 hours ago

      Does it? If you set up an instance for your local community/city/whatever, and name it something that makes sense for your intended userbase, I think it would be fine.

      It goes from “I sold my couch on FlohMarkt” to “I sold my couch on Local Ottawa Marketplace” for the ‘normies’ out there. They’re not going to care about the underlying software so long as their couch gets sold.

      Do recommend a DIY local advertising strategy if trying to get something like this running, though - posters at IRL flea markets, adverts in small community papers for antiques and collectibles, crossposts/links to postings on stuff like MaxSold/Kijiji/Craigslist/GumTree/FB Marketplace/[insert online marketplace operating in your area] by first adopters, that kind of thing.

      Focus on the current primary use case of centralized marketplace services (buying shit from your neighbours), then introduce the “Oh yeah, we’ve also set it up so you can see postings on Local Toronto Marketplace, Local Kingston Marketplace, Marché Local de Montréal” etc. from there.

      I really, really think talking to people in terms of specific instances over the overarching platform/protocol is a way around ‘normie’ confusion about the Fediverse when first trying it, then getting exposure to how it works in practice will help them understand the nitty gritty stuff better. Is this problematic in some cases, like with Lemmy? A little bit, yeah. For something like FlohMarkt? I think less so.

      (‘normie’ in quotes 'cause I’m not the biggest fan of the term, but it’s a useful shorthand)

    • maniclucky@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      It’s not that bad. It’s just German for flea market. And English speakers shouldn’t have an issue with at least “Markt”. Not far from a cognate.

      Definitely better names but I think the bigger hurdle is getting the critical mass to get something like marketplace to work in the fediverse even with the perfect name.

      • FundMECFSResearch@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        7 hours ago

        Yep. It’s kind of annoying when people see everything through an “english” lense and assume anything that isn’t made to work for english speakers won’t work…

        • TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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          5 hours ago

          Op has a point. Even English names that succeed internationally are somewhat bound by the ability of speakers of other languages to spell and pronounce the name. Y’all are here acting like what they’re saying is hateful or something…

          • nasi_goreng@lemmy.zip
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            2 hours ago

            Its even more important to use various word from various language.

            English as default also resulting American culture as the most prominent culture.

            Newer generation are more acceptable to outside culture, so this will be work. Not to forget, the rest of non-English society already operate in multi language society and get exposed for various culture.

            Years ago, people heavily localized Angliscize a lot of Asian media, but now, people are more accepting foreign naming convention. Just take a look at various FOSS porject in Japanese, Hindi, Persia, or Finnish.

      • TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        But telling a friend about this starts with the name. Simple names are easier. And that would just start with making it short. Single syllable being best.

        • ddh@lemmy.sdf.org
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          13 minutes ago

          Isn’t this more like the software you’d use to build whatever local (but maybe federated) site? Like, you don’t ask your friend if they’ve been on Shopify or Squarespace lately.

    • Kichae@lemmy.ca
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      8 hours ago

      We have to stop sending end users to software solutions for web admins. We don’t send them yo “nginx” or “apache”, after all.

      Someone throw up a website using this software and give the site a sensible name, and then direct users to that website.

    • lambalicious@lemmy.sdf.org
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      6 hours ago

      Oh look, the Queen of Naming has spoken! Everything should just be named “Facebook something” or “Twitter that”.

    • Shard@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      I can’t understand why every other fediverse name is so stupid as to be off putting to the average user.