zlacker

[parent] [thread] 3 comments
1. piva00+(OP)[view] [source] 2023-06-01 07:39:36
I was part of the Digg -> Reddit exodus at the time, I loved Digg until they destroyed it, had a Reddit account for long but never really used it.

Now with Reddit trying to shutdown Apollo and other 3rd party clients with this pricing move I can see myself never using Reddit, their official client sucks a lot (it's unfortunate they bought Alien Blue just to kill it, which gave Apollo the chance to rise from those ashes), if Apollo dies... I will simply not use Reddit as much, the only other way I can use Reddit right now is through old.reddit.com, that sucks on mobile browsers without RES.

It seems I will soon experience a repeat of Digg with Reddit, slowly use it less and less because the experience is broken until the moment I forget it exists.

replies(1): >>mebizz+e12
2. mebizz+e12[view] [source] 2023-06-01 19:36:39
>>piva00+(OP)
With the Digg exodus, Reddit was already the strong #2 alternative for a decent amount of time so it was a no-brainer and obviously Reddit has grown exponentially beyond what Digg was.

I have no idea what is out there as an alternative at this point, there just seems to be too much chaff everywhere.

replies(2): >>Castei+8R4 >>johnny+c1g
◧◩
3. Castei+8R4[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-06-02 16:22:12
>>mebizz+e12
Yep, Twitter is currently enjoying this effect of having no "close 2nd" choice for their user base to defect to.
◧◩
4. johnny+c1g[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-06-06 08:57:49
>>mebizz+e12
I've looked for a long time. Tildes feels like a good #2, but it seems content remaining extremely small. I think it's still invite only after 5 years.

Pretty much all alternatives I looked at lacked community. Not expecting reddit numbers, but even a threshold as simple as "more than 5 posts/20 comments a day" was a huge hurdle here. Social media is just so centralized now.

[go to top]