• @kadu
    link
    581 year ago

    Reddit’s native video hosting and player are absolutely not something I miss nor desire, felt like they were designed with the goal of frustrating the user at least 10 times per day.

    • @ThaurinOP
      link
      181 year ago

      Sure, but on Apollo it wasn’t all that bad.

      • @kadu
        link
        331 year ago

        Apollo had it’s own parser for most content. If third party Lemmy apps also start bundling built in players for YouTube and other popular hosting services, you won’t need Lemmy handling that.

        I think video hosting would severely impact the storage needs for instance admins.

        • @ThaurinOP
          link
          131 year ago

          I hadn’t realized that video hosting on Reddit servers was a big thing. I have linked to videos I made on YouTube and I guess Reddit Enhancement Suite and Apollo made that look good.

          So I suppose we need to wait and see how the clients evolve and if people start linking to more video content where appropriate, like in a community such as c/videos or c/unexpected.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            141 year ago

            It was a classic Reddit move.

            1. Burn a brunch of money to implement a feature nobody asked for.

            2. Make that feature worse than what you already have.

            3. Burn more money maintaining that feature, as you now need to pay for more computing resources to support it.

            4. Whine about not being profitable.

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        121 year ago

        I never understood why people complained about v.reddit. It always worked fine on RiF. Then I saw what it looks like on the “official” Reddit… Ugh

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        11 year ago

        In Apollo it wouldn’t let you choose the quality, so most of the time you’d get a 12p video.

        (I’m on 500 meg fibre, that should not be a problem)