I think a big issue with the new design is the trust issue I/people have that stem from Reddit's other design efforts. Take the mobile website. It looks a lot nicer than the desktop site, but is completely unuseable on a lower end (but current) android device - because instead of showing content immediately it does some javascript client rendering and shows some loading screen, and that regularly takes 10-20 seconds on bigger comment threads. At the same time there is still i.reddit.com, an ugly mobile site seemingly from way back when sites started to make dedicated iPhone-targeting mobile variants, and that one is as fast as a site can be. Actually usable.
On mobile, if you visit the reddit site, they push a "use the app"-banner in your face. Every goddamn time.
When they redesigned the profiles recently there was a lot of pushback. I did not necessarily agree with that, I thought and think the new profile sites are fine in general. But what definitely was an issue was the performance. Again some javascript client rendering leading to loading indicators, even on the desktop. They improved loading times after that, but still.
So one big point of the new design is not actually "how will it look", but whether they will get the functionality/UX right. HN does, without client side rendering and redesigns...
I have exclusively been using i.reddit.com for at least 5 years now and it isnt pretty or anything but it loads fast and works. I use reddit to get to the content. The ui is just a tool to get me somewhere. I do not want a mobile app and the real mobile website takes forever to load and half the time im on reddit im just scrolling aimlessly anyway and the mobile website cannot handle it also its paginated and i want infinite scrolling. Speed of content on a link aggregator site will always be more important than appearance.
I fear they will remove i.reddit.com in the future because it does not have ads. It also does not have their fake posts that are actually ads and mark promoted that
> Furthermore, we do not have plans to do away with the current site. We want to give you more choices for how you view Reddit (we are looking at you i.reddit.com).
That's nice, but they actually already broke that i.version of that site. Some posts (those with images hosted on reddit?) open the regular mobile version of the site, making it cumbersome to use. Does not feel like an officially sanctioned choice.
Well the other issue is reddit videos. When a link is v.reddit.com it redirects to the new mobile site. This is basically the same issue as the images, just with their videos.
Personally, I prefer apps over websites almost always unless the app is just a dedicated browser window to the company's website. I feel like the mobile experience on almost all websites is absolutely terrible when compared to a dedicated mobile app offering. Unless companies start investing more money into making their websites feel as good and snappy as their apps do, I know I'll default to the app over the website, always.
I usually prefer apps too but it's only because apps have native controls that are first-class citizens in the UI - they don't float around and aren't as prone to being mis-clicked. Apps generally have better performance than the website too.
Sites that have more static text with large text controls are fine in the browser, but that's usually the exception.
This is Apple's vision because Google owns the browser market. PWAs could replace at least half the apps people are using. Reddit absolutely doesn't need native apps but there are a bunch because their mobile experience is so bad.
> One where I have an app on my phone for every website I visit?
Google is working on "instant apps" that auto-install apps when you try to visit a website, so that should give you a vision into the future some want.
Indeed, the mobile site is one of the worst I have ever had the displeasure of using. The banner it shows is absolutely horrible. I often just want to open a couple of links for offline reading like when I'm about to board a plane and I have dismiss all these stupid banners.
The reddit mobile site actually just stopped loading for me at all a few months ago; I assume it was a redesign at their end paired with an update I ignored at my end - I just get a blank screen. Since I minimise the number of apps I install, it basically removed reddit from my mobile browsing. Now you've gone and taught me i.reddit.com which still works! (Actually, thanks.)
> On mobile, if you visit the reddit site, they push a "use the app"-banner in your face. Every goddamn time.
It's not at all obvious, but if you go into the settings menu on the top right, you can tell it to not ask you this anymore. It seems to store it in a cookie, so you shouldn't be prompted if you don't use incognito or similar when checking it.
If you go to i.reddit.com and click one of the subreddit links it goes to reddit.com/r/whatever/.compact or whatever. So they appear to be the exact same site. Just different links
Thankfully there are also non-standard apps that are better (i use one called sync).
I think its tough to run a social network today and not be tempted to milk your users for everything a la facebook. Reddit does a reasonable job imo (and is being rewarded with good communities building there) though you can see the app is a bit of a grab in that direction (otherwise theyd just make the mobile web experience better). Hopefully their trajectory will stay positive though as always people will move on if bad decisions are made (a la slashdot, kuro5hin, digg, etc)
I think the fact that the Reddit management got to witness the rapid death of Digg and rapid influx of users resulting from it let them learn a valuable lesson at Diggs expense (at just how fast your users can destory you if you piss them off).
One thing I wonder though is where Reddit users would go in the event of such a collapse. I'm not aware of an established site in this format that's available like Reddit was available when the Digg collapse happened.
One thing I noticed was there Hamburger menu in the top left hand corner. It gives me, a web developer, a chuckle to see the hamburger menu as an actual hamburger...
But regular users will have no idea what to do with that icon. Just a small example of the redesign I took away from it.
I think JS rendering can definitely be a major issue, too. Uber (I know Uber is bad, but m.uber.com is a great piece of engineering) and Netflix have taken big leaps in rendering performance, they'd be wise to take a page or two away from them.
Serious question: Why do you think m.uber.com is a great piece of engineering? I've tried it on 3 phones, with 3 different browsers, and I've never gotten it to work at all. I'm not saying that your experience is invalid or anything, just that my impression is the opposite of yours, and I'm wondering why.
Slightly less chuckling:
1. the menu appears as the page loads, and then pops out of view.
2. just loading the crucial bits takes 7 seconds, and that's on an off day with a fancy fast internet connection in one of the richest countries in the world (Netherlands).
I'm generally less negative than others about style changes, but i loathe how heavy the whole thing feels. The fact that it's not taking into account accessibility at all (so far) is also problematic.
For 'old' reddit I used RES and often disliked how clunky it made everything. But its features were generally worth it. I do not see what benefits the redesign offers that is worth the 'heaviness' of the whole thing.
Its so bad on mobile, I just treat reddit search results like spam. No, I dont want an account, an app, or to enable any scripting to see a text discussion.
> When they redesigned the profiles recently there was a lot of pushback.
There was massive amounts of pushback. Until the moderators started deleting posts, almost half the posts in the beta-subreddit was complaining about them, asking them to be rolled back.
But did they listen to their users? No. They actively censored and silenced people who were complaining.
That tells us that this new "redesign" is not for the users. It's for someone else.
> They actively censored and silenced people who were complaining.
Forget the issues with design. The active censorship by both Reddit admins and power-hungry moderators is the real issue that Reddit is facing. Reddit used to be a bastion of free-flowing ideas and discussion. Now it's a hive of groupthink and curated brand-friendly content.
I still frequent Reddit because it has enough network-effect to still be worthwhile to me. But that can change on a dime, often triggered by something unrelated, like a UI re-design (e.g. like what happened Digg).
I'm surprised the article didn't call out what happened to Digg during their redesign and subsequent flood of users leaving for Reddit. I figured that's why Reddit thought it was worth the money of hiring 20 designers.
