Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

> the company is literally re-writing all of its code

The old and ugly mobile website is _perfect_ (apart from some bugs). The new one is a horrible piece of garbage.



I disagree. I use the extension reddit enhancement suite and _that_ makes it useable.


For the desktop site, yeah. But whenever I mistakenly end up on the new mobile site (usually by using the in-app browser of my HN app, normal links open in Reddit Sync) I'm annoyed. It's slow and crappy.


It's not perfect, but it's not the end of the world. I'd prefer it if they'd stop the 'oh, but the app is 50% faster' modals; who installs apps like that these days?


I just resort to using the desktop version on mobile. I can't really stand the current mobile design, let alone their app, way too much space wasted.



I agree, I have no idea how you use Reddit without it. If there people out there clicking on URLs/pictures, then going back to see the context/comments, I would love to hear how long this process takes you. This is my main negative to using Reddit on mobile, which I almost never do because it would lake about 200 taps to view a small amount of content.


New tab guy reporting in. I just open a few articles at a time, and go to the comments if I feel I need more input on the issue. I haven't noticed it impacting my workflow. I've used RES on and off, but when I install a new browser I always forget to add it, and rarely miss it.


There is an option in reddit to load links in new tabs. I click on a link, look at the image / read the article, close the tab and end uo back where I started.


I am talking about mobile, not desktop. On desktop I also use RES, but on mobile I am fine with the old mobile website.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: