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by wyldfire
3003 days ago
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> The performance might be superb but the UX is atrocious, everyone has just learned to get over it. I guess I'm one of those. I've been using reddit since before they enabled comments. I love that it's remained simple and it works really well for me. The only items I'd imagine improving on would be remembering collapsed threads (like HN does) and preserving a deeper history of threads I've seen (maybe opt-in if it bugs people). What's the "learning curve" that you refer to? Voting and comments are pretty simple, right? |
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Neither is the concept of subreddits, the difference between text and link posts, subreddit discovery, the community and culture... These were all hurdles that she needed to get through and at the end she gave it up. Too complicated.
The difference between her and most Reddit users is that she was determined to get active on Reddit: she kept trying for weeks.
The difference between her and most non-Reddit users is that she's quite tech-savvy. She worked in tech for 20 years. She fixes her friends' computer problems.