-
26 votes
-
Google is enabling RCS independently of mobile operators in the UK and France this month
10 votes -
iOS 13 now shows you a map of where apps have been tracking you
13 votes -
Cuphead will be playable in Tesla Model 3, Model S, and Model X cars
7 votes -
~all?
Could we have a meta-group which is a union of all the available (sub)groups? The purpose of it being having a way to view what the front page looks like without having to log out. IDK what is the...
Could we have a meta-group which is a union of all the available (sub)groups? The purpose of it being having a way to view what the front page looks like without having to log out. IDK what is the general trend but I personally don't follow all groups (e.g. I am not interested in anime, and I try to minimise my intake of politics, so I am not subbed to ~anime and ~news), but sometimes I am curious about what the part I don't usually see is like.
I should admit that viewing the frontpage in a private window is almost there (with the caveat of having to copy links around if I want to comment, which is not much trouble frankly), so this would rather be polishing than some very useful new feature.
17 votes -
The OnePlus 7 Pro has a 90Hz screen, three cameras, and costs $669
12 votes -
I tried to make Facebook's news feed random and fun
6 votes -
"Spoiler" tags should also display on comments in tagged posts when viewed from a user page
Right now if a post is tagged with 'spoiler', that tag appears in its own color which is good. However, if you are interacting with a user and click through to their profile, there is no...
Right now if a post is tagged with 'spoiler', that tag appears in its own color which is good. However, if you are interacting with a user and click through to their profile, there is no indication that some of their comments may have been in these spoiler threads and thus contain spoilers (just happened to me, thankfully for show I don't watch). It might be nice to somehow indicate these potential spoilers on the user page so that they can be skipped over.
15 votes -
View all comments in a group (tildes?)
On Reddit, it's possible to view all the comments in a subreddit by going to the subreddit comments url. For example: https://www.reddit.com/r/tildes/comments/ As a separate request, would it be...
On Reddit, it's possible to view all the comments in a subreddit by going to the subreddit comments url. For example: https://www.reddit.com/r/tildes/comments/
As a separate request, would it be possible to add a new comment sorting method. Perhaps an option to disable comment nesting and sort by new. It would make it easier to see new comments that are added to a post.
7 votes -
Friend mechanic
I personally think a friend mechanic which allows you to follow what other people say on the site would be quite nice. Right now the only way you could do this is by checking their profile every...
I personally think a friend mechanic which allows you to follow what other people say on the site would be quite nice.
Right now the only way you could do this is by checking their profile every now and then which is... tiring at best.
I don't think there's necessarily room for abuse but I'm interested to see what you all think of this.
Edit : I've made a top-level comment to clarify certain things
14 votes -
Option to temporarily hide read posts
It would be nice to have an optional feature that filters out posts that a) you have read and b) don't have any new unread comments. When a post gets new comments it should reappear. That way we...
It would be nice to have an optional feature that filters out posts that a) you have read and b) don't have any new unread comments. When a post gets new comments it should reappear. That way we could see more unread content on the page, but still keep long running topics going. Have it not affect search, so people can still find posts for reference.
11 votes -
Protections against fingerprinting and cryptocurrency mining available in Firefox Nightly and Beta
16 votes -
Telegram now allows every Telegram user to delete any message in a private conversation from both sides
23 votes -
Apple introduces second generation AirPods, with Hey Siri, H1 audio chip, and wireless charging
14 votes -
Google announces "Stadia", a new game-streaming platform with deep YouTube integration
38 votes -
Instagram adds in-app checkout as part of its big push into shopping
3 votes -
Mozilla releases Iodide, an open source browser tool for publishing dynamic data science
14 votes -
Facebook’s News Feed era is now officially over: What Chris Cox’s departure means for the company
6 votes -
YouTube is rolling out a feature that shows fact-checks when people search for sensitive topics
18 votes -
Facebook's terms for its Patreon-like "Fan Subscriptions" feature include taking up to 30% of revenue, offering free trial subscriptions, and a perpetual license to all content
16 votes -
A list of Hacker News' undocumented features and behaviors - Anything interesting that we could apply (or avoid) here?
24 votes -
What would you want in a Reddit app?
My friend and I are considering finishing a prototype of a Reddit app. We've already agreed to the following features on first release (if we keep going). Similar urls to current Reddit website...
My friend and I are considering finishing a prototype of a Reddit app. We've already agreed to the following features on first release (if we keep going).
- Similar urls to current Reddit website (so you can change the URL to reddit.com and see the same page)
- voting, commenting, posting selftexts and links
- Directly uploading image posts may come later if it looks complicated
- Masstagger integrated.
- Dark theme (other options in later releases)
- Primary use case: desktop and mobile web.
- Performance first. Reddit's 1 minute load time on default mobile, missing/broken features on i.reddit.com/.compact, and a few tiny complaints on the desktop site are the primary reasons we are considering writing this app. Native is not in our collective skillsets or radar, so we're going to go the extra mile to make sure the app respects both your time and your battery where possible. We did do some research and found that Reddit has actually been negligent in this regard on mobile web, meanwhile we have years of experience in the subject.
