![]() Large pages (~250,000 by 2017 standards ~20,000 by 2014 standards) run into the opposite issue as small pages. Or, they don’t remain medium for very long. Thus these pages have additional incentive to familiarise themselves with the others within their cluster. Their fanbaase often follows all of the related pages and further contributes to the community formed across these pages: they are very likely to be familiar with, or respond positively to, closely related content. They interact with each other by collaborative content creation, sharing each other’s posts frequently, remixing each other’s contents and pooling useful techniques and ideas together. These pages sometimes form clusters with other closely associated pages which share themes and narratives, which helps them all develop. This means that viewers need both general memetic literacy and a historical familiarity with the page. Medium pages (~75,000 by 2017 standards ~10,000 by 2014 standards) are most often specialised, insular and experimental. Rapid growth is dangerous for a memepage that lacks a pre-existing culture, community or an equivalent. This frequently leads to low-literacy users following the page and locking it in a cycle of low-quality content high-quality content (from the perspective of high-literacy users) is often esoteric and impenetrable to normies, and thus punished with lower reach. There are other strategies a small page can use to grow quickly, such as viral success with a post (either by being shared by a bigger page or by making a popular post). Because these enthusiasts tend to have good taste, their demand for quality content exerts a pressure for better taste from the memepages. The question is a pragmatic one for admins on smaller pages (under 10,000 followers by mid-2017 standards under 1000 by 2014 standards): what content will help the page grow in the community? The answer is offered by community participants enthusiastic enough to follow small pages and give them attention, but only implicitly. It’s a difficult question related to, but distinct from, questions like “what makes an artwork good?” and “what makes a game good?” I’ve been wrestling with the question of what makes a meme good for 3 years as a creator and memepage admin. About This site uses Just the Docs, a documentation theme for Jekyll.Creeps, Tweeps, & the Limits of Social Media Freedom.The Structures of Hyperspatial Politics.On Vectoralism & the Meme Alliance's General Strike.How to Digitally Coauthor Articles In Philosophy Class.A Golden Age of Meme Pages and the Microcosm of Art History.From Outrage to Dicks Out to Dead Celebrity: The Evolution of the Great Ape Harambe.2010's Decade Review, Part 1: The Origin of 2010's Memecultures.2010's Decade Review, Part 2: Memetaphysics Through Three Lenses.Jeremy Cahill (Metamer) Dismissed for Serious Misconduct.Twitch Plays Pokemon, the Meme Scene, & the Project of Hyperspace.Memes Are Not Jokes, They Are Diagram-Games.The Quadrant System for the Categorization of Internet Memes.Defining ‘Normie’, ‘Casual’, ‘Ironist’ and ‘Autist’ In Internet Subcultures.The design of a platform determines the kind of content produced.Structure and Content in Drake-Style Templates.The Memeticist's Challenge Remains Open.Memes and Humor: Reply to Claudia Vulliamy's "What is a Meme?".GME Frenzy Hints At the New Stage of Memecultures.Me watching all 46 episodes of marineford at the same time using the vision pro pic.twitter. Thanks to Apple Vision Pro we were able to cure our kid's debilitating iPad addiction and start having normal family dinners again. ![]() The first thing I'm doing when I get my Apple Vision Pro is putting it in "Buscemi mode" /D9R4Wd8h7E ![]() Me walking into a PowerPoint presentation with my Apple Vision Pro headset to edit the font size You can charge your apple pencil with vision pro /C1lPVwPvTi Here are some of our favourite memes about the Vision Pro. ![]() And of course, you can’t avoid the memes poking fun at the device’s price. Another post is suggesting a great way to make the Eyesight feature a little more entertaining for everyone. Others are delighting (or perhaps rueing) the day when kids move on from iPad to Vision Pro addiction. People have noted that the Vision Pro look like ski goggles, but some argue they also resemble scuba goggles. ![]()
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