top | item 45634690

(no title)

dominick-cc | 4 months ago

Thanks for this link. Opening reddit links on mobile is very frustrating for me because it opens the app and messes with the browser back button for me. Not sure if others have that problem too.

discuss

order

pluc|4 months ago

That's because you're not supposed to open reddit links anymore, you can just share your content directly with AI companies and ad brokers and cut out the middleman.

exe34|4 months ago

I had the same idea about the britcard - why doesn't the government just buy the information from the ad brokers?

layer8|4 months ago

On iOS Safari, long-press the link and select Open (or Open in Background). That will open the link in the browser instead of in the app, and Safari will remember that preference for the app. Select Open in Reddit to revert.

Also, don’t install the app? Use Sink It instead: https://gosinkit.com/

eth0up|4 months ago

I'm a grovelling Linux fiend and usually support related posts. I tried to visit the url and saw it was blocked. Didn't want the post to die so archived it asap.

Note too, that NextDNS blocks archive.is et al by default unless you manually add redirects.

Whatta world

aspenmayer|4 months ago

I’ve noticed that even on VPNs, US exit points sometimes block archive.is. Not sure if that is DNS related or what. Non-US VPN exit points don’t seem to be blocked at those times that the site navigation fails on US ones.

I believe NextDNS is headquartered in the US, which may be related to the site nav issues we’re both experiencing.

Curiously, uBlock Origin and my blocklists seem to block content on archive.is from loading from mail.ru, which may be related to the blocks, but I have never heard anyone on HN or elsewhere mention this, so I am, so that it can be known and explained if any explanation exists for why mail.ru scripts on archive.is are present. I don’t seem to see those scripts on the Tor version of archive.today, which archive.is is a mirror of today; apparently the original domain is the .is one, in any case.

Consider my curiousity piqued!

More info about the archive.is|.today mirrors including the Tor (.onion) version of the site are on the Wikipedia entry for the site:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archive.today

> archiveiya74codqgiixo33q62qlrqtkgmcitqx5u2oeqnmn5bpcbiyd.onion

Doohickey-d|4 months ago

On Android "Redreader" is the only third-party Reddit app that somehow survived the third-party-app-purge. Still free and open source, and much more pleasant than the official one.

Would definitely recommend.

phatskat|4 months ago

The day Apollo died is the day I stopped logging in to Reddit, or going there regularly. I use old when I have to go there for more than a top-level reply from a Google search. I want to say they really goofed up, but tbh Reddit seems fine without me. I’m mostly fine without it, but I do miss a few of my communities.

curious_ralts|4 months ago

Thanks for this, I was resorting to creating a PWA on old reddit (which has horrible ergonomics for mobile) per subreddit (you can't rename them so I remember which is which by position) thinking all the reddit clients that don't require login are gone.

ntoskrnl_exe|4 months ago

Try pressing on the original link and opening it in another tab, that usually bypasses opening the app for me.

marksbrown|4 months ago

For the moment "yesterday for old reddit" on firefox android works quite well.