ux-research
teddit
ux-research | teddit | |
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1 | 10 | |
- | 248 | |
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- | 0.0 | |
- | 10 months ago | |
JavaScript | ||
- | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
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ux-research
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Ask HN: What is the most bloated website you use
GitLab Product Design Manager here Thanks for your feedback!
You bring up quite a few great points. We have worked hard on bringing every tool from the DevOps lifecycle into our platform, and I agree with you that quite a few areas have become overwhelming, especially for new users or people who don't use our entire set of features.
We are actively working on refining that, but as you can imagine, that's no easy feat, as we have a vast variety of project types, workflows, use cases, user types, etc...
One of the most problematic areas, as you perfectly mentioned, is the left sidebar. We already enable project administrators to remove items from there by going to Settings -> General -> Visibility, project features, permissions, and then toggling off the areas you would like to remove. However, this is a project setting, not per user.
At the same time, we also work on making that left sidebar better for everyone, in multiple smaller iterations. As first step, we are making some small changes to the visual design (https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/322680) and make the navigation easier to understand (https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/322687). We are also aware that our left sidebar has become too crowded with too many top-level/sub-level items, and we are validating an idea that would be the first step for us to get out of this (https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/ux-research/-/issues/1421). There are already a few follow-up ideas (e.g. grouping items into larger groups or pinning most important items per user), but they are a bit further away.
I hope that gives you a better understanding how our UX team at GitLab thinks about this. Let me know if you have any other feedback or ideas
teddit
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Louis Rossmann calls community to leave Reddit
Someone should just convert the Teddit UI into a Lemmy theme.
https://github.com/teddit-net/teddit
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Reddit seems to have forgotten why websites provide a free API
Why scrapy if you have teddit? These kinds of projects are the best tbh
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The Internet of Ads is Fucking Terrible
Not really everyone's cup of tea but as an interesting aside... I've recently become quite enamoured with the various "alternative frontends" that are floating around, like invidious for youtube or teddit for reddit. These are not just about blocking ads, (although they do that), they also make these platforms less hostile to your mental health.
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Is there any front-ends for Reddit that allow you to sign in?
Teddit is the equivalent of Invidious but just like Invidious you can't log in, it would beat the purpose if you could. Most of that TOS would still apply if you are logged trough an app or front end. tracking you can minimize by opting out and using with uBlock Origin.
- How to lurk reddit without an account
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Free Talk Friday | Dec 31, 2021 - Jan 6, 2022
The archiving began in earnest when I started limiting my time exlusively to the FTF. Before that I focused more on archiving fanart, fanfiction and mods for a later use I still want to get to at some point. My archives of FTF threads are HTML files downloaded though the teddit frontend(https://github.com/teddit-net/teddit). Though my archive is much bigger than that. To fill in the backlog of posts from before I started archiving manually I used a Python script to scrape the reddit pushshift archive https://github.com/pushshift/api in order to make sure that I grabbed every comment said in any thread created by JustMonika as well her post text though this backlog data is not easily browsable in its current form, its a whole lot of JSON.
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Once reddit IPO's I want to reimplement it. But I can't do it alone.
Before writing something from scratch, look at a load of open source projects that do parts of what you need, like: https://github.com/teddit-net/teddit. But there are loads more to research.
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Ask HN: What is the most bloated website you use
Teddit.net[0] solves a lot of these problems and paired with Redirector[1], it's a transparent switch out.
https://github.com/teddit-net/teddit
- Is there a Freetube like application but for Reddit?
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Ask HN: Is there a list of “privacy respecting” proxies for social media pages?
[2]: https://github.com/teddit-net/teddit
What are some alternatives?
nitter - Alternative Twitter front-end
libreddit - Private front-end for Reddit
your-web-app-is-bloated - measuring memory usage of popular webapps
gitlab
Invidious - Invidious is an alternative front-end to YouTube
Lemmy - 🐀 A link aggregator and forum for the fediverse
SubEther - Decentralized social network and server APIs
Pushshift API - Pushshift API