1 upvotes, 2 direct replies (showing 2)
View submission: Weekly Recap | December 19, 2024
Hi! Yes, the intention is to make that experience better for all and Reddit is bringing in an expert in accessibility issues to help with that!
Comment by TheTechHobbit at 19/12/2024 at 21:42 UTC
-2 upvotes, 0 direct replies
Why do you need to bring in an expert to add features that already existed on the old UI?
Comment by Wrong_Exit_9257 at 19/12/2024 at 20:02 UTC
-5 upvotes, 0 direct replies
you dont need to waste money on an expert.
1. you had community made apps that did this better than your 'developers' can do!
1.5 you also had community apps that natively supported deaf/blind persons, yet reddit manglement had a massive bowel movement on that idea now didn't they?
2. you had the v2 UI that did this near perfectly with less lag, a more readable layout, and a better color scheme, than the shitui that was forced on us.
you used to have an super active community that had developers in it (oh the irony) with posts from UX developers and programmers on what to do, but you cant be arsed to ask YOUR technical community to draft a concept or even make a demo? reddit and github are the abbot and castello of the modern development community, WTF why cant you use your resources? with all the students on here someone is bound to be willing to do something for a final project /capstone.