Is there something in particular that would get you to actively use the new LessWrong? I would be interested in hearing a specific vision from some of you that makes you excited about using LessWrong.
And I don't want to only limit this to technical features. If there is some kind of state of the LessWrong community, or some kind of norm that if widely accepted would get you excited about LessWrong, then I would love to hear about that.
Examples could be:
"I would actively engage with LessWrong if I had the ability to automatically crosspost my content on LessWrong, mirror the LW comments on my own blog and have moderator right on my own posts"
"I would be excited about engaging with the community more if it would get better at giving feedback to new writers. I am currently trying to get better at writing, but the LessWrong comments haven't been historically very useful for me, and I have mostly felt discouraged after posting my writing on the page."
"I would be excited if there simply would be more high-quality content on LessWrong. If I imagine two to three people like Scott Alexander posting as frequently as he does, then I would definitely participate more."
I don't foresee posting to LW in place of posting on my blog without some unanticipated value add. I would be happy to use a shared comment system or something like that.
If interesting discussions are occurring I would be reasonably likely to chime in from time to time, as I currently do on LessWrong but with a frequency determined by the frequency of interesting conversations.
What do you feel is the biggest benefit of using your blog instead of LessWrong? I definitely have a sense of why many authors in general prefer writing on their own blogs, but I would be interested in a short summary of what causes that preference in your specific case.