- Mailbox (send/receive messages, orange icon on new message/comment reply/thread reply).
- No infinite scroll
- View source JSON of comments/posts.
What are some features/ideas that members of this community would really like in a Reddit app?
13 votes -
Google Maps can now guide you to drug disposal locations
3 votes -
The past, present, and future of Pokémon Go, according to Niantic
8 votes -
SoundCloud has launched a new distribution feature which enables artists to spread their music to a range of rival streaming services
7 votes -
Are there any thoughts for a notification system or a mobile app?
While browsing through the Tildes documentation, I stumbled across this in the Technical Goals section: Tildes is a website. Your phone already has an app for using it—it's your browser. Tildes...
While browsing through the Tildes documentation, I stumbled across this in the Technical Goals section:
Tildes is a website. Your phone already has an app for using it—it's your browser.
Tildes will have a full-featured API, so I definitely don't want to discourage mobile apps overall, but the primary interface for using the site on mobile should remain as the website. That means that mobile users will get access to updates at exactly the same time as desktop ones, and full functionality should always be available on both.
This got me thinking. Despite Tildes preferring mobile browsers over an app, is there still a chance for one? I usually avoid using websites on mobile unless I must, as mobile websites generally don't have the full functionality of the website. Labelling comments 'Exemplary' and 'Malice' on mobile is an example of what doesn't work (there's more), and it's usually very unresponsive for some of the things that still do work. Also, there aren't any notifications on mobile websites and some people, me included, have cumbersome browsers that make the feel of using the website slow and laborious.
Another thing is, if the app has no chance of happening, could Tildes get desktop notifications? I usually like to respond to replies to my topics and comments as quickly as possible and I'm not a fan of the whole 'constant login to check my notifications' thing. Email notifications aren't possible because of Tildes' privacy belief.
33 votes -
Is there any way you can mention a user in topics or comments?
Lots of different social networks have different ways to do this, such as u/, @, +, etc. Is there a way for this to be done on Tildes? And if not, should there be?
8 votes -
Suggestion: add an *optional* short-text bio blurb on user profiles
Now that user profiles have history, it would also be useful, like Hacker News and Reddit, to have a short plain-text bio blurb that users can optionally fill out. It'd be great to let users...
Now that user profiles have history, it would also be useful, like Hacker News and Reddit, to have a short plain-text bio blurb that users can optionally fill out.
It'd be great to let users provide some context about themselves.
What do you folks think?
20 votes -
No, Elon, the Navigate on Autopilot feature is not ‘full self-driving’
11 votes -
Suggestion - Add support for https://tildes.net/https://link-url.com/foo/bar
On reddit it's possible to see where a link was posted by sticking the full URL immediately after https://reddit.com/. This would be a neat feature here as well.
16 votes -
Samsung used a DSLR photo to fake their phone's portrait mode functionality
16 votes -
Allow anonymous posting in some groups?
Crazy Idea™: You know what might be neato, but I have no idea how it could be implemented... if Tildes could have groups where truly anonymous posting was allowed, though it would require...
Crazy Idea™: You know what might be neato, but I have no idea how it could be implemented... if Tildes could have groups where truly anonymous posting was allowed, though it would require authentication. Use cases: ~talk about something embarrassing, or ask questions for which on Reddit you would make a throwaway. Maybe this user permission was only allowed after some threshold was met? If it was truly anonymous in the database, then notifications on replies probably could not work, right?
Would that be useful at all? If so, probably low priority I know, but just a thought.
10 votes -
Would it make sense to make the default activity period be a function of the recent activity on the site, and in each group?
I am a bit lazy, and I also seem to like the default 3 day filter on the activity feed... but, sometimes a person less lazy than I responds to a topic of mine which is older that 3 days. These are...
I am a bit lazy, and I also seem to like the default 3 day filter on the activity feed... but, sometimes a person less lazy than I responds to a topic of mine which is older that 3 days. These are usually good responses. These folks clearly played with the time filter. Other users are missing out on these responses.
I agree that a 3 day filter may be the ideal filter at the normal activity level of Tildes at large, at this point. But Tildes is still really fluctuating in activity, as may other sites based on the codebase. This may be an even bigger issue in specific groups.
Would there be any workable and beneficial way to make the default time filter a function of recent activity? This may apply to the main feed, and each group feed. This would help in site/group times of low activity, and might scale to the much higher activity of the future.. does this make any sense at all?
Would it be better to make the default time filter a function of activity, instead of a arbitrary setting which an admin selected?
Edit: the list box label might default to a dynamic “recent”, or similar, and then still have the other options of “last 1 hour, last 12 hours,” etc...
9 votes -
Flickr's free accounts will be limited to 1,000 photos and videos starting January 8, 2019
30 votes -
The iPhone’s new parental controls block searches for sex ed, allow violence and racism
25 votes -
PSN online ID change feature entering PlayStation preview program soon
8 votes -
The NY Times has an option in their store to pick out favorite recipes that have been posted on the site (and in the paper) and print them in a cookbook
5 votes -
Suggestion: Add a show all posts by x button
As a lurker on the somethingawful forums one of my favorite features is a button which will show all the posts a single person has made in a thread. It'd be really handy if someone (like the OP)...
