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This is actually good. There’s finally more room for good services offered by smaller companies that care about users.
This is actually good. There’s finally more room for good services offered by smaller companies that care about users.
Seems like quite a lot of people on Reddit are suffering from some random apps (such as the phone app) taking gigabytes of space, which didn’t happen before.
I’m actually surprised this wasn’t the case before.
Oh I got it. I’m still stuck in the time when tweets had 140 characters, so I didn’t think there was more text 😆
Wasn’t that already there case? What’s changing?
But then, if it depends on customers to collectively stop buying something, we’re doomed already.
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Used to be the MacOS and iOS subreddits.
But if it wasn’t available in the API then apps would have to do a fetch of all the users posts to calculate it, possibly discouraging it.
That’s nice!
It works for any instance though, not only lemmy.world.
Problem is deeplinks such as https://m.lemmy.world/post/1291838 don’t work
I checked the official app but it’s awful. So many adds that have no clear visual cues it’s an ad, so you start reading it and realize halfway it’s just an ad. It makes you so pissed you just don’t want to continue browsing.
I’m pretty sure the employees working on it don’t have a say on it. Someone at the top decided to do it and they just have to pretend they believe on it because they have to be “team players”.
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I agree. They said they’re working on an Android theme though.
Besides bigger batteries make phones heavier pretty quickly. For mobile devices, optimized system and apps is very important.
I think it’s more like a pattern observed in many of the blog posts about the reasons ex-employees left Google after a while.