In comment sections or in community pages, it’s mostly an ocean of default avatars.
As a UI developer, that’s always been a gripe because I put a lot of effort into making them look good and scale properly, etc. When I see 60-70% or more accounts sporting the default avatar, it makes me wonder why I even bother.
So, since this bugs me so much, figured I’d just ask.
Lemm.ee users I can understand because of the waiting period for uploads, but AFAIK, most instances don’t have that restriction. Even then, there are plenty of .ee accounts that never bother to go back and set one.
I don’t even see or care to see avatars. Its just clutter imo.
Yeah same. Does Connect even have a setting for that? I mean I won’t use it; I guess I never bothered to look is all.
There is a setting. The profile pictures are so small in list view, you can’t really tell what it is.
My app either doesn’t show them or it’s off by default. I didn’t know there were avatars but I’m not interested in them either since I’m reading on my phone and prefer a minimalist view.
Same. No avatars shown in voyager.
I didn’t even know there were user avatars. Most common apps don’t show them.
You are probably a dude who spends money on skins and battlepasses.
deleted by creator
I would first need a personality to express.
I think I have one … don’t know who can see my Snoopy.
I don’t even see it on voyager. I don’t know why I would want an avatar anyway.
I do not see the importance of an avatar.
I’m too lazy to search for the image I usually use.
I have a username. That’s all the identifying I need. Why do you feel the need to twitterfy lemmy?
I’m ugly and I don’t like cartoon pfp
Mine’s a picture of a cow. Just sayin’.
I like that picture!
It’s a lovely cow.
Heck, I was salty when the old site added avatars. I already ignored names and was weirded out by “popular redditors” culture before avatars, and it was annoying to see a logo next to a name coloring my perception of the comment. I’m here to read comments, not to look at avatars
I forgot.
One of the harsh lessons in software is learning that users sometimes have different wants and expectations than the developer. Gold-plating is a constant temptation, and it usually leads to frustration and resentment.
At the end of the day, if 60-70% of people don’t care, either do it for the 30-40%, or do it for your own enjoyment, or put your efforts elsewhere. In any case, don’t fall into a pit of resentment just because lots of users are approaching a platform differently than you.




