> However, according to the status page everything should be operational.
Seems like a recurring theme, and not even with Reddit in particular. Why is it so common that I as an end user will notice a problem before whatever system is in charge of the status page does?
> Why is it so common that I as an end user will notice a problem before whatever system is in charge of the status page does?
Survival bias: only when you notice a problem before the system in charge of the status page does, is that you notice it. When you don't, you don't notice it.
It is quite an amazing idea. Every five minutes a user can place one single colors pixel in the canvas. Subreddits and other groups coordinate and make some interesting pixel art. Worth following imo.
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[ 2.8 ms ] story [ 35.8 ms ] thread> Our CDN was unable to reach our servers > Please check www.redditstatus.com if you consistently get this error.
However, according to the status page everything should be operational.
Seems like a recurring theme, and not even with Reddit in particular. Why is it so common that I as an end user will notice a problem before whatever system is in charge of the status page does?
Survival bias: only when you notice a problem before the system in charge of the status page does, is that you notice it. When you don't, you don't notice it.
It's not just old.reddit either, its the new abomination too
And there is no proper description for the whole subreddit.
That's basically it, users can color a tile every 15 minutes or so. The reddit Twitter page posts some of the cool stuff if you're into that
Is that still happening?
I mostly use Apollo so I can't even see it.
Reddit is experiencing an increased error rate, not yet reflected on the status page.
I do have the user option to use the old UI turned on in the user preferences, so reddit.com and old.reddit.com are the same to me.
So I went to reddit.com in a private window (not logged in) and it came right up.