Five Years anniversary on the Hive Blockchain - Lessons Learned

in LeoFinance3 years ago

Five Years

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Pull up a chair there quick and sit down and make yourself at home folks. We have reason to celebrate! I knew my five year anniversary since sign up was in January, but I was not sure when exactly, but fear not, the folks at @hivebuzz were on hand to let me know that the 29th of January was the date that I signed up all the way back in 2018. Thanks for the reminder and inspiration for this post.

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Five years is a long time in anyone's book, but to be completely honest I was not invested properly for the entire five years. I lost faith in the old chain before a certain Mr. Justin Sun wreaked havoc and to be honest looking back, I'm glad that I was absent for that period, as I have loads of friends here now and idea of having to pick sides in a kind of blockchain civil war does not ring my bell at all. In fact I am not a fan of confrontation, and much rather an environment where everyone gets along, and that is certainly what I have seen since rekindling my interest in Blockchain and Hive a couple of years ago. So, even though it is my fifth birthday, really I had a strong first year, went missing for around 18 months or more and came back around two years ago. Since coming back I found myself much more invested in what has grown into a much fairer and more equal playing field, where good honest content is rewarded and their are no bid bots to be seen. Looking back they were the beginning of the end for the last platform.

So, amazingly five years have passed since I first happened upon Web 3.0 and the ability for me to make money for posting content. Although over time the economic side is secondary as I have forged some strong friendships with people across the world as well. So , have I learned many lessons since early 2018 about online communities, blockchain and Web 3.0?

What I've learned

Engagement is the key

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This isn't new, yet I am surprised that many people still don't seem to get it. This especially true for those that are new to Hive, but I also see some folks that are more old hat neglecting engagement. They pump all of their efforts into posting, but spend little time reading other peoples content, commenting on other peoples comments, replying meaningfully to those who engage with their posts.

Engagement is the key here on Hive and everything else flows from here and that is especially true for those who are completely new. At the very beginning you are basically invisible and bar a lucky few, those first posts that you pour time and effort into will not be seen by anyone. You may have just spent eight hours researching and writing a post that could contend for the Booker prize, but nobody knows it is there, unless you get lucky and someone with considerable Hive Power spots it by chance and upvotes it which all of a sudden gives it increased visibility. That however is uncommon and it is much more likely that you first few posts will not be seen by many and will probably only earn you less than 1 Hive, my first post for instance earned 0 Hive and 1 comment.

So do try to remember to spend time getting to know others in communities that interest you, for me two examples would be the #music community and the #sportstalksocial community where I spend a good bit of time and have built up friendships.

Being authentic pays

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Do not try to be all things to all people is something that I would say. Instead try to find your niche. Many will flock to the trending page and drop one sentence or worse still one word comments on high paying posts in the hopes of attracting attention, votes, follows etc from influential Hivians. That my friends does not work, if you are going to make comments on these posts, make sure that you have read the post fully and that your comment is adding value or asking a question about the post. The following are going to give you a bad name and steer people away from you and your content:

Great Post.

That was very good.

Follow me and I'll follow you.

That was excellent.

Wow, amazing post.

These types of comments tell me that someone is lazy and most likely has not even read my post and I will always reply out of courtesy, but my reply will reflect the level of effort and often be one or two words. On the other hand when the comment is well thought out and insightful or adds value, I will be happy to spend ten or twenty minutes talking over and back, all the while getting to know the person better. That interaction may well make me click over to their page and have a look for a post that may interest me and I will typically comment and upvote, as I am quite reciprocal like that. Whereas those who post with one or two words, I will not waste me time with.

Hive Engine Tokens

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Not only can we earn Hive and HBD here on Hive, there are also a plethora of Hive Engine tokens that we can earn, stake and purchase. Some that spring to mind include Leo Finance, Proofofbrain, Sportstalksocial, Waiv, Beer, Music, Bilpcoin, Neoxian and because we are all part of the open and decentralised Blockchain you can have a look at my account here or anyone else's for that matter just put their username in place of mine below and copy and paste into your browser.

https://peakd.com/@ablaze/wallet/hive-engine

Rather than repeating myself, I wrote a full post on Hive Engine Tokens a couple of weeks ago, so if you are interested, you can check it out here:

https://hive.blog/hive-167922/@ablaze/feeling-bullish-about-the-hive-engine-tokens

Communities

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There is something innate within most of us which makes us want to belong and form bonds with others. It is inherent in us and is part of the society that has been formed over many decades, centuries and millennia.