Just because there are lots of complaints doesn't mean the majority doesn't like it. Usually, unhappy users are more likely to say something than happy ones.
There has been a similar situation with Ubuntu and Unity: A vocal minority kept on complaining that Unity be a step back from gnome. Now that Ubuntu has dropped it, many users state to actually have liked Unity and are sad about that change.
“Just because there are lots of complaints doesn't mean the majority doesn't like it. ”
True, but it doesn’t mean that the majority does like it.
Complaints do not necessarily represent the majority. But they may. And during a beta, it’s more likely as people are encouraged to submit feedback. So if there are lots of “hate it” comments and few “love it” comments that is useful.
They could release before and after usage data (in whole) that may give a better picture. Comparing the same user’s historical activity on the old and new to see changes in time spent, number of taps, taps per article, etc.
A new UX should increase usability. There should be clear usability data. And a community driven site should share this data.
I suspect that the ad revenue from the redesign is higher. And that’s why they are not sharing real data, and are squashing feedback that doesn’t like the revenue driving changes.
I hate the mobile Reddit site. It's slow to load, obtuse to navigate, and pushes the crappy mobile app on me. Before now, I had complained plenty, just not to Reddit.
Why would I use an app for something when a web browser provides a better experience with fewer bugs and a richer feature set?
The app and mobile site quickly run out of memory after a page or two of gifs.
The app does not allow you to open content in other tabs. This is problematic if I want to follow a trail of links and resume where I left off in the feed or comments; I have to mash the back button repeatedly. Additionally, I can't open a new tab to look into comments or a link later.
The mobile site and app have issues with sorting by top / newest every now and then, and often will fail to load content altogether - leaving the user with a white screen. (I've reproduced this in firefox & chrome on Android, and safari and firefox on iOS)
The mobile site and app take longer to load comments and additional content - and sometimes fail to load all together. Whereas the desktop version of the site loads almost instantaneously and almost never fails.
The app does funky things with copy pasting of text.
The mobile site sometimes crops half the images, making it a pain to click through.
Downloading images / saving getting an images source URL can be a pain on the mobile site / app.
And of course, the mobile site spams you constantly to download their app.
I can't use an adblocker, privacy related plugins or browse incognito in the app.
The app is a wrapper around a mobile site. A better question is what value-adds does the app provide over Safari/Chrome? Particularly as now notifications can be enabled straight from mobile browsers.
Because my phone's storage is 98% full. I need to delete some apps not install a new one. An app that wants to be installed needs to prove value. (I wish I could uninstall gmail and other such built in programs that I have no use for)
> Now that Ubuntu has dropped it, many users state to actually have liked Unity and are sad about that change.
Maybe that is because the people who complained back then dropped Unity and/or dropped Ubuntu entirely. At least I did so and I would not have known that Ubuntu dropped Unity if I didn't read your comment.
And that in turn also doesn't mean that the majority preferred Unity, it's simply the same phenomenons again: people tend to dislike change, and only the people who dislike the change let themselves be heard.
You just made the same logical fallacy you were advocating against.
There's no reason it can't just be 2 vocal minorities - 1 who liked Unity and 1 who didn't, while the majority of users was indifferent, or at least indifferent enough not to make a comment.
For the record, Ubuntu dropped Unity at the same time they dropped Mir. I assume it had more to do with that than a belief that users preferred Gnome 3.
I still hate the profile redesign, thankfully you can go back to 'legacy' mode somewhere hidden in the options ... but I'm afraid they will take that out soon as well.
My big issue with the profile redesign is that the the individual items in your feed (?) aren’t links any more. You can’t Ctrl-click, right-click or scroll wheel-click them any more. There’s (as far as I can tell) no way of opening them in a new tab at all^1. Every click will take you away from the profile. Which is a shame: visually I like the redesign. But it’s unusable.
I’m honestly a bit in awe at this level of active UX hostility.
^1 … unless you enable the option causing all items to be opened in a new window. Obviously that’s also not what I want.
Isn't that the way everyone uses Reddit: open up link list, middle-click link, middle-click comments, middle-click link, middle-click comments, repeat ad infinitum, then read, comment, read, comment and so on?
The problem is that they're making assumptions on how people use the site and then break years and years of conventions that are used on mostly every website.
These conventions are there because it's the default, not because most people use them.
Here on HN and most of the old reddit users certainly use that, but I doubt that the majority of reddit today (including the team of 20 designers making the new design) care about it "middle click to open in a new tab".
I agree. My point is that they aren't overriding, they're just clueless. Using `onClick` instead of a proper link solves their problem and they don't even see the new one that they just created.
RES has a toggle which will auto-redirect you away from any new-style profile page to the old user profile page for that user.
I rely on it heavily for moderation, since the mod toolbox extension has a search function over a user's history, but it only works from the old-style profile page (or at least, that was the case when I first had to turn on the redirect).
The new profile overview is terrible. I always switch it back to legacy since I can't follow the new overview. There is no way to keep it permanent in the legacy site that I know of.
I stopped using Reddit a while ago when it became clear that they had a pretty adversarial relationship with their users. Their moderation is terrible, the community ranges from unpleasant and repetitive to downright toxic, the content is better found elsewhere, and the administration is incompetent and amoral at best.
I’ve never once felt like I missed out on something by eschewing Reddit, and every time I check to see if it’s changed for the better it is markedly worse. Reddit, Imgur, Instagram, Facebook, are just bad places to be. There are a couple of good subreddits to read occasionally, like askhistorians, but you don’t need an account to read it. Actually participating gets old, fast.
I have a feeling there's a story here. Was there something specific that tipped you over the edge. Reddit itself hasn't changed very much. It's always been a strange mixture of toxic sludge and strangely amazing communities.
> the content is better found elsewhere
I really haven't found this. Every other website is either bloated, editorialized, dumbed down or some mixture of all three. Reddit (and HN) seems to walk a tightrope that reminds me of the best parts of the old days of the internet.
I'm trying to get off of it right now. It's my last online "addiction". I've been there since 2009 and watched most things change for the worst. The community got more toxic and it's clear there is corporate control over some subreddits.
Why do we care so much about design? Reddits success in spite of completely eschewing designers should prove design is over valued. So to does Craigslist. Japanese websites are proof by example that this is strictly a cultural phenomena. Why does Western society seem to value form over function so much?
How much is "good design" codeword for dumbing the site down as much as possible and making it shiny enough for people who get distracted by car keys? Reddit doesn't exactly have the learning curve of a command line tool or a rocket plane. Maybe I'm elitist, but if you can't understand reddit as it is maybe you're an idiot?
Call me an old man waving around my cane, but I say to hell with the redesign. Give me my plain old links in their plain old default blue underline and my mod-hacked-together css+bots. The internet need not anymore "progress for the sake of progress".
I would be more specific. Designing so things look good is over valued. Designing so things are simple to use the first time but don't restrict the user later on are under valued.
