Ask HN: If you could only use one, would you pick Google or Reddit?
A couple years back the answer for me would've been Google. These days, I really wouldn't mind if Google went away, but I would really miss reddit. My use case for Google is mostly as a reddit search engine anyway.
EDIT: I meant Google Search only, not the rest of Google.
32 comments
[ 3.2 ms ] story [ 68.1 ms ] threadI'm keeping Google
I've already de-googled. As of a few days ago, I de-reddited.
If it’s just google search, then I would keep Reddit.
I've been mostly happy with DDG but still use google maps.
I rely on phind for my internet searches, while ChatGPT serves me for figuring out anything. If needed, I could always revert back to bing for internet scraping.
Honestly, I have grown to somewhat dislike both. I suppose I wouldn't mind eliminating either and seeing which one I miss more.
The results are great, but it does take a little bit of time to show up, but that's expected with today's technology.
The thing that keeps me from using it instead of Google are really things like having a map show up or news results or photos.
That and the fact that I can't make it a default search in Safari or that easily.
Google, I could not care less about. Bing Search FTW!
I could live without google search or reddit results, but I would be minorly annoyed with the loss of either.
People act like Reddit is this great source of information, but it seems pretty shakey or uninformed whenever I search for something specific. Seems like all the good info is being siloed away in Discord now.
Google search, meanwhile, has deteriorated, but it still indexes obscure things I can't find on other search engines.
Google and it's not even close.
Reddit is a good way to connect. But it's social media. There's lots of players here. Reddit's strength was the (false) perception that it was 'one of us'.
Reddit (via /u/spez) made it clear that they'll step over their users. They made it clear that to engage in conversation with them - you need everything well documented (and recorded). They feel dirty to me now.
The users made reddit. Seems like many are headed to the fediverse. It may never have the numbers reddit has but it seems destined to carry its spirit. See you there...
Google is ad-ridden and results are crappy (have been for a long time)
reddit is good, but ehhhh… it can be a mixed bag.
Reddit gives more content & community to the world…
Hard to say, but I feel Reddit is “less important” and “more replaceable” than Google’s empire…
- Objective, general knowledge: Wikipedia
- Objective, general news: AP & Reuters
- "How do I XXX?": Stack Exchange (they have similar