It does not work on the macro scale however, but rather on the micro scale, because as a people there is a limitation to how many people we can truly care about, this is known as Dunbar's number and I will speak about it in more detail below.

I am not friends with everyone in Ireland, nor am I friends with everyone in Galway, rather I have various groups of friends who I choose to spend my time with, as well as family of course. In the same way I am not following or being followed by everyone here on Hive, rather I have a select number of people who I follow and who choose to follow me. Equally I tend to interact mostly with that same cohort of people, of course I do try to broaden my horizons and engage with new people, so that I can support up and coming accounts.

My Three Tune Tuesday concept is a great vehicle for just that actually and I routinely happen across new Hivians through this initiative and some of my very good friends on here, I met through this activity. This is the power of community and one needs to remember to not try to be a member of them all, but rather find your niche within the ones that really resonate with you and you'll likely find some like minded people to converse with and get to know.

Now, I promised a little more on Dunbar's number, as I found it pretty interesting so here is an excerpt from https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20191001-dunbars-number-why-we-can-only-maintain-150-relationships on the subject.

"The theory of Dunbar’s number holds that we can only really maintain about 150 connections at once. But is the rule true in today’s world of social media?

If you’ve ever been romantically rejected by someone who just wanted to be friends, you may have delivered a version of this line: “I’ve got enough friends already.” Your implication, of course, being that people only have enough emotional bandwidth for a certain number of buddies.

It turns out that’s not just an excuse. There are well-defined limits to the number of friends and acquaintances the average person can retain. But the question about whether these limits are the same in today’s digital world – one in which it’s common to have social media profiles, or online forums, with thousands of followers – is more complicated.

According to British anthropologist Robin Dunbar, the “magic number” is 150. Dunbar became convinced that there was a ratio between brain sizes and group sizes through his studies of non-human primates. This ratio was mapped out using neuroimaging and observation of time spent on grooming, an important social behaviour of primates. Dunbar concluded that the size, relative to the body, of the neocortex – the part of the brain associated with cognition and language – is linked to the size of a cohesive social group. This ratio limits how much complexity a social system can handle.

Dunbar and his colleagues applied this basic principle to humans, examining historical, anthropological and contemporary psychological data about group sizes, including how big groups get before they split off or collapse. They found remarkable consistency around the number 150.

According to Dunbar and many researchers he influenced, this rule of 150 remains true for early hunter-gatherer societies as well as a surprising array of modern groupings: offices, communes, factories, residential campsites, military organisations, 11th Century English villages, even Christmas card lists. Exceed 150, and a network is unlikely to last long or cohere well. (One implication for the era of urbanisation may be that, to avoid alienation or tensions, city residents should find quasi-villages within their cities.)

Now!! Put that in your pipe and smoke it! Oh and If you want to remove me from your Christmas card list now, I completely understand!

Here's to another five years on the Hive Blockchain.

That's all for today. Thanks for reading.

The images used throughout are not my own and were sourced on copyright free website Pixabay.com. The sources are as follows:

https://pixabay.com/photos/cake-5th-birthday-candles-birthday-3873495/
https://pixabay.com/photos/key-heart-feather-stars-pearl-2471007/
https://pixabay.com/photos/smartphone-finger-fingerprint-4562985/
https://pixabay.com/photos/exhibition-visitors-gallery-viewer-2944064/

Thanks as always for stopping by everyone.

Peace Out

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Well done you! I joined in May 2017 and was very active, posting most days. During the Justin Tron takeover I moved from city to country...such a culture shock it took me close to 3 years to be able to function normally:)
But Steemit had become a joke with all the bid bots and downvoting wars. Hive is a much friendlier place altogether and I do love the engagement. Happily I can speed read so I manage to get through quite a lot, learn a little along the way and make a semi-intelligent comment without too much bother.

But Steemit had become a joke with all the bid bots and downvoting wars. Hive is a much friendlier place altogether and I do love the engagement.

Yep, that's it exactly, in a way the takeover thing probably helped to create what we have now, which is far more open, inclusive and rewarding of good quality content. Those bloody bid bots...

Well done you! I joined in May 2017 and was very active, posting most days.

Wow, you were very early indeed and thanks for the best wishes.

Happily I can speed read so I manage to get through quite a lot

Very handy skill to have, I can do it to a certain extent as well.

Congrats on your 5 years on chain ABlaze. It has been great getting to know you through #ttt. Without meeting some interesting and cool people on Hive, it would not be worth turning up each day. I wish you a successful next 5 years!

Thanks a lot @mypathtofire, it's been great getting to know you over on #ttt and that had brought me back to your page to check out the rest of your content too, which is always interesting to check out, though your music posts are my favourite! Yep, I love my tunes!