As a lurker on the somethingawful forums one of my favorite features is a button which will show all the posts a single person has made in a thread. It'd be really handy if someone (like the OP) is answering questions about a topic. It's really nice to have on a more traditional forum website, but I'm not sure how useful it'd be here. Regardless, I thought I would suggest it.
9 votes -
Introducing Firefox Monitor, helping people take control after a data breach
24 votes -
PlayStation Now adds downloading of PS4, PS2 games
14 votes -
The OnePlus 6T won't have a headphone jack, but battery life will be improved
16 votes -
A comparison of women's and men's pocket sizes
39 votes -
WordPress is getting a new default editor
7 votes -
Tackling the Comment Voting Problem
I took a break from Tildes for a week and came back to look at things again with a fresh perspective. One of the things I immediately noticed was how the earliest comments are the ones that get...
I took a break from Tildes for a week and came back to look at things again with a fresh perspective.
One of the things I immediately noticed was how the earliest comments are the ones that get the upvotes to the top of the comment list, and tend to stay there, even when better comments and chains flow below.
I started thinking about why this is so pervasive. Not just on tildes, but everywhere. Reddit and tumblr both suffer this issue to a degree. At the end of the day, going through any comments requires a certain amount of time, and a certain approach to the existing library of commentary. If we lock in the amount of time an average person will examine comments (which...is not much), we’re left with the only thing to address: the approach to going through the existing library.
Plenty of proposals (mostly already done) come to mind. Perhaps you go by most active or most recent comments. Controversial perhaps, or sorting by newest, rather than most popular. Maybe some secret mix of it all (the reddit “hot” formula). What about complete and utter randomness? ...yeah remember that Certain Amount of Time we discussed earlier? It’ll only be a couple posts before the user will switch back to another sort method.
So what should we try? What HASN’T been tried?
What about multiple panes? User-selectable, arrangable, 1-4. Vertical columns of different views, updated dynamically synchronously or asynchronously for the most controversial, new, and active. You could see all the views at once, side by side, so that your time switching between views and waiting for page loads evaporates and 100% of that limited attention span is spent on the comments in each of the sorts.
Having the more rapidly-changing columns (newest, active) update synchronously (every # seconds, configurable) would allow a user to engage those comments in time for the next refresh. The less-rapidly changing columns could be set to be asynchronous- updating as the orders change (top, controversial). This can also be tweaked as the site gets either more or less active as a whole. So what might need to be asynchronous now while things are quiet, can be made synchronous later.
Again, all of this is just a possibility, or perhaps starting point for a way to address the overall issue of the first comments being the most voted on.
36 votes -
Migration of sub-tags/communities
Was asked to post here about this: Is there a plan for migrating sub-tags (or top-level groups too)? The scenario I'm thinking of is that things may either fork, or change their name unanimously....
Was asked to post here about this:
Is there a plan for migrating sub-tags (or top-level groups too)? The scenario I'm thinking of is that things may either fork, or change their name unanimously.
Let's say a tech product changes its official name from XX to be YY, Would there be a way to migrate
~tech.XX.stuff to ~tech.YY.stuff?I can't say that this will be a common occurrence, but may affect historical usefulness of the tagging system, as people looking for things in the past won't be able to easily - plus it may divide communities once existing (do they keep posting in the old tag or the new one?).
For now, this isn't too important as @Deimos (from what it seems?) is in charge of creating new topics and presumably modify them too, but for the future (according to this) we may start having user created groups pop-up.
Cheers,
3 votes -
Zooming out on Google Maps now reveals a globe
7 votes -
Reddit's bot ecosystem - Any good lessons for features on Tildes?
I may be one of the least qualified people here to discuss this topic, but I find two reddit bots pretty useful: https://www.reddit.com/user/autotldr...
I may be one of the least qualified people here to discuss this topic, but I find two reddit bots pretty useful:
https://www.reddit.com/user/autotldr
https://www.reddit.com/user/alternate-source-bot (this is my recent favorite)
What do you all think features like the two above being integrated into Tildes in some fashion, via bot or otherwise? Are there any other bot behaviors that you like which would have a good impact here, or are bots that produce comments the scourge of Reddit?
Sorry if this has been discussed before, if so let me know and I will delete this topic.
22 votes -
Steam has updated its built in chat feature
4 votes -
Reddit reinvents the chat room with subreddit chat
31 votes -
What is the most interesting feature you've seen in a language?
For me, it's definitely the topic particles in Japanese. It just seems like a really interesting thing that is a reason enough to want to learn Japanese, even excluding other great features it...
For me, it's definitely the topic particles in Japanese. It just seems like a really interesting thing that is a reason enough to want to learn Japanese, even excluding other great features it has. Here some info on them.
30 votes