Likewise. It's probably the worst web UI I currently know of. Whatever team designed and implemented it should really feel bad about themselves and their work, it's unnecessarily bad, as if they were trying to make a shitty UI. I will happily stop using reddit if they kill old.reddit.com
It's not just bad it's _unusable_ on any older mobile device. Takes 10 seconds to load a page, greets you with a "Reddit is more fun in the app" popup that takes up half the page, then will display the top 3 comments but if you scroll down it will load a random different post that they think you'll like instead of showing you more comments.
They also straight up won’t let you see certain subreddits on the mobile web page, a message pops up telling you to download the app because the subreddit content is “unreviewed” or “mature”.
Not talking about NSFW stuff, either. Just regular subreddits.
I agree. If I ever actually meet the designers or team responsible for it I would seriously question their abilities. This includes if I saw it on someone's resume or in their portfolio. Even with the current state of web UI, the new reddit UI is astoundingly bad.
They're A/B testing a slightly less bad interface on both mobile and desktop AFAICT, and they also added an algorithmic home page even for people with no account.
Yeah, I know that to be true, but those 4% of old reddit users have probably been the longest and most active reddit users from the days when reddit was more like HN.
I understand why reddit doesn't care to cater to us and instead chase new user growth (metrics & money), but in doing so they've ignored and pushed away a lot of their oldest and most loyal users. I used to donate to reddit, but I'd never do that today because of what it has become and the path it is on.
Maybe they know it and are fine with it. But they are executing terribly on that goal from a technical and usability perspective, and becoming yet another generic social media platform that is worse than the other ones. They're making themselves easier to replace eventually IMO.
I wonder if this includes users who opted out of the redesign through settings. I use reddit.com instead of old.reddit.com, but I am on the old site due to this setting.
How many pageloads though? How many of the submissions and comments are coming from old reddit? How many of the votes? If you consider the usage/engagement curve is practically guaranteed to be a power curve, you might be surprised or actually not what that 4% translates to.
I wonder if "redditors as a whole" includes visits from external links. I never go to new reddit deliberately, but often end up there via other sources. I also use third party mobile apps more, so there will be plenty of days when I don't use old _or_ new reddit, meaning I'm not counted in that 4%.