My view on Reddit
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@IRJ said:
An avatar would help considerably for me. It's much easier to remember a picture vs a screen name.
Do they not even support them? If feels to me like a site that gave up long ago.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@IRJ said:
An avatar would help considerably for me. It's much easier to remember a picture vs a screen name.
Do they not even support them? If feels to me like a site that gave up long ago.
I am not sure, but if you look at posts on there, everything is just text. No avatars
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@IRJ said:
I am not sure, but if you look at posts on there, everything is just text. No avatars
To me the screen always looks like a screen of gibberish. I go on there sometimes for different AMA things and it always seems just awful. The conversations are messy, people get ignored, the whole thing is impossible to use. A big, huge effort AMA gets, for example, less conversation than this thread about how bad their system is.
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The downfall of reddit for me lately had been the fact that they're running it into the ground with censorship and bad management. The general manager who made it successful left when he saw the writing on the wall that the board was going to squeeze the site for money now that it was so big. After that they ship is being run by fools. I've been spending a lot more time on voat.co lately.
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I rarely look at a forum or community (whatever you wan't to call it) and say damn that site is ugly. The purpose of a forum is have useful information. I have seen some pretty weak looking forums, but overall it hasn't bothered me because they have a few basic things.
Avatars - Like I said before you get to know someone by their avatar more than you do by their name. You eventually pickup on names too, but an avatar is what catches your eye and that is how I remember someone
Categories or Subforums - Reddit has this, but its hard to find. I like to have all the categories on the homepage so I can know right away if the site is useful to me or not.
Replies or Quotes - Reddit has this as well, but it generally takes you on a rabbit trail when you read 50 replies to single response. In a traditional forum, the main focus of the topic keeps going and you are only drawn away from it when somebody is quoted. Even then the main focus of the topic is still there.
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Reddit suffers from being "one community for everything." Which makes it easy to be big, but essentially impossible to be good.
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@IRJ said:
Avatars - Like I said before you get to know someone by their avatar more than you do by their name. You eventually pickup on names too, but an avatar is what catches your eye and that is how I remember someone
This is what bothers me about FB - users change avatars all the time. It makes it near impossible to follow someone by their avatar.
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Oh yeah, I hate that. It's a cultural thing. IT people tend not to do that.
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@Dashrender said:
@IRJ said:
Avatars - Like I said before you get to know someone by their avatar more than you do by their name. You eventually pickup on names too, but an avatar is what catches your eye and that is how I remember someone
This is what bothers me about FB - users change avatars all the time. It makes it near impossible to follow someone by their avatar.
The majority of people use pictures of themselves on FB, so it's more facial recognition than avatar recognition.
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Expected complaints about it's quality going downhill lol (which I agree with btw, front page is cancerous)
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I check Reddit pretty much every day, and have been doing so for years.
The interface is terrible, yes. I was on Digg before I moved to Reddit... I still remember loading up Reddit for the first time out of curiosity and just staring at it in horror. I've gotten used to it, but it has by no means improved. Their iOS apps are pretty good though.
My two favorite things about reddit are coming across incredible stories or explanations in post comments, and how you can find thriving niche subreddits for a ton of interests. For example, who would spend a bunch of time on the internet talking about cooking ramen? These guys.
With that said, I don't think it's going to be able to maintain the position it's holding for much longer. It's trying to be a mix of giant monetized supersite and community-focused free speech paradise. It's not going very well. Right now it's clear the administration is desperately trying to figure out how to balance these two things, and all I can say is good luck.
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@WingCreative said:
For example, who would spend a bunch of time on the internet talking about cooking ramen? These guys.
Best part of Reddit is the sweet subreddits about junk you are interested in. I'm a WW2 nutter and honestly the stuff you find on there is mind blowing. For a long time I wondered what actually happens when a tank gets penetrated by a shell, and not only did I find out, I discovered the differences between shells (AP, APHE, APBC, APCBC, APDS, API, APFSDS and more).
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@MattSpeller said:
@WingCreative said:
For example, who would spend a bunch of time on the internet talking about cooking ramen? These guys.
Best part of Reddit is the sweet subreddits about junk you are interested in. I'm a WW2 nutter and honestly the stuff you find on there is mind blowing. For a long time I wondered what actually happens when a tank gets penetrated by a shell, and not only did I find out, I discovered the differences between shells (AP, APHE, APBC, APCBC, APDS, API, APFSDS and more).
Most definitely - I always end up losing a few hours of my time whenever I remember AskScience or AskHistorians exists!
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I like Reddit too, i check Reddit often.