All the redesigns look Facebook-ish. Which make me wonder... Do the designers understand what people love about Reddit? The new interface looks void of information and way too distracting...
This isn't by chance... Reddit is actively pushing themselves towards being the next Facebook, down to the whole "deprioritize subreddits/emphasize profile pages and groups of friends" mechanic. They just hope by boiling the frog slowly enough, people won't realize what's happening around them.
Why do the instances need to be subs? It seems to me you just need NNTP extended to support voting and a few other features (most—probably all—of which could just be messages with new defined headers and, in some cases, no actual message body.)
I was thinking the other day. What if there was a browser extension that pulled in reddit/subreddit comment threads a la Alientube for the site or article you were viewing/searching. Literally anywhere you went on the internet for any hyperlink, you could check and see if there is a comment thread for that url. Decentralize the comment threads and related metadata onto something like IPFS and you have reddit but internet wide and you aren't limited to reddit's terrible search bar.
I wouldn't say these redesigns actually look very good... they're just easy. Maybe not to implement, but easy to imagine, easy to accept, and easy to make strict guidelines for.
And then you look other mediums of design, and you realize its only the software UI weenies who pull this out and think its something to be proud of. There's a reason you can slap bootstrap onto any website and have a "good" design; the result has nothing to do with the website itself.
>How much is "good design" codeword for dumbing the site down as much as possible and making it shiny enough for people who get distracted by car keys?
You're confusing user interface design and graphic design, which are two different disciplines with different goals, neither of which is to be merely distracting.
>Japanese websites are proof by example that this is strictly a cultural phenomena.
You're assuming that Japanese don't consider that "good design." It is a cultural phenomenon, but your assertion that it's strictly a Western phenomenon is incorrect.
It's also particularly odd to invoke Japan as an example of a culture that doesn't care at all about design or aesthetics.
>Maybe I'm elitist, but if you can't understand reddit as it is maybe you're an idiot?
I don't think there was ever an overabundance of users who didn't understand Reddit, given the site's popularity. Like a lot of programmers, you're assuming an inverse correlation exists between the quality of a site's design and the intellect of its users. So yes, you're an elitist.
>Give me my plain old links in their plain old default blue underline and my mod-hacked-together css+bots.
... and here you are arguing in favor of minimalism, which is a form of design.
Your entire comment is just a rant about how other people's design preferences are less valid than your own.
"It's also particularly odd to invoke Japan as an example of a culture that doesn't care at all about design or aesthetics."
The belief that Japanese people all deeply care about such artistic things is largely a Western romanticization of Japanese culture, the sort that Roy Andrew Miller criticized in Japan's Modern Myth over three decades ago already. Yes, Japan is home to some interesting traditions, but that doesn't mean that broad society cares. And as Japanese websites show, Japanese mass society is quite comfortable with cluttered websites that one would be hard-pressed to call "elegant".
True, but I didn't claim that "Japanese people all deeply care about such artistic things", only that they had a history with a design aesthetic that differed in principle from Western design, but wasn't an example of the absence of design. One could just as correctly assert that most Westerners don't care deeply about design, either.
>And as Japanese websites show, Japanese mass society is quite comfortable with cluttered websites that one would be hard-pressed to call "elegant".
Do they look cluttered to Japanese people, though? Or do they only look cluttered to Westerners because Japanese text looks like noise rather than language? Admittedly, it doesn't look elegant, but that doesn't mean it isn't an example of design.
You're confusing user interface design and graphic design, which are two different disciplines with different goals, neither of which is to be merely distracting.
"Dumbing it down" = designing for user's mental models = ux design
>"Dumbing it down" = designing for user's mental models = ux design
Riiight... when Reddit designs their UI around the mental model of mainstream users, they're dumbing it down, but when Hacker News designs their UI around pg's mental model of "good hackers", they're being elegant and minimalist.
Most people will understand reddit if they give it a chance. Problem is that they're less likely to do so if they find the design and UX unintuitive.
I know I disliked reddit's design when I saw it the first time, and I've spoken to several people who never got into reddit because they disliked the design.
there was a similar discussion in emacs land, people were afraid they'd lose users, and to me .. that was perfectly fine. Those who stick to emacs in the spite of all the seemingly looking defects are users that really like it. Distorting something for market share like mentality is not good, it lowers entry but low entry means easy exit. Not worth it IMO. (plus in emacs, case, unless some large effort, no way a newcomer, even tech saavy, won't suffer, it's just too large)
Yes. There is a huge portion of people who will take one look at something that is mostly text, declare that it appears jumbled and/or confusing, and have any interest in doing anything with it immediately killed.
This large group of people, probably the majority, does not want to give such platforms a chance, and they do not want to get under the covers and figure it out. They simply do not want anything to do with something that is tightly-packed or primarily text-based. Many of the people I tried to recruit to reddit in the early days (either reddit.com or sites running the reddit software) had this reaction.
This can be a feature when you're trying to target specific types of people (cf. HN). But if you're trying to sell ads, it's a bug, because ad sales are all about getting as many human eyeballs on your platform as possible. Perceived ugliness is a real barrier to mass adoption.
I do agree mostly. To the point that reading reddit redesign makes me feel slightly bad.
Reddit value is so removed from the technicalities. Everybody even make jokes about its crippled search function. Yet nobody really cares.
And to an extent, the less designed a website the more willing I am to discover it. To me it means there's no love spent on css or trends, and much of it is spent communicating what the creator(s) wanted to communicate. Whereas most new websites have so much generic layers and presentation whooha, which is often just a revision of another website, I just can't care.
But as someone making mobile apps for over decade, "being elitist about it" is not going to accomplish anything. You'd think any rational mind would have no trouble figuring it out, and compared to what you're dealing with on a day to day basis as a developer, it should be a piece of cake. But people are stupid and are not magically going to wise up, and you're not going to change that.
UIs for the masses need to be as simple and foolproof as humanly possible, that's just the reality of it. Apple and everything they do is the best example of this.
It is a function problem, though. The reddit mobile "upgrade" is a huge regression in usability over just viewing the desktop site on my mobile devices, which I have done for over 6 years without complaint.
There is no upside to using this new mobile site. It loads more slowly, has obtrusive banner every time, has fewer features, is more confusing to use, and well, just sucks.
The problem I usually have with redesigns is the people advocating a redesign seldom pitch it armed with data showing the redesign will be better. Show me quantitatively that moving this button or changing that color or font size will move the needle on revenue, or engagement, or whatever the key metrics are.
At most software companies, if you want to add a feature, the burden is on you to estimate the value the feature will provide, and demonstrate how you will measure the value post release. How you draw the line from the feature to the value will be scrutinized. If the idea doesn’t stand up to it, it’s questionable why we need to invest in the feature.
