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26 votes
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Looking for beta testers for my Tildes.net iOS app!
Happy Friday everyone! I'm making a post to see if anyone wants to beta test my Tildes.net iOS app Backtick. Background I've been wanting to create a Reddit app for quite a while, and just when I...
Happy Friday everyone! I'm making a post to see if anyone wants to beta test my Tildes.net iOS app Backtick.
Background
I've been wanting to create a Reddit app for quite a while, and just when I got started, the API change chaos happened. Thankfully, I remembered signing up for Tildes.net a few years ago and decided to pivot to make an app for this site instead! The app is still a work in progress, but I believe releasing early and getting as many eyes on it during development results in a better end product (and it's more fun for me 😊).
Features
Here are the current features of Backtick:
- Light mode/dark mode
- Login to Tildes.net (suports 2FA)
- Front page feed with sorting support
- View, vote, and comment on posts
- Reply and vote on comments
- Collapse comments
- View notifications
- Full markdown rendering
- Text-to-speech for posts and comments
Here is a video demo of the app in its current state (updated for v1.8.1): https://youtube.com/shorts/iukQJyJbtw8?feature=share
I know there missing features, but as I mentioned before, I would love to get as many people in as early as possible to help shape Backtick's future.
Testing
If you're interested in testing the app as I continue to work on it during my free time you will need:
- An iOS 16 device
- TestFlight (Apple's testing app)
You can access the beta here: https://testflight.apple.com/join/gNH18NE9. If you have any issues please DM me your Apple ID email and I will send you an invite manually.
Thanks, everyone! Have a great weekend.
- AshEdit:
Getting some great feedback! I'll be tracking bugs and potential features here if anyone is curious: https://chatter-brick-3d3.notion.site/Backtick-Tracker-888150b641ae4c0ab39dc0345783bc50?pvs=4Edit2:
I created the Discord server to help facilitate better collaboration with those who wish to be more involved. It will be a place for discussion around potential features, bugs, and general chat. I will still be taking in feedback via TestFlight and Tildes.net, so it's perfectly fine if you don't want to join.
Join here: https://discord.gg/aah7nkfpBY194 votes -
Turning milk into clothing
8 votes -
German Aerospace Center (DLR), a NASA VERITAS mission partner, is conducting instrument field tests in Iceland
4 votes -
At the Grizzly & Wolf Discovery Center in West Yellowstone, Montana, you can get a product certified as bear-resistant... by testing it with actual bears
21 votes -
Why Oppenheimer deserves his own movie
14 votes -
The questionable engineering of the Oceangate Titan submersible
51 votes -
Women in Denmark can now take a blood test to identify genetic foetal abnormalities in early pregnancy. But it has raised ethical questions.
62 votes -
What's a good way to test a website that runs on edge nodes?
I have a little web app running on Deno Deploy and I want to see how it handles people connecting from multiple regions. There's a BroadcastChannel class that lets you send messages to any servers...
I have a little web app running on Deno Deploy and I want to see how it handles people connecting from multiple regions. There's a BroadcastChannel class that lets you send messages to any servers running in other regions, but to test it, I need to make connections in multiple regions, so there's more than one server running.
What are good ways to test this, either interactively or by writing tests? Maybe use a VPN? What's your favorite?
4 votes -
Tildes is still in alpha-testing. It’s an unfinished product. Set your expectations accordingly.
Someone mentioned elsewhere that they signed up for Tildes “years ago during the beta”. That reminded me: Tildes hasn’t reached beta-testing yet. Officially, Tildes is still in alpha-testing...
Someone mentioned elsewhere that they signed up for Tildes “years ago during the beta”. That reminded me: Tildes hasn’t reached beta-testing yet.
Officially, Tildes is still in alpha-testing phase.
The login page says “Tildes is currently in invite-only alpha...” And the Contact page says “To request an invite to the Tildes alpha...”
We’re still in alpha-testing. Alpha-testing of software usually happens on an incomplete product before it is released to the customer.
