In all honesty, maybe I would go back if I could pay a few bucks a month to use my own client that didn't show ads.
But that's because there are a few niche communities on Reddit that don't seem to want to migrate anywhere else.
In all honesty, maybe I would go back if I could pay a few bucks a month to use my own client that didn't show ads.
But that's because there are a few niche communities on Reddit that don't seem to want to migrate anywhere else.
Yes and this makes sense on the surface. Cat threads on one server should be merged with cats on another server, so that I get a whole cativerse subreddit equivalent.
But then what happens when you have ambiguous terms like Tomorrow? Or when one server changes the rules in protest (like r/pics right now)?
Don't want to hastily make decisions that could lead to awful user experiences.
/r/pics is now too sexy to browse.
Just got to wait for a Reddit Vanced app then...
I agree. As a lazy user, I do not want to have to worry about upvoting/boosting my own content.
I understand the concept, but not the purpose. Why would I post something to a microblog when I can post a thread? Or I guess if I was more twitter-savvy, why would I create a thread when I can post something to a microblog?
We'll see all 10 communities as separate communities though. I'd love to have 10 separate communities and one browser site that treats those 10 communities like one singular cat community.