This same scrutiny often doesn’t apply to redesigns. We are redesigning because it needs to look “fresh” or “modern”. It needs to “pop”. The old design looks old. So how do you measure “pop” in a way that’s not explainable by other product changes? (??) If it doesn’t quantitatively pop, do we go back to the old design? (the answer is always no) And the designers always get all bummed when you ask for this data. Look at all the criticism of Marissa Meyer having the gall to AB test 30 shades of blue. Why isn’t it ok to measure art?
I don’t think you’re an old man waving around your cane. This is an important question to ask because the effort blown on redesigns often could have otherwise been invested in things that would bring more value.
> Why does Western society seem to value form over function so much?
I don't think that's universally true, it's just a side-effect of marketing. Sometimes you redesign products to rekindle interest, but that rarely applies to other things (eg. public construction which is usually blunt but functional).
The trend I see lately is something I think of as dropoff panic. By staring at metrics too much PMs get worried about dropoff and start to focus their efforts on lubricating onboarding to such an extent in the hopes of preventing dropoff.
This results in the sort of dark patterns you see on Pintrest's signup and the overall dumbing down of everything into samey "friendly" interfaces that all feel like Facebook.
You manage to capture more of the casual users for the sort term by doing this, although they'll likely dropoff eventually. But this is done at the expense of your hardcore users who fell in love with your app/site/game despite the learning curve or dense interface.
Too much effort is placed on trying to capture a very low quality of user that likely wont engage anyway.
> Reddits success in spite of completely eschewing designers should prove design is over valued.
This is not a fair conclusion to draw. All that tells us is that design isn't the _only_ factor in success. There is nothing to suggest that Reddit would not be more popular were it better designed.
I'm not really sure what the cultural roots are, but the fact that visual appeal is valued by consumers makes it important to developers. I would also push back heavily on using Japanese web design as a counterexample. Their popular sites generally share an aesthetic, it's just a little different than what ours have. It's also worth mentioning that western designed sites dominate the Japanese market as well.
Because it's the lowest common denominator.
Because everybody can have some input there.
Because somebody in the org needed an "initiative" and the design is the easiest to explain.
We care so much about design because all the thousands of hours we've collectively wasted being confused by Reddit and Craigslist's interfaces could have been much better spent elsewhere.
Why improve anything? Because by doing so, we find what really should be.
Here's the thing though - generally speaking, I don't know of many people who are confused by Craigslist. It's an effective design for what it needs to do - browsing is easy and obvious, searching is easy and obvious. It's just "ugly", which is a different thing.
I will say Reddit is a bit of a different beast - there's too many hidden and confusing features, and it's probably fair to say that iterating on the design was necessary.
My biggest concern is that what I've seen from the redesign seems to be focused on making Reddit less ugly than making it more obvious and functional.
We're both posting on what might be one of the "ugliest" discussion forums on the internet - but I've rarely been confused as to how to do something on HN, which I can't say for many, many "modern", "pretty" websites.
HN always felt like a minimalist reddit. Just a better tech subreddit
I like to use the parent/old person test for ui usability(obviously not every old person will do, you know the type tho). I showed my parents reddit and they picked it up right away. Both failed to learn snapchat and struggle through most "modern" websites.
I blew their minds when I showed them if they click the three lines on lpta of websites, really a hamburger menu, they get options and stuff.
Often users are just expected to know these "design paradigms" like symbols(hamburger menu) or which direction to swipe(im still guessing half the time Snapchat). Whatever happened to using words like settings to open the settings menu. When did GUIs' forget to show available commands to users in an understandable format.
Craigslist is one of the most frustrating user experiences I have ever had. Every attempt I have made to use it has ended with me looking elsewhere, and each time I have had vastly better experiences on other sites.
Everyone has a huge bias for what they already know. If you already understand and like Craigslist, I'm sure it's great. As a new user, it's awful.
That statement might hold if these 'modern' designs weren't oversimplifications presenting less information density and reduced feature-sets that heavy users depend on.
This is interesting as I think the UX for these two sites is simple and honest and easy to use. Although in its limited functionality.
Can you give some examples of the hours you’ve spent being confused?
It may just be a different way of thinking for different people situation. For me, I prefer simple and honest vs pretty wit targeted ads trying to divert.
I think this is part of a bias being transferred to products. Pretty people are favored more, so pretty web sites are desired. Although data can show this doesn’t matter (Craigslist, old-good-Reddit vs new-shitty-Reddit) very much.
> One cashier is beautiful, one hideous. On which do you queue up?
I'm going to pick the one that scans items faster, accurately displays receipt information on a screen before paying, accepts chip, automatically prints relevant coupons, automatically adds product recalls on the receipt, and doesn't nag me to sign up for a custom credit card.
> accurately displays receipt information on a screen before paying, accepts chip, automatically prints relevant coupons, automatically adds product recalls on the receipt, and doesn't nag me to sign up for a custom credit card.
None of these (maybe save for the last if you have a cashier that isn't doing their job) is going to differ between the two cashiers as they'd be store-level policies.
I agree that those are more important factors. How do you measure that when you’re choosing a line? How much time do you spend measuring before it’s not productive.
It's what the owners do when they don't want to confront the real problems. In Reddit's case, their social engineering system has failed, and they don't want to admit it. YT redesign in 3.2.1...
I am getting more and more respect for Craigslist who resisted doing constant redesigns for the sake of looking hip. Craigslist is ugly but I don't have to relearn something every few months because they have moved some function to another place.
It seems most sites like Reddit have run out of ideas and instead of leaving things alone they just shuffle things around and sell it as innovation. Same thing for Windows 10 and office 365. Lots of visual changes but under the hood it's same old.
This is the first major redesign in 10 years, I'd say they aren't doing it just to look hip. Additionally from the few screenshots I have seen, it doesn't look like even the most casual of users will have to re-learn everything.
I agree with your argument that redesigns should have a purpose, but I disagree that the argument can be applied here.
They weren't doing it for 10 years because they were terrified of becoming digg and giving users a major gripe. They're already inserting a lot more ads into the feeds, so they're on pretty shaky ground.
Last I checked reddit's reasoning for the redesign was that their current codebase was difficult to work with due to "the lack of separation of the frontend and backend code"
It really depends on your position and level of user engagement. Users of Reddit and Craigslist know very well what they want and what to expect. They can navigate a wall of text really quickly because they've looked at it for countless hours. Strong design can be really critical to onboarding new users or leading down a path. Neither of which are priorities for Reddit or Craigslist.
It's the leading down a path that is the problem. Onboarding for old-school Reddit and Craigslist isn't hard. You click on a few things. You're done.
Once the idea of leading people down a path happens, then you've got a curated directed experience that conflicts with why you came there in the first place. That's what people have a problem with.
The whole thing is presumptuous, as if they know better than you why you're there.
Reddit doesn't need a sales funnel. It's owner Conde Nast does that's one problem.
The users have a very different set of expectations set long before the new owner walked in.
Prior to the big sale, which raised a lot of expectations, which may not actually be met very well at all given how users actually use Reddit,the site was self-sustaining based on gold and intra Reddit ads.