This is a very important point. Tildes is not feature-complete yet: there are literally hundreds of feature requests yet to work on before Tildes will be what people want it to be – and even that list is far from complete. In Agile software development terms, Tildes is a minimum viable product, or, in other words, “a version of a product with just enough features to be usable by early customers who can then provide feedback for future product development”.
Tildes works as it is, but it’s a bare-bones forum: you can post, and comment… and that’s about it. It’s a proof of concept. There are a few minor tweaks here and there, which give the impression that Tildes is more complex than it is, but they’re misleading. There are plans to make Tildes a more complex website but, right now, most of that complexity of Tildes exists only in people’s imaginations (and there have been some very imaginative people contributing to that list of future features!).
Most questions about “Why doesn’t Tildes do X?” or “Can Tildes do X?” can be answered simply by saying “Tildes is incomplete and X hasn’t been built yet.” There are some questions about missing features which can be answered by saying “Tildes was never intended to do X”, but those are far and away in the minority. Most flaws, drawbacks, and problems with Tildes exist because Tildes is still a proof of concept, rather than a finished product.
It’s also worth noting that Tildes’ current feature set is absolutely not up to the task if the user base and site activity increase too quickly. There’s too much manual tinkering required at the moment to make things work properly: for one thing, there are no significant moderation tools on Tildes (that’s almost all done manually at the moment). There are still a lot of features yet to be built - and we don’t even know what some of those features are yet!
To pre-empt the people who will rightly point out that Tildes is 5 years old: Tildes’ feature set was intended to grow gradually over time, in line with a gradual growth in users, activity, and the need for those features to exist. However, Tildes has not undergone much growth over the past few years, so the existing features were sufficient to manage the existing activity. Basically, the site didn’t need a lot of fancy features to handle the low traffic here.
This sudden surge of new users might change that. But it will take time to build more features. That was always the intention, and it hasn’t changed now.
Until then: Tildes is still in alpha-testing. It’s an unfinished product. Set your expectations accordingly.
EDIT:
If you're one of the many people who seem to be replying to this topic, saying "it's okay, I like this simple bare-bones site as it is"... then you're probably not part of my original intended audience for this topic. This topic was aimed at all the people who are arriving here, being taken aback at how simple Tildes is, and wondering where the advanced features are.
However, we can still take the "set your expectations accordingly" message and apply it to you: "Tildes is an unfinished product, so you can expect it to change in the future. It won't be like this forever."
Either way, "set your expectations accordingly" is the message here, whether you're expecting more features and not finding them, or whether you're expecting simplicity and enjoying what you see. Either way, you should know that things will change around here. Maybe slowly. Maybe quickly. Maybe they'll get better from your point of view. Maybe they'll get worse from your point of view. But, change they will.
151 votes -
At the University of California San Diego, there's the Shake Table; an earthquake simulator with the heaviest payload capacity in the world
8 votes -
Is there a way to do a DNA test anonymously?
Not sure if this is the right spot, but the topic says it. I'd like to get my DNA checked out, but I don't want it connected to my name and all that. Is this actually possible? Am I overreacting?...
Not sure if this is the right spot, but the topic says it. I'd like to get my DNA checked out, but I don't want it connected to my name and all that. Is this actually possible? Am I overreacting?
I'm not even sure what I look to gain from the testing, but I figured I'd look into it. If I can do it safely and privately, I'm game. If not, no loss.
Any thoughts?
