With Vers you get a chronological feed. Only posts from the people you follow, in the order they are posted. No more sponsored posts, no ads, and no algorithm changing the order of your feed behind the scenes.
Don't get sucked into a feed full of posts you've already read. The Vers distraction-free feed removes the noise by only showing you 1 post at a time. Once you interact with that post it will never be seen again. When you're out of posts your feed will be empty. Enjoy social media free from distractions.
Vers is a social network for those who are tired of social networks. No worries about follows, likes, or any other superficial social media numbers that ruin the experience, it's just you and your content. Tell your stories and share your thoughts with the world. On Vers only you can see how many likes and followers you have so there's no external pressure to perform well.
Ever get tired of the constant notifications on your phone? One notification, then another, and another. As the minutes go by it's hard to feel present in the moment you're in because of the distraction of the next notification. With Vers you can set it up so you only receive your notifications once per day. Once in the morning, afternoon, or evening in your local timezone.
Studies have shown that vibrant colors are a crucial part of how social networks get people addicted. Enter Grayscale Mode, a scientifically proven feature that's able to minimize your addiction to social networking. By stripping away all the neuron-stimulating colors from the site you'll be less motivated to use Vers.
Vers will even encourage you to log off if it’s your bedtime. What other social network can you say does that?
I had a feeling this had been discussed on HN a few times before. And I think it's pretty obvious why anyone with a social network to plug is trying to ride in on the Twitter/Elon publicity bandwaggon, this week.
I looked at the longest discussion [0] from just over a year ago and the first post I saw was this, from ColinWright:
----
I came here to say the same thing as square_usual[0] said elsewhere[1], but I'll expand on that a bit.
My immediate thought was ... Hmm, I wonder what this is? Is it like Twitter? Is it like Facebook? Is it like Mastodon? Is it like Instagram? TikTok? QQ? Pinterest? Reddit? Hacker News? How is it different? How is it new?
Then the first thing I saw was a paragraph of text and a sign-in form.
You are competing for people's attention, and while your platform may be wonderful, if you don't get people to try it, it will die unloved. The first thing you've done is given them a barrier, not a taster.
----
I've just revisited the site today and nothing has changed. You can't see anything of the content unless you sign up for an account. Any site that's supposed to be a 'community' that won't even let me peep behind the curtain without creating an account, I just assume it's a ghost town and they're trying to trick people into creating accounts, just to artificially inflate the user figures.
Pity you didn't take ColinWright's advice on board a year ago. I see that every subequent discussion of vers.social on here has attracted no interest whatsoever. Maybe that ahould also tell you something.
Respectfully this is a non-issue. Every social network’s homepage looks exactly like mine - a short description and a log in form. Go to Twitter or Facebook and their homepage will look exactly the same. People are nitpicking. I also have multiple paragraphs explaining the app so I actually am more explanatory than most social networks. I recommend actually joining the site and seeing how it works before hopping onto the bandwagon from last year - I think that’s only fair
People join social networks to socialise --there's a clue in the name. If said network respects their privacy, doesn't shove ads in their face and doesn't annoy them, those are all welcome additional bonus points. But the primary reason is to interact with other people.
I think you're pretty misguided if you think many people will flock to a social network that [with respect] is almost unheard of, when they; can't even see how many other people are using it / read what kind of topics are being discussed there / gauge what the 'tone' of the place is / see whether anyone they know is already there.
You're doing the equivalent of asking people to pay to get into a nightclub, without letting them know what kind of people go there, what kind of music they play, or even whether there's anyone else inside.
It's not bandwaggon jumping to point this out. It's just a really obvious barrier to entry that you refuse to recognise, even though you've had it pointed out to you more than once and for over a year.
Unfortunately just because a couple people on Hacker News requested a different homepage it doesn’t change how the market works. Twitter’s homepage is nothing but a log in form and so is Facebook’s. Vers’ homepage has paragraphs explaining the site - it is more explanatory than the other social networks you get a better idea of what you’re joining than with the others. You don’t see a public feed on Facebook or Twitter’s homepage. This is my hard work and you’re writing me off on a technicality
Dalton has a valid point, you're literally describing every social media site out there right now. Why is he in the wrong for doing the same?
Go to Twitter logged out, what do you see? How about Facebook?
Now, how do you view anything on these platforms while not a member? You have a link somewhere, a tweet, a facebook post, something someone shared that you clicked.
Now look at Vers... You think you can't see inside because you came to a door with no walls on either side and thought "I can't see unless I unlock that door" then walk away.
Want to peek into Vers without signing in, you need to find a link you can view, just like the rest of social networks you're used to.