The idea of billions of page views, based on largely organic online discussion, equaling massive dollars, isn't one proven valid.
That's a problem too.
The reason it's a problem, is curating a very compelling discussion site for advertisers runs in conflict with what makes for a very compelling discussion site.
Craigslist is more of a, 'Go there to accomplish specific task' end point.
Reddit is more of a, 'hang out here when your bored!' type of thing.
The former just has to work and work cleanly. The latter needs to hold it's users interest over time while staying 'hip' enough to gain users from potential competitors to stay relevant overtime.
Reddit is also the 6th most popular website in the world, and likely gets thousands of potential new users daily that are turned off by the design and don't become Reddit addicts.
This puts them just below Google, Youtube, Facebook, Baidu and Wikipedia[1]. That's absolutely huge. If the interface was so bad surely they wouldn't have been able to get there now, would they?
So, bear with me on this, because I'm certain a lot of us have tech-illiterate parents and will understand what I'm getting at here.
I'm not sure Fark is the best example, given that their demographic seems to be middle-aged folks (or at least older than the Millennial age range). You can't really (or simply shouldn't) do sweeping design changes if your demographic is aging. Every time I wander over to that site, it becomes very clear that a lot of the users are at least a decade older than me (likely in their 40s and 50s).
If it were a tech site, that's one thing, but Fark is more of a site for just anyone. Targeting that wider demo is going to attract less tech-minded and likely less-adaptable users compared to, say, a similar site where the userbase throws around a lot of lingo.
reddit on the other hand can more or less assume that the users that stick around will figure out the new site. They're probably right, or at least not horribly wrong, and are instead banking on retaining just a majority of users, not all of them.
Sort of posted this elsewhere, but I think Craigslist is suffering from this as well. It seems to be losing market share from what I can tell. I showed up on their site for the first time about a year ago to buy and sell furniture, and was so turned off by it. Ended up using a different platform.
Visual appeal is extremely powerful, and it's valuable to virtually any product.
If it is suffering from anything, I'd suggest Craigslist is suffering more from the number of scam/spam/low-effort posts ("Honda for sale." No model, mileage, photos, etc in the post) that you have to sort through or the tricks you have to use to avoid them.
ex: When searching for an apartment, I always have to put a price floor in place because everything more than ~25% below market is pure spam and there's a ton of it. It wouldn't occur to the average person that they could filter a bunch of spam out by putting a lower limit on the price of the thing they're looking for, for example. So they get an even worse experience than me, and it's pretty painful to sort through even with various tricks like that in the filtering.
I recently wanted to buy and sell some furniture and checked out craigslist. Was hugely put off by what was, for me, totally counter-intuitive UX and ugly design. Poked around for a bit, ended up using a different service and was very happy.
From what I understand, Craigslist has been losing popularity recently, and I have no doubt that the 90s feel of the site is a big contributor.
Existing users of sites may be temporarily irked by a redesign, but they can be huge for keeping the site attractive to new users. They should happen infrequently, but they have a purpose. IMO Craigslist has made a huge mistake by leaving the site unchanged for so long.
I know for a fact that Reddit suffers from this as well. They have mentioned it in lots of places, and I'm confident that's backed up by their user studies. Visual appeal has a huge effect on new users, and I'm sure that's why Reddit is doing what they are doing.
reddit is a UX nightmare though, they could use a redesign. The primary reason I don't regularly use reddit is because it is so unintuitive and defies so many conventions in terms of human interface that I became overly anxious just looking at it.
I tried the redesign for a couple of hours and bailed out.
I don't care about the looks, but there are two changes that are egregious for me regarding UX:
1) They took out the subreddit ribbon at the top where you can quickly switch between the communities you subscribe to. It's been replaced by a hamburger menu that takes ages to show up, and then you have to scroll (and they are sorted alphabetically, not by popularity).
2) In the main subreddit view, the titles now link to the comments rather than the articles, you have to pixel-hunt the actual link, which is much smaller. I suppose they do this to keep users on site, but I dislike the change.
Edit: also, infinite scroll! As if Reddit wasn't sufficiently addictive as it is :-(
No idea. I opted in through the beta options and disabled it from there as well (at the bottom of the preference screen). I still have the beta option enabled though.
I think reddit has bigger issues than the look of their site. I stopped using it once all the hate subreddits started growing. Even the smaller more niche subreddits I frequented turned into meme filled echo chambers. What really did it in for me was just how much sponsored content made the homepage that wasn't labeled as such.
They also banned me from reddit gifts for pointing out their first sponsored exchange (before they said it was sponsored, they tried acting like it was "fan service").
Funnily enough: Reddit started declining for me around the time they started banning "hate" subreddits but leaving others in place (r/shitredditsays for example). It felt like the curators of the site really had some kind of agenda to push, and it really turned me off of using it as a news aggregator platform.
(I say this as a person who has never been a member of any of the banned subreddits)
Agree. Censorship beyond a sub's mods is largely uncalled for. Sometimes (fewer times than is the case now), banning of some subs could be necessary.
I believe that subs are isolated enough that if you don't want to engage with any particular sub's content you wouldn't have to. Otherwise the whole thing becomes somewhat skewed towards a certain set of opinions and could even be deemed to be totalitarian.
> I believe that subs are isolated enough that if you don't want to engage with any particular sub's content you wouldn't have to. Otherwise the whole thing becomes somewhat skewed towards a certain set of opinions and could even be deemed to be totalitarian.
But that's the thing, they are in theory, but in practice, you see subreddits leaking into others. Even with strict no-brigading rules, it's too easy to click on a link from /r/subredditdrama, for instance, and then start participating. And sometimes people with the same opinion just go to other subreddits to antagonize/troll people; you see this more with the more extremely-sided subreddits.
"Brigading" is the single most idiotic concept to come out of the site admins in Reddit's entire history. It's a value judgment that conveys nothing useful.
Do you know what someone following a link on Reddit and clicking around and participating where they end up is? Normal usage of Reddit! The idea that you're not allowed to participate just because you came through an on-site link reflects a kind of isolationism that has nothing in common with Reddit's philosophy, nor how real people ever used the site.
Oh I completely agree, I always found that silly for the exact same reason. I think I got banned on one of those subreddits because I had a comment in both the topic linked and the subreddit's own.
Okay, so I used the link aggregation and discussion site as designed? Cool, I'll take that ban.
Leading by example trickles down a lot more consistently than money. Reddit leads by arbitrary censorship. On niche subs you used to be able to fairly regularly have HN quality discussions with people you disagree with. In the past ~3yr it's become a lot more rare to happen. Disagreement gets silenced.
They’re not about targeting a particular demographic, but they prowl reddit to find comments - some appropriately quoted, some taken entirely out of context - with the express purpose of producing something that will get the mob howling and spitting in fury. Bonus points if they’re angry enough to go to the source post and rain vitriol on the original commenter.
