The redesign is terrible. It looks nicer, but ultimately it behaves terribly. It loses connection with reddit all the time, makes my PC fan speed up to a volume that not even games can achieve, and is downright just behaviorally bizarre. Videos stop and start randomly, or refuse to buffer. Images are too big and stick out of frames sometimes, things take 10+ seconds to load even if the rest of the page loaded just fine.
I switch the URL to old.reddit and poof! Performance problems are magically gone.
The performance is awful. If they just did a site wide CSS and HTML makeover, that would've been fine. But they somehow crammed enough JS in there to make my computer beg for mercy.
It is atrocious. Reinforces every possible stereotype about web apps. One tab of the reddit redesign after scrolling will eat more memory and cpu then most AAA games on my rig.
I think it's fault of the "new" (well hardly new anymore) UI. I use old.reddit.com with an AddOn to my browser to always redirect to it and the site is as responsive as HN.
I honestly wonder what goes on behind Reddit. It's been pretty terrible since the beginning. I don't mean to be insulting to anyone in particular, I know how projects go, and I love the site. But speedy or well done, it is not.
There's no question they've sabotaged their webapp in favor of the app where there's no adblock and they can send push notifications for profit. Been a user since 2009 and still use a ton for everything, but it's quickly grown more painful by the day.
No one is saying they shouldn't make money. It is our right to gripe about it when they do so in an annoying or obnoxious manner. We might even abandon the platform if the advertising push becomes too obnoxious. If that happens and they fold, apparently they did not have a viable business model. There is no "should" about any of it.
Of course there is. Objective functions can be utilitarian or deeply selfish,
but "should" pushes them in someone's desired direction. Relativism is
tautological and intentionally or not, condescending.
Ideally they would make money by making a better product, not neuter their existing good product to force users to use the worse but more lucrative product
What do you see in the parent comment that says they _shouldn't_ do this? It's just laying out that they _are_ doing it, in direct response to a comment wondering why their site is so terrible.
Their method of making money has directly contributed to a nosedive in the quality of their products. I frankly consider this a kind of rarely documented market failure.
One of my favorite quotes because it is so hard for me to swallow
> People will choose convenience over quality any day
- CEO of iHeart Media
I am neither a fan of iHeart Media nor that idea, but I think it may be correct. If true, an explanation for Reddit's poor quality is that they made media consumption convenient, and user hostile behavior goes unpunished because there is nowhere else as convenient as reddit.
That's how I and many others felt with Digg over a decade ago. People like to use what they are familiar, but if you push hard enough people will abandon the platform. I guess reddit isn't pushing hard enough yet, although I suppose I would be gone if the old version wasn't available.
Someone must have tripped over a couple of wires back in China!
EDIT: Clearly, I failed to make it obvious, but I meant this as a joke. I don't believe our traffic is "hubbed" or affected by China in any way whatsoever...