>Go to Twitter logged out, what do you see? How about Facebook?
With respect to the dev; most people have a pretty good idea what Facebook and Twitter are about and some idea of the huge numbers of people using each site. It's also highly likely that we all know countless people with Facebook, Twitter, Instagram etc. accounts. So, even if there's a locked door with a "Create an Account to See What's Inside!" sign at the entrance, we've a pretty good idea what's going on inside, can be pretty sure that we'll find someone in there to interact with, and so make an informed decision as to whether to venture in.
Vers? How many people have even heard of it --never mind know anyone with an account there? So, what's the incentive for me [or anyone] to go to the hassle of setting up yet another website account, just to see what's inside? The huge incumbent social media websites don't need to try and draw people in. New upstarts do. And I think it takes a bit more enticement than "We're not going to tell you what's in here. But buy a ticket anyway. It'll be great!"
7 comments
[ 4.5 ms ] story [ 27.4 ms ] threadDon't get sucked into a feed full of posts you've already read. The Vers distraction-free feed removes the noise by only showing you 1 post at a time. Once you interact with that post it will never be seen again. When you're out of posts your feed will be empty. Enjoy social media free from distractions.
Vers is a social network for those who are tired of social networks. No worries about follows, likes, or any other superficial social media numbers that ruin the experience, it's just you and your content. Tell your stories and share your thoughts with the world. On Vers only you can see how many likes and followers you have so there's no external pressure to perform well.
Ever get tired of the constant notifications on your phone? One notification, then another, and another. As the minutes go by it's hard to feel present in the moment you're in because of the distraction of the next notification. With Vers you can set it up so you only receive your notifications once per day. Once in the morning, afternoon, or evening in your local timezone.
Studies have shown that vibrant colors are a crucial part of how social networks get people addicted. Enter Grayscale Mode, a scientifically proven feature that's able to minimize your addiction to social networking. By stripping away all the neuron-stimulating colors from the site you'll be less motivated to use Vers.
Vers will even encourage you to log off if it’s your bedtime. What other social network can you say does that?
I looked at the longest discussion [0] from just over a year ago and the first post I saw was this, from ColinWright:
----
I came here to say the same thing as square_usual[0] said elsewhere[1], but I'll expand on that a bit.
My immediate thought was ... Hmm, I wonder what this is? Is it like Twitter? Is it like Facebook? Is it like Mastodon? Is it like Instagram? TikTok? QQ? Pinterest? Reddit? Hacker News? How is it different? How is it new?
Then the first thing I saw was a paragraph of text and a sign-in form.
You are competing for people's attention, and while your platform may be wonderful, if you don't get people to try it, it will die unloved. The first thing you've done is given them a barrier, not a taster.
----
I've just revisited the site today and nothing has changed. You can't see anything of the content unless you sign up for an account. Any site that's supposed to be a 'community' that won't even let me peep behind the curtain without creating an account, I just assume it's a ghost town and they're trying to trick people into creating accounts, just to artificially inflate the user figures.
Pity you didn't take ColinWright's advice on board a year ago. I see that every subequent discussion of vers.social on here has attracted no interest whatsoever. Maybe that ahould also tell you something.
[0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=28927767
I think you're pretty misguided if you think many people will flock to a social network that [with respect] is almost unheard of, when they; can't even see how many other people are using it / read what kind of topics are being discussed there / gauge what the 'tone' of the place is / see whether anyone they know is already there.
You're doing the equivalent of asking people to pay to get into a nightclub, without letting them know what kind of people go there, what kind of music they play, or even whether there's anyone else inside.
It's not bandwaggon jumping to point this out. It's just a really obvious barrier to entry that you refuse to recognise, even though you've had it pointed out to you more than once and for over a year.
Go to Twitter logged out, what do you see? How about Facebook?
Now, how do you view anything on these platforms while not a member? You have a link somewhere, a tweet, a facebook post, something someone shared that you clicked.
Now look at Vers... You think you can't see inside because you came to a door with no walls on either side and thought "I can't see unless I unlock that door" then walk away.
Want to peek into Vers without signing in, you need to find a link you can view, just like the rest of social networks you're used to.
Here, I took time out of my day to find a link for you. https://vers.social/@dalton
Vers? How many people have even heard of it --never mind know anyone with an account there? So, what's the incentive for me [or anyone] to go to the hassle of setting up yet another website account, just to see what's inside? The huge incumbent social media websites don't need to try and draw people in. New upstarts do. And I think it takes a bit more enticement than "We're not going to tell you what's in here. But buy a ticket anyway. It'll be great!"