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by vicktour
1099 days ago
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I'm glad it works for you, but its never worked right for me. It always seemed to be messing up links and the UI is so bad. I prefer my client to be minimal and functional and that's why I went with Reddit is Fun. Simple UI that worked and could manage the comment section successfully. Honestly, it feels like the Reddit team saw one of the "Everything Apps" from China and thought its UI and UX where something to be modeled after. I simply wish they would have attempted to buy Apollo and RiF. Then offer them up as official clients. RiF is the only way that I will interact with Reddit because of the way it is laid out and how functional it is. That's where my hate come from. They are effectively killing Reddit for many of us. |
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It's not that it works for me really, it's I'm not the target market.
I obviously getting on in the years. I have a 17 year old Reddit account and I signed up for that at work!
I just don't use my phone for apps like Reddit. I use it for what I need to, calling, texting, delivery apps, banking, navigation, music and that's about it.
If I'm sitting in the doctor's office lounge too long I may fire up Reddit's official app otherwise I don't use it.
I can see the benefits Apollo and others bring, they look far better from all angles. I just don't need them.
But I'm not alone, that's why this whole fiasco will likely blow over. Most people don't know and/or don't care about these apps, but they use Reddit. The HN crowd is not your typical home user, or a "get off my lawn" type like myself. Even though I have multiple decades of working as a software engineer.
Now should they be doing this now? Should they be trying to rush this IPO and these profitability targets and whatever to get that big payout?
No, they shouldn't. But that's the choice they made.