by qubitcoder on 6/9/23, 9:25 PM with 5 comments
by Hard_Space on 6/10/23, 9:36 AM
I only retained the subscription over the last five years, as the quality and worth of the catalog dropped, because I could share it with my mid-80s father and his wife (and two friends, though my father's share was the main motivation).
Sadly this probably also applies to the Reddit crunch, which will rob me of Apollo in 20 days time, and cut my Reddit usage by about 80% - I guess no-one ever went broke relying on the stickiness of lowest-common-denominator users.
The outlier life is really starting to suck. I already de-Googled and de-Dropboxed myself last year (well, 90%) with Fastmail and Syncthing; went back to the high seas and dropped Amazon; but I'm kind of relying on some new movement or surge of enthusiasm to save Reddit's utility in some other form than the random and non-indexed chaos of Discord (since Discord is about three years away from its own enshittification, if it gets enough traction).
by thx-2718 on 6/9/23, 9:40 PM
Such that over time they have lower subscription numbers.
by refurb on 6/9/23, 11:20 PM
That may be true, but apparently enough people wanted to keep Netflix and were willing to pay. Not surprising since a company like Netflix is going to do some research and surveying before making such a drastic move.