Nice one ABlaze 🎶🎵🎶

Happy Birthday mate!

Excellent post.... lol

It's mad that you were around for all of that stuff that happened during the legacy chain, but, weren't too involved. It sounds like a crazy time by all accounts. I had no idea about it but got taken on to write a script for a feature film based on it. I learned a lot about the tech and the history of Hive which is really cool, we're in the second draft atm. It's been an amazing experience.

Yeah, I think engagement is really important. I like getting comments on stuff I write, but realistically, I know that not a lot of people read fiction, and alot of people don't like sci-fi, especially not serialised stuff. I wouldn't call what I write a niche though and I do bounce around a little with my content, to be honest, I don't mind what a post makes or if people comment, as really, I'm just building my writing skills, experience and I'm developing the novels while potentially getting some readers along the way. I do find comments occasionally litrally commenting on the title. I don't know how to describe it.

Like, I'd post something titled, the best friends. Hypothetically. But, it's about a friend who betrays someone or something like that, could be dark maybe. Then I get a comment like. "Wow, amazing, there's nothing like having a best friend."

It could be sarcasm, maybe they did read it, but I've just given up replying to those kinds of comments.

Also, the dunbar number, I forgot the name of it, but yeah it's interesting alright, to think we can only have a certain amount of meaningful connections. There's a book I read called The Subtle Art of Not Giving A F*ck, which kind of talks about it and the fact that too many people now care too much, about way too much. Social media has deffinatly made the world smaller and problems seem closer than they are. The idea is to choose what to care about, and what's in your control, rather than making yourself misrable, I suppose in a way the dunbar number fits that catagory.

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I had no idea about it but got taken on to write a script for a feature film based on it. I learned a lot about the tech and the history of Hive which is really cool, we're in the second draft atm. It's been an amazing experience.

Ya I remember reading that you were involved man, that's pure class and I can't wait to see the finished article when you guys are done.

Like, I'd post something titled, the best friends. Hypothetically. But, it's about a friend who betrays someone or something like that, could be dark maybe. Then I get a comment like. "Wow, amazing, there's nothing like having a best friend." It could be sarcasm, maybe they did read it, but I've just given up replying to those kinds of comments.

Nah man, they 100% didn't read it, your gut feeling is right, just fishing for upvotes, dead right to ignore those kind of nonsense comments.

and on the engagement front, you would be on top of my list along with @tengolotodo for engaging comments and getting around to read loads of people's content and engage really well with it, which means for me you both have a massively bright future here and will both attract the ongoing attention of whales, mainly because you are not fishing for it and are just being genuine sound heads.

The idea is to choose what to care about, and what's in your control, rather than making yourself misrable, I suppose in a way the dunbar number fits that catagory.

Ya that makes sense. Today everyone is getting feckin offfended on behalf of someone else, when often the person that is supposedly offended is not actually offended... The whole thing is gone nuts.... Cancel culture... Social Media... Woke culture.... I can't keep up, @bozz mentioned deep fakes to me lately, and I read up on it, now there is something to be concerned about... A world where you can't determine between truth and lies is very dangerous, and you don't even need deep fakes to convince some people that lies are the truth - you just need to type it or print it and it's gospel to them..

Oh man, deep fakes are pretty scary, imagine not only if they were used to wrongly incriminate people, but if they were used as a way for people to hide their deeds. "That wasn't me, it's a deep fake."

It's a strange world man, and it gets weirder by the day, too many people are more interested in breaking off into their factions, I guess it stems from a sense of needing to belong to something. I had a talk with a friend of mine about it before, we were pretty gone, but it was still worth pondering.

So, you know how we're raised in this world, hearing about all of these counter-culture movements that brought forward ideas and changed the world, or at least the mindset of some people. Take the hippie movement. I think a lot of people buying into the bullshit these days are longing to belong to something as big as that, so they can say to their grandkids, "I was there fighting for freedom and fighting against oppression... on Twitter. Me and my followers and friends were able to ban X,Y, and Z. We made a difference!" It's not as impressive, but for a generation or two of people living in other people's nostalgia, they flock to the idea of being somewhere or doing something.

!PIZZA !LOLZ

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Wow, that’s a lot of time! I have half a year more than you, to be honest, but that’s not that matters at all!

I still recall my first steps in this blockchain (or actually the one which name should not be said) and it feels almost a little bit nostalgic already. That means that a lot of time has passed. Back then I was single, now I have a wife and two kids (third to be delivered in March). I still remember our entries in #beersaturday and this was the main reason for me to hang around back at that time. I had also a period when I almost forgot the network, just like you and returned on the hive network with much more dedication.

