Compare to old [dot] reddit [dot] com? Yes, a thousand times yes! When clicking on “Reply” or “Post” I see spinning a spinning wheels for ~30s. Sometimes, I’m looking at the front page of a community, and new posts rush in over the websocket from different communities. It looks like the websocket updates are absurdly buggy.
If you’re comparing the reddit’s redesign, I guess lemmy is about as responsive/buggy.
The server thing isn’t that bad
Because you’re a technical user. For the average user, it’s convoluted and unnecessary. (Again, I’m a huge fediverse supporter, it has to be this way, but I have to admit it’s not user friendly.)
I haven’t ever used old reddit, I’m comparing lemmy to the new reddit and it’s 100 times more responsive if anything. I don’t have to wait like 10 seconds after I click on a post every time, it’s amazin.
Compare to old [dot] reddit [dot] com? Yes, a thousand times yes! When clicking on “Reply” or “Post” I see spinning a spinning wheels for ~30s. Sometimes, I’m looking at the front page of a community, and new posts rush in over the websocket from different communities. It looks like the websocket updates are absurdly buggy.
If you’re comparing the reddit’s redesign, I guess lemmy is about as responsive/buggy.
Because you’re a technical user. For the average user, it’s convoluted and unnecessary. (Again, I’m a huge fediverse supporter, it has to be this way, but I have to admit it’s not user friendly.)
I haven’t ever used old reddit, I’m comparing lemmy to the new reddit and it’s 100 times more responsive if anything. I don’t have to wait like 10 seconds after I click on a post every time, it’s amazin.
The old reddit was a gem. I still used it until the end. It had no javascript, it was Web 2.0 from the 2010s. It was great. The redesign was a sin.