It’s a sub dedicated to chasing people with torches and pitchforks, protected from their garbage behavior because, if you take them at face value, they’re chasing bigots of various types.
I've been subscribed to /r/canada for as long as I've been on Reddit but it's now it's become a right-wing hate fest over there. I'm surprised at the decline in the last year or so.
There's a concerted effort by right-wingers to overrun every "local" reddit. If you go to /r/seattle or /r/seattlewa half the comments in most posts are HEAVILY downvoted hate speech and trolling.
It's natural for /r/Canada to go against the government of the day. Just like they loathed Harper, so too will they loathe Trudeau. That's just the burden of governing.
or when you are reading interesting threads and people starts posting and up-voting stupid comments...
last time I was reading about an interesting machine painting manual signatures: excited commenters started talking how much they where expecting such machine painting penises... I mean, I feel so out from those communities and they leave me such depressing feelings.
So you're saying you don't like Reddit for being Reddit... because the whole trends towards the lowest common denominator seems to be all Reddit is now-a-days.
That sounds about right. Reddit just isn’t a fun place to be, and hasn’t been for years. I’m not sure what the value proposition is for Reddit anymore, other than for the owners of Reddit.
Just because it isn't fun for you doesn't mean it isn't fun for others. Fun, humour, and social interactions in general are very subjective. There's clearly people that do enjoy that kind of humour or else Reddit wouldn't be where it is today considering it's basically always been like what you described.
It's getting bad. I like guns and if you let that slip in almost any non-gun subreddit I immediately get messages that I'm basically a terrorist and have student blood on my hands as if I like school shootings.
Its true in the opposite direction too. I fled to some of the pro-gun subreddits, until I realized they were increasingly TheDonald_Lite. They really need to ban T_D
There's an old and undervalued adage: don't fix what isn't broken.
Reddit is a community of communities. You can be part of more than one or just one, you can post in all of them, you're not forced to look at any of them, and each of them has different rules, culture and enforcement policies. They're on a pretty even playing field as far as site rules and moderation tools go too. It's crazy, chaotic and lends itself well to surprise.
The primary interface lends itself well to lurking, but what it is really meant for is talking to people. You can post a new top-level comment on any post, but the real discussion happens in the threads in-between. The top level discussions are also ranked, democratically, but if the discussion looks skewed you can even easily change how you look at a thread to see what you're missing.
All in all, it's a real gem, the way it is now.
Looking at this design, all I see is a Facebook. A different kind of Facebook to be sure, but it doesn't look like a real improvement on what I have now, just different. A change for the sake of making a change because otherwise all of those engineers in their office downtown would be bored or working elsewhere if they didn't have a project like this to keep them interested/entertained. Fine I suppose, and for now I can still use the classic interface, but for how long? How long till some bored engineer or annoyed project manager with a vision/dream/overwhelming urge to kick a puppy manages to convince the rest that they should drop the classic interface in favor of putting more wood behind their Facebook-shaped arrow.
Yes, all it seems to be doing is drag the visual design towards Facebook, or towards what everybody is doing nowadays . You can call that "less dated", but it's also unoriginal.
Which is a shame, given that there's a decade of ideas here, from third-party add-ons like RES to all of the custom CSS from subreddits and everything. They could have taken the best parts and just improved Reddit, going in a unique direction regardless of what the rest of the Web currently happens to look like.
Can you even call it "design" if the end result makes it look more like everybody else?
The big difference, IMO, is the extent of the redesign. Digg went past graphics & UX into the core experience of the site and how content propagation worked, alienating power users and key content aggregators.
Reddit seems to be focusing mostly on the visual. While this may regress the site in some ways it shouldn't have the same relationship killing power.
The titles linking to the comments just reflects reality, most people don't follow the links but go to the comments immediately; then if the discussion is good they maybe go to the article in question.
I don't know about that. I was a heavy Digg user when that happened and Reddit was already an increasingly serious competitor when then the redesign killed Digg.
I don't see the "next one" that is already starting to steal some Reddit traffic that could possibly take over even if Reddit's design is similarly badly recieved.
Didn't Digg also force the new design on all users right away? I think that was a big mistake, at least Reddit are rolling this out to a subset of users first and then they can collect feedback before going live with it on a broader scale.
Voat.com has been around for a while. They made a decent push during some reddit drama ~2 years ago. However, looking through voat 'subverses' aka subreddits they look pretty dead for the counterparts that I visit on reddit ex: www.reddit.com/r/homebrewing vs www.voat.com/v/homebrewing and www.reddit.com/r/unrealengine vs www.voat.com/v/unrealengine
Their 'HOT' ordering makes the site look dead where they should probably take into account newer stories as everything in the 'HOT' ranking is years old (except for heavier trafficked subverses)
I definitely agree, but I also remember how Reddit was considered the dumping ground for users banned on Digg and content that wasn't good enough for Digg.
Today unpleasant content probably makes up a large percentage of Voat traffic. But if a few big subreddits moved over that percentage would be dwarfed and suddenly it's no longer a Recycle Bin.
Absolutely not. Reddit existed and filled Digg's old shoes, so Reddit was chosen. But people didn't leave Digg because Reddit existed. The key problem with Digg was "Digg Version 4" which made their users much less influental in the dynamics of the website.
One place that I have gone to instead of Reddit lately is Hacker News... I have started using Reddit more as only a source for current events because it's easier to sift through (with categorized subreddits and all) than a Twitter stream of breaking news. But for science and tech talk, this place seems to have a higher quality discussion in the majority of the cases.
I believe reddit was always closer to being the site that Digg's users wanted that Digg itself.
It was more focused on discussion (there are self-posts, r/AskReddit, etc.) and less on pure link sharing.
Digg v4 just gave many Digg users a reason to give reddit a chance (and maybe push through being initially put off by its design), and they never looked back, even after Digg resolved the initial issues.
Everyone keeps talking about how reddit is going the way of Digg. It feels like maybe for the last 4 or 5 years.
But here it stands.
I wonder who will be the last person to claim it, and in turn, claim to be the Nostradamus. I suppose if you claim something often enough, you'll be right eventually.
Idk why everyone in here and on r/redesign can't take off their rose-colored glasses and admit that current (old?) Reddit has some pretty glaring usability issues.
I know I avoided Reddit for the longest time simply due to the fact that there was a learning curve at all...and I know many, many people that would adore Reddit actively avoid it because it's a little overwhelming and hard to use at first. People seem to really underestimate just how important that first couple of seconds on a new website are.
Granted, a lot of people pushed passed the quirks and the learning curve and grew to love the site we all know today - that's evident by the massive user base - but I just don't understand why everyone is so vehemently against a redesign effort when the site was clearly a hodgepodge.
Now, I'm not arguing that the current redesign is great and a smashing success, I think they're missing the mark on what made Reddit great in the first place...but to sit here and yell "If it ain't broke don't fix it" is laughable. The performance might be superb but the UX is atrocious, everyone has just learned to get over it.