If you find your communities, if you deliver some good content, sooner or later you will get rewarded, but nothing happens overnight.

Wish you many more years here and a lot of profitable posts!

Hey man, ya a lot can happen in five years and great to hear that your life is moving in a great direction and number three arriving in March! Very exciting, you'll have to call him Paddy or Patrick if he is born on the 17th!! :)

#BeerSaturday and #Freewrite were certainly what kept me going in the early days, I think I might have given up otherwise and it's great to see both of us have found our niche now and are growing, here's to the next five man.

Maybe we should name the baby Patricia… she will be a baby girl next to two bigger brothers!

I’m always glad to see you around in HIVE.
Cheers!

Wow!! That's an amazing post

😆Seriously, congrats on your Hiversary. It's great that you came back and have established yourself within the community, particularly through your TTT.

Wow!! That's an amazing post

Love it! 😆😆😆

congrats on your Hiversary. It's great that you came back and have established yourself within the community, particularly through your TTT.

Thanks a million, it would never be possible without the help of good friends like you looking out for me along the way, so thanks.

Congratulations! Happy Hive Anniversary!
5 years is a long time. But when you look back, it seems time flies pretty fast.

By the way, the example of your first post reminds me of my first post. My first post earning was very close to 0. I was excited about what would happen after 7 days. Well, it was so little, just dust, could not reach the threshold, and I did not get anything. I thought maybe you could not earn here. lol...

I got little earnings from the next post. Happy to see it worked. :)

This is an awesome journey. Wish you all the best on this journey, @ablaze!

Thanks dude, I will dig out that first post at some stage and do a post about it, it was actually some nice photos from the Hill of Tara in Ireland and a little about Ireland's ancient high kings and the battles they undertook to be the High King.

Congrats buddy . Fair play to ya. Sound so you are.

Nice one man, pair flay for your elbow a mhach...

I also see some folks that are more old hat neglecting engagement.

Actually many are like that, and many others don't engage with newer accounts. They have their auto-vote followers and just post whatever drivel they want to at times.
I used to have a three strikes and you're out rule. If I leave engagement on three posts of a Hivian and got no comment back etc, then I stopped following them or engaging etc.

I fluffing digress! Yeah big congrats on 5 years.
Choosing sides would have been a bawbag to do, I was not part of the legacy chain although I was in crypto and funnily enough was watching it all play out on twitter!

You are a star and a pleasure to engage with.
What can we say about ttt, it is the dogs bollocks so thank you for that initiative!

If only all the older accounts were like you, then Hive would be even more fluffing awesome!

Thanks auld stock, you're pure sound yourself and it's been cool getting to know you and a bunch of others through #ttt, all the while discovering new tunes and rediscovering forgotten old gems, with the odd bit of shite thrown in! Though I'd never have the heart to tell anyone that, and just try to encourage everyone! But I have unearthed some quality stuff that I would never have known about were it not for Hive and #ttt, so happy days.

That 3 strikes and your out idea is a good one, at least you are giving people a chance, as sometimes comments get lost if you leave it 3 or 4 days without replying, which I often do, but if you get ignored 3 times, especially after giving a meaningful and insightful comment, that is just plain rude in my book.

Aye well some people think they are entitled to be rude! Fluffing arses!

Happy Hive Birthday man! I didn´t realize your account was so old :D

Ya man, my account is almost as old as yours, although I did kind of go walk about for 18 to 24 months when I lost interest and motivation with the legacy platform..

sure we will eat cake with you...gratz!

Cut a nice big auld sliceen there for yourself and grab a mug of tae (pronounced tay) while your at it!

we are in

Congratulations indeed and best wishes, five years is a really important milestone!

It's nice to read about your experiences on Hive and what has added value to your life; I believe that our fantastic ecosystem offers great opportunities to everyone and I'm not just talking about economic opportunities.

Hive is a nice place to meet new people, travel with the mind, snatch information and vitsa ideas; I think it's sensational!

It would have been nice to leave earlier, but I will make up for lost time and take experiences like yours as an example!
Thanks for sharing!

Congratulations indeed and best wishes, five years is a really important milestone!

Thanks a million! Ya 5 years has a fair auld ring to it now alright! Delighted to still be going.

Hive is a nice place to meet new people, travel with the mind, snatch information and vitsa ideas; I think it's sensational!

Ya you capture the essence of it really well here, I don't know of a better on line community.

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