top | item 27754402

Old.reddit.com Isn't Working

20 points| mjreacher | 4 years ago |old.reddit.com | reply

18 comments

order
[+] noname120|4 years ago|reply
Most likely a bug. Even if they decide to decommission old.reddit.com at some point, they will at least redirect to reddit.com if only to avoid SEO penalty.
[+] tpmx|4 years ago|reply
One thing I've learned about bay area companies: You can never be too cynical; they'll almost always be way ahead of you.

The typical easy way is to have many "unfortunate mistaken outages". This is how Google via Maps and Mail handled Opera 6+ times (iirc), how Facebook handled Opera Mini 8+ times with the login javascript doing more and more esoteric things, etc etc.

I believe Firefox has witnessed something similar in the past few years couple of years with popular properties.

I wouldn't put it past the Reddit team to try to do something similar to push away people from their old, less monetizable interface.

[+] jedberg|4 years ago|reply
For those wondering, this is highly unlikely to be intentional. The "you broke reddit" only comes up when there is a major software error. It's one step above a python stack trace.

An actual decommissioning would be coupled with a redirect or a note or something.

[+] throwawaysea|4 years ago|reply
I don't use Reddit often, but wow the "new" Reddit design is incredibly jarring and difficult to navigate. Are the majority of users really liking this experience?
[+] jedberg|4 years ago|reply
All the new users get that interface by default, and when they first launched it you had to specifically opt out, which not everyone knows how to do.

I don't think they have any experiments where they give a new user the old interface to do a proper A/B test, so I don't think you can conclusively say that people like the new interface better than the old, or vice versa.

[+] dijit|4 years ago|reply
The new design serves the needs of the company over the needs of the users.
[+] ericra|4 years ago|reply
Same for me.

Teddit (https://teddit.net/) is a reasonable alternative to old.reddit.com provided you don't care about being logged in. I'm not affiliated with them, but I have used their Reddit front-end quite a bit and like the style.

[+] tpmx|4 years ago|reply
Same. Is this the end of a reasonable reddit layout?
[+] Gobd|4 years ago|reply
Regular https://reddit.com also doesn't work so I'd say this could also be a larger problem.
[+] Khelavaster|4 years ago|reply
Are they going to finally fix their HSTS settings?