> 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?
I've had to explain Reddit to my mom--she wanted to see what her kids were so busy with all the time--I can tell you that voting comments aren't nearly as simple as they might seem.
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.
Well, if her experience is representative of other folks, then I suppose it is a problem. But is it one that a new interface could fix? I believe that it's possible, but it's not obvious to me how it would be improved. I'm not experienced at all in UI/UX design.
> The difference between her and most Reddit users is that she was determined to get active on Reddit: she kept trying for weeks.
I don't understand -- she persisted and others who use reddit don't/didn't? Meaning they don't need to apply significant effort and she did? Does that mean that it's somehow intuitive to them and not her? I feel like I am missing the point you're making.
> But is it one that a new interface could fix? I believe that it's possible, but it's not obvious to me how it would be improved.
A new interface could fix a lot of the issues, but I think the jury is still out on whether or not the current redesign is fixing those issues.
In my opinion, the higher level concepts of subreddits and subreddit discoverability are one of the main hurdles that brand new users have to understand and overcome. Most people that don't know anything about Reddit just assume it's a massive forum of people posting random shit - and don't bother going much further than that.
I think the new sidebar and the overhauled search are a great start at making the browsing experience much more intuitive - but the new profiles and messenger are all questionable design decisions that feel a lot less "Reddit" and a lot more "Facebook".
Right off the bat it appears that user account info lives outside the custom styling of each subreddit, this is a good thing and creates consistency for access to my stuff.
Secondly it looks like each subreddit gets to decide which view works best for the content of that subreddit. /r/askscience will benefit from a compact view, while /r/pics would benefit from a card view. As long as I'm able to change the default and have it stick next time i access that subreddit, I'm all for this.
There are parallels to Craigslist/POF here. All 3 sites have a reputation for being ugly, and having glaring "usability issue" yet are extremely successful and resist even common-sense change.
I'm disappointed to see Hacker News turning into Slashdot - immediate negative reaction to anything new, lack of empathy with the insanely difficult task the reddit management team is undertaking, and a general selfish bias of "as a power user I like obscure feature x, therefore without x they're doomed".
Humans hate change. Our minds strive to maintain equilibrium and have an immune system like response to anything that threatens to disrupt that state. Even when we intellectually commit to change, our emotions sabotage the effort.
Cue the bereavement model and the diffusion of innovation. Successful advocates of change account for the time and effort it takes to drag people along.
Burnie Burns of Rooster Teeth phrased it as, "the internet demands progress, but hates change." I like that because it succinctly draws attention to the juxtaposition of ideals and emotional reaction.
* The new thing doesn't bring any real improvements. Many UI changes, few UX changes.
* Nothing about the design was broken before and users don't really complain about it.
* Having used it, the site is noticeably slower. Turns out that shiny is expensive. And I'm on a powerful machine too.
* The UI is now more cluttered and less information dense taking a page straight from FB's playbook. They might be successful but hackers have constantly shit on the design.
* Nobody said that managing a site that large was easy, but doing nothing was always an option for them.
There is a theoretical design that would make the community salivate but this wasn't it.
Me and a lot of smart developers before me have learned on our skins that you should never make a rewrite.
I think web design has the same problems as web development in regards to rewrite but the design community has yet to internalize that you should never remake something from scratch.
That's not to say that you should keep an old design forever - instead make changes incrementally and gradually. Putting 12 designers to work for a year with zero feedback and trying not to hurt whatever magic made reddit popular in the first place is bound to be a disastrous affair.
I think this is absolutely true for user to user social interaction websites, less true for B2B applications. In the last 2 years at my company we took an old early 2000s looking application that our customers used and completely redesigned it plus brought in a lot of new functionality. To the point where at the core they are still getting some of the same job done but with such a different experience drawing 1:1 lines between the functionality is blurred. This whole new experience has been absolutely fantastic, our customers rave about it and our revenue has grown around 250%. Not to say this is always the case but when something is dated and not providing the experience it can/should be, sometimes a rewrite can be a huge win. But like you said, it still can't be done in a bubble and it can't be driven by a vision of a designer but ultimately the experience your customers seek.
Like every redesign, I'm sure that people are going to be angry about it no matter how it looks.
I'm surprised that no one has mentioned it, but really the make or break of this new reddit will be speed. The one thing that I remember noticing about the site is how much faster it was than the comparable time wasting sites (Facebook, Stumbleupon, etc). More speed, more addictiveness.
I recently noticed that reddit started to push AI as well for choosing what to display on my front page. As if everyone else doing it was not enough. The more I read some subreddit, the more posts I see from it on my front page, even though they may be scored lower compared to other posts. Just noticed today that a 30k+ karma post from a subscribed subreddit was all the way on page 3.
Reddit wants to limit CSS to appease people like you who want a functional but bland site. But reddit is just a place for memes. Letting users creatively break the site is a feature, not a bug.
There are so many jokes that can only be implemented by purposefully ruining UX. Subs like /r/CrappyDesign/ will lose their personality. Fancy upvote animations like in /r/Megumin/ can't be done. Surreal subs like /r/ooer and /r/infiniteworldproblems can't exist entirely. Any unanticipated but functional features like comment faces, flairs, multiline block spoiler tags, hiding downvotes, link filters, dropdown/slideout menus, etc, will never arise organically.
Some custom CSS (including some of the ones mentioned above) annoys me too. But I see it as a unique part of reddit culture and it won't be the same without it.
I used the redesign for two days and rolled back. The designers went for a river of news app-like design.
I've always had trouble putting individual items in context in river of news designs and prefer to switch from one topic (subreddit in this case) to another and scan each one. The hamburger menu makes this a lot more awkward.
I also really dislike mobile-driven UI designs on a desktop. I know why they're done. I've implemented them myself. They annoy me.
Coincidentally earlier today, from a distance, I saw a colleague browse that very article (without seeing what it was about), and the white on cyan header-bar immediately reminded me of the good, old X11 window-manager CDE[0][1].
And it made me feel really nostalgic. I actually wanted to, just for one day, switch my laptop over to it. I bet it would have been blazingly fast.
But alas, Ubuntu (and nobody else) seems to ship it any more. Seeing how building and running it from source required me to put some system-services into a insecure configuration, I reluctantly put the project away.
I guess it comes off as no surprise that I on overall hate the reddit redesign and consider it a net negative change w.r.t. usability. I generally dislike how "modern" design things they make things better by taking away options and removing features.
The "old" reddit gave you full overview of what was going on with all your activity in exactly 2 clicks. Super neat. Super efficient.
The new ... I don't even know. I'm guessing much more than 10. And it involves scrolling and modal dialogues too. Fuck it.
May the old layout remain an option for as long as I keep bother using the site.
If you want a fast window manager try ratpoison (similar idea to GNU screen), which is widely available. It is really nice to have a window manager that actually manages your windows. If you use GNU screen (or, I assume but have never used, tmux) you can have two terminals sharing the same session for split screen use.
