I've been going to Reddit over and over because Lemmy doesn't have the same machine learning, data science communities that Reddit has . Does anyone know of any communities?
FreeCodeCamp is beyond dope. I love their Javascript course as it is graded and fantastic. I still love JS for basic scripting and calculation and random other stuff
If you're on Mac too, I would recommend CodeRunner as a side tool thats really well developed and can IDE-run almost any language. Its awesome and a great tool I use constantly
I'm not trying to sound smarmy, but you can try starting up a community that you're looking for yourself and seeing if conversations spring up to address the lack. If the user base is large enough to support what you're looking for, I'd expect others to be looking for the same thing you are.
In addition to your active search for established communities, of course.
I would love to do that . It's just that I find myself incapable and also I'm just a student right now , making a community would mean being some sort of an expert no?
But yeah I'll absolutely love to do that some day.
You don't have to be an expert, or really even remotely knowledgeable to create a community. If you want it (and whatever instance allows you to create a community), you can make it. Where the challenge comes is in growing the community. You're going to have a hard time attracting people to your community if you don't have anything to offer. A community that's entirely composed of you asking questions nobody answers isn't really of interest to most people.
What I recommend is that you fine one or two people who you think might fit the community's needs, and reach out to them. See if they'd be interested in creating content in your community. I did this on reddit with a couple small communities I made. I sent DMs to power users in similar communities, and asked if they'd be interested in joining a new one, in exchange for giving them mod and letting them have some control over the direction of the community, while I did most of the busywork.
Oh man this is going to be a really important lesson for you to learn: you do not need to be more competent than others, or even more competent than average, in order to run a community about a competency.
The skills involved in running a community are not the skills the community is about. Being able to moderate and encourage discussions which you yourself cannot dominate is a super important leadership skill.
If the idea seems attractive to you, do it.
But also be realistic about your time. It could be you don’t have time to start, shape, and run a new community.
That doesn’t mean you can’t spend some time identifying others who could run it and then selling the idea to them.
It's basically just one button. There's a podcast I like and there wasn't a community so I just started one and had the first post up within a couple minutes.
Just make it clear what kind of community you're starting in community info throw a couple questions or posts related to what you're interested to up there and see if anyone bites.
You don't need any technical knowledge to start a lemmy community, It isn't like starting an instance. It's just starting a group within whatever instance you're part of already. And all the basic tools are already there.