12 votes -
To prepare for future pandemics, we can learn from the OECD's top two performers: New Zealand and Iceland
8 votes -
Doom's most mysterious glitch finally solved after thirty years
8 votes -
First report of rare cat discovered on Mt. Everest
9 votes -
Navigating the ethics of ancient human DNA research
1 vote -
How donkeys changed the course of human history
5 votes -
Roomba testers feel misled after intimate images ended up on Facebook
7 votes -
Team of Swedish engineers has finally developed the first crash test dummy designed on the body of the average woman
15 votes -
The dangers of A/B testing and "funnel hacking": How we made things worse by making them better
8 votes -
Physical buttons outperform touchscreens in new cars, test finds
24 votes -
Covid testing company "selling customers' DNA"
12 votes -
Map drawn from memory helps man reunite with family decades after abduction
4 votes -
The anatomy of Portal - How Portal's puzzles trick you into being smart
5 votes -
Coverage is not strongly correlated with test suite effectiveness
7 votes -
The first baby in history to be conceived with the help of polygenic testing
9 votes -
US Food and Drug Administration authorizes over-the-counter screening tests for COVID-19
6 votes -
How the New York Times A/B tests their headlines
8 votes -
Texas Department of Public Safety issues amber alert for victim of horror doll Chucky
5 votes -
NHS to trial blood test to detect more than fifty forms of cancer
9 votes -
You can now try the RetroArch Playtest on Steam for Linux
7 votes -
Five reasons not to grow your QA department
5 votes -
The pros and cons of software crowdtesting
3 votes -
Tracker for coronavirus test results from officials in the US government and presidential campaigns
21 votes -
US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention coronavirus testers pulled from Minnesota after hostile and racist encounters
5 votes -
New open-source test tube rack helps COVID-19 testing lab tame thousands of samples
7 votes -
Oakland Airport wants to attract passengers with free rapid Covid testing
2 votes -
Tell me about your early experiences with debugging and software QA
Are you an “old timer” in the computer industry? I’m writing a story about the things programmers (and QA people) had to do to test their software. It’s meant to be a nostalgic piece that’ll...
Are you an “old timer” in the computer industry? I’m writing a story about the things programmers (and QA people) had to do to test their software. It’s meant to be a nostalgic piece that’ll remind people about old methods — for good or ill.
For example, there was a point where the only way to insert a breakpoint in the code was to insert “printfs” that said “I got to this place in the code!” And all testing was manual testing. Nothing was automated. If you wanted a bug tracking system, you built your own.
So tell me your stories. Tell me what you had to do to test software, way back when, and compare it to today. What tools did you use -- or build? Is there anything you miss? Anything that makes you especially glad that the past is past?
C’mon, you know you wanted a “remember when”!
8 votes -
United to be first US airline to offer coronavirus tests for passengers
7 votes -
Finland has deployed coronavirus-sniffing dogs at the Nordic country's main international airport – a four-month trial of an alternative testing method
9 votes -
Eight ways to know that it’s time to hire a new QA tester
3 votes -
Arizona university prevents potential Covid outbreak by testing feces
8 votes -
Covid testing rant
I'm in line at a free covid testing site. It is a CVS minuteclinic. I have to use the normal drivethrough, and self administer the nasal swab. What the hell is that bullshit? My wife went to a...
I'm in line at a free covid testing site. It is a CVS minuteclinic. I have to use the normal drivethrough, and self administer the nasal swab.
What the hell is that bullshit? My wife went to a 'real' test site where a professional swabbed and she described it as a pap smear on the back of her eye.
So I'm going to a CVS so they can print a barcode, give me, an unqualified layperson a long qtip and a test tube to do my own test and drop in a collection box. Which they will likely ship to an actual lab.
And for all of this 'work', they get to bill my insurance for hundreds or more, which will likely mean rate hikes later.
Our healthcare system is a sham, and this is just further proof. Given I have to do it myself anyway, the government should just mail me a kit which I then drop off.
It would not shock me in the slightest if they actually just drop the tests in a dumpster and just send a 'negative' a few days later.
Edit: 40 min later, through line and swabbed. Yes, they just have Quest diagnostics empty the dropbox. 0 reason CVS should be involved.
17 votes -
Estimating software testing time: a few useful guidelines
4 votes -
Your coronavirus test is positive. Maybe it shouldn’t be.
6 votes -
Washington University develops COVID-19 saliva test
5 votes -
Five rules for successful test automation
5 votes -
America is following disastrous Trump advice to slow down testing
10 votes -
Five ways cloud-native application testing is different from testing on-premises software
4 votes -
Denmark launches coronavirus passports – citizens can download official document if they have tested negative for illness within last seven days
7 votes