I clicked on the link to read the article, not gape at a full screen illustration that adds literally no info! Why would the author want me to scroll 1200 pixels before I can read even the title?
> I don't want to use reddit's own app, why would I use a third-party app?
Because the third party apps are much better that the official one, in all metrics. If you have a specific grievance against the official app, there are overwhelming chances that you won't face the same issue in a 3rd party app.
I think you've missed the point completely. Twice. :)
There's exactly zero reason for a text-and-images-and-comments site to have an "official app", or a plethora of "third-party apps that are better than the original". A mobile site would be perfectly fine.
However, since there's zero incentive for anyone to use those apps, instead of improving (or at least keeping) the mobile experience Reddit actively degrades it. Hence the entirely unnecessary apps.
I currently have next-to-zero incentive to even click on links to Reddit, and the requirement to have an app just for that will bring that incentive to exactly zero.
And it looks like their redesign had zero intention to improve mobile experience.
I think if you use a good app like rif or sync, you will realize that they do add considerable value to "a text-and-images-and-comments site". I find them easier to navigate than any website. Another big plus is that apps have a lot of settings. You can customize the layout, colors, basically everything in a good app.
This is basic stuff. A single website can never provide all the flexibility of use that an app based on the api can.
For some reason you assume I want or need any of that.
Reddit is not my go to website. Neither is Hacker news. Or Twitter. Or... Or...
I browse the web. I may come across links that I click. I really really really don't appreciate the experience of getting yanked out of my flow into some app.
Even Facebook has a very decent mobile web experience. However for some reason Reddit actively degrades its mobile site and tries to make it as unusable as possible.
If you put your ear against an unopened Huawei Y360 box and listen carefully, you'll find it's already started complaining about lack of space. And Google's updates to its unremovable apps are huge. I have 5 apps installed on it and need to remove one before I can download anything else.
Which is fine, it helps with addiction and most things can be accessed through a web browser anyway.
> But up close, the changes have turned Reddit from an esoteric maze into a website anyone can use—like a junk drawer that's been gutted, cleaned, and reorganized.
> For people who have been on Reddit for years, the obtuseness is part of the appeal.
What maze? What obtuseness? Reddit is a plain, usable site (esp. if you turn off the image previews they added a few years back). There's simply nothing wrong with it the way it is.
I suspect that this is a submarine article, paid for by Reddit itself.
I also suspect that the new interface will be yet another JS-laden, SPA atrocity — but perhaps I'm wrong, and I'll be pleasantly surprised by nice, static, server-rendered HTML instead.
> Before, formatting text posts required the use of Markdown; now, there's a WYSIWYG toolbar too.
Ah, that's reassuring to see. So many sites have gone all-in on Markdown in the last few years, which seems to me to be resurrecting early 80s Wordstar-style formatting codes and rejecting the UI advances of Xerox Parc and the Mac.
Markdown has its place - essentially, something that's readable in both raw and rendered form - but it's not a consumer-friendly way of editing rich text, and I'm pleased to see Reddit recognise that.
WYSIWYG can often take more resources on a webpage, and act unpredictably and with less control over formatting.
Atlassian's Confluence wiki was one of the most painful tools I've ever had to use in a professional capacity, largely because their editor several years ago was so atrocious. I was forced off of it from a nice, Markdown-based wiki our team had been running.
So I would miss Markdown. BTW, having live preview/having a WYSIWYG toolbar with Markdown editing is a happy meeting of both worlds; I don't see the issue with it.
Yes this would be nice as the current [0] approach is limiting
- image support
Please no, if I want to see the image I can click your link (or use a browser plugin to show it to me on hover)
- user profile page enhancements: avatars, pretty URLs, more links to user's other sites/profiles, etc.
Avatars no, but there rest is fine
- user karma listed next to username in comments
One of the nice things on HN is username/karma is not in your face, you read the comment BEFORE making a pre-judgement on the user, I quite like this. I like that I don't often notice a username like "tptacek" before I read the post so that I form my own opinion before agreeing (or disagreeing if the case may be) before I've read the comment. Also you can get Chrome plugins to show this for you, I have one that shows me on hover (along with the links in their profile and the ability to follow them [1])
- social logins (1 less password to manage)
Ehh, I think they used to allow for openid. Personally nowadays I prefer 1 username/password per site and let 1Password sort it all out for me.
I actually don't want any of those things, not even markdown support.
The site IMO does what it needs to very well and I value the minimalism a lot. Would hate to see it cluttered with extra chrome, images, karma, summaries. And instead of social login try using a password manager.
What is up with web redesigners? They always seem to make things worse, less performant, seem to have egos that shine brighter than the sun. In the end, just shove their perfect child into your face (looking at you youtube).
Isn't it possible to "morph" the changes, little by little, so the users don't get overwhelmed by the changes?
I think Facebook has done such progressive redesigns in the past.
personally I hate the new user profile overview. I used to be able to quickly scroll through someone's post history and now it looks like another facebook feed ...
For those interested in a different experience, there is a terminal client called rtv[0]. I use it for most of my Reddit browsing and I consider it even better than the site for text subs like NoSleep for example.
At this point Reddit's look is authentic. I'd stick with it. Others here have mentioned craigslist as an example. People aren't leaving Reddit because it doesn't look flat and bland like so many other sites. Reddit is an old zoo. It should look like one.
The key questions would seem to be how long use of a legacy interface was maintained and supported. Having more than one ui is a cost burden, but that aside doesn't have to be a problem
Based on the near-universal disdain for the redesign here in the HN comments, I'd like to go on record predicting it's going to be a huge success amongst non-HN types.
Reddit is not yet profitable, right? Will this redesign help them actually make money? Is it meant to allow for more sponsored content between user submissions?
Whew. Looks like a dodged a bullet by finally leaving Reddit due to their increasing censorship last month. This new design looks terrible and it breaks reading the site without javascript enabled. Before reddit worked just fine and you could toggle JS on to vote/comment/submit.
I imagine they feel they can do this kind of thing since new users now overwhelming outnumber old users and they've pushed most of the original users off the site. Facebook 2: This time it's Reddit is coming along nicely.
[ ] I would like to beta test features for reddit (by enabling you'll be subscribed to /r/beta automatically. details on the /r/beta wiki)
Wait for page to reload, scroll down, then click the new option you'll see:
[ ] Use the redesign as my default experience (by enabling this, you will be redirected to the new site when you go to any supported https://reddit.com page)
On mobile, if you visit the reddit site, they push a "use the app"-banner in your face. Every goddamn time.
When they redesigned the profiles recently there was a lot of pushback. I did not necessarily agree with that, I thought and think the new profile sites are fine in general. But what definitely was an issue was the performance. Again some javascript client rendering leading to loading indicators, even on the desktop. They improved loading times after that, but still.
So one big point of the new design is not actually "how will it look", but whether they will get the functionality/UX right. HN does, without client side rendering and redesigns...