• bus_factor@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    Different goals. The goal of Apollo was to make a good app. The goal of the official reddit app is to show you ads and siphon money off you.

    I guarantee you a good chunk of that R&D money is for making ads more profitable and other monetization.

    • Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      To be fair, the point of Apollo was to also make money. But it was to make money by selling you things that made a nice experience nicer. Reddit makes money by selling you stuff that makes a shitty experience slightly less shitty.

      • NateNate60@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        I said it before on Reddit and I will say it again here—

        If Reddit has asked me for a premium subscription to use my favourite third-party app, I would have fucking paid.

        Just bad business all around

        • Kinglink@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          I don’t know the right price point, but 1 dollar a month probably would have worked for most people. It just wasn’t enough because they probably can make more than 1 by spoon feeding you ads now.

          • kingthrillgore@lemmy.mlOP
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            9 months ago

            I’d go as far as 5 dollars a month, which is more than the buck thirty they make off users right now.

            • gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.works
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              9 months ago

              It just boggles the mind.

              They had the userbase. They had the community moderation. They had the power-users basically doing their job for them. They could have had a bulletproof, tied-to-world-population-growth metric - not super fast, but basically monotonically increasing. They basically could have turned it into a sustainable money printer, while not crushing user enthusiasm. Hell, they could have even done an opt- in policy for ML training datasets, either offsetting or outright paying users a commission for content that’s used as part of a training set. There were so many possibilities that didn’t involve pointing the ship at an iceberg.

              Spez threw it away because he wanted the quick payout from ad revenue.

              • Hackerman_uwu@lemmy.world
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                9 months ago

                Spez threw it away because he’s a libertarian tool. He doesn’t care how he gets the payout as long as it’s not ‘collectivist’. This commie shit your’e spouting in this post would not impress daddy Elon. GTFO.

        • Rumbelows@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          100% I did pay for the premium version of Apollo and I absolutely would have paid about £20 a month for access.

          It was the #1 most used app on all my devices.

        • qdJzXuisAndVQb2@lemm.ee
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          9 months ago

          Didn’t that become an option at some point? I’m sure I’ve read there are apps you can pay for to have access. Fuck that, though. Make it a reasonable price, too, and I’d listen. No way I’m paying a fiver a month for reddit. Maye 1 or 2.

          • Kinglink@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            Apps can pay in a ridiculous deal that no app would be able to support. So you either be a pay app that no one downloads, or a free app that gets killed the second it gets too big (And that number was low)

      • randomname01@feddit.nl
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        9 months ago

        Yeah, but the Apollo dev didn’t have the huge server costs that Reddit has. I’m not defending Reddit at all, but this is just comparing apples to oranges.

        • Zink@pawb.social
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          9 months ago

          So the reason reddit struggled to develop a decent app is… because of server costs?

          • Anamnesis@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            Seriously. They still don’t have a way to increase the font size on the default app last I checked. How is such a basic feature STILL lacking?

          • randomname01@feddit.nl
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            9 months ago

            Im a way, yeah. They clearly they made a shitty app to extract as much value from their users as possible. But my point was that Reddit has significantly higher costs than third party app developers (because they host the content), so the business model that works for third party app developers doesn’t work for them.

            Looking at a third party app - made by someone who doesn’t have to bear the costs of running the site and can therefore make decent money on an ad-free experience - and a first party one which does have to recoup those expenses doesn’t really work. The financial models are just fundamentally different.

            I don’t say that to defend Reddit. They’re clearly a shitty company headed by shitty people, and I’m sure they could’ve found different ways to make money. But yeah, their financial incentives for making an app are fundamentally different than those of other devs.

        • Passerby6497@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          Server costs don’t force you to make a bloated and shitty app experience. You might have an argument that 3rd party apps put strain on the servers, but that’s just reddits fault for making an awful and borderline unusable UX.

          • Optional@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            I think he’s arguing that the organization, being several hundred times bigger, makes it a lot harder to focus on one thing, like making the app awesome.

            As an example, in an hour long meeting you’d spend x% of the time on server costs, another y% on, i dunno, legal, another % on how to enshittify, and finally 5 minutes on the app.

    • Kinglink@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      The goal of Apollo was to make a good app. The goal of the official reddit app is to show you ads and siphon money off you.

      Spot fucking on.

      Ever have a good app? Something you like using but it’s by a corporation but that’s ok, because it’s a good app and does what you want? And then they start adding more features to it, and it slows down, and it’s more annoying and it keeps offering services you don’t want, and it changes and it morphs and it becomes a shit app.

      Hell I’ve watched Whisk become something I liked using to something worthless now it’s Samsung food… Switched to using CopyMeThat which actually also gets me recipes from sites that you can’t just read the recipes from, and that’s ALL it does (well recipe book/shopping cart/meal planning, which is what it’s designed for.)

      I’m just sick of “How do we make more money” instead of just being an app that does what it says. Gaming is going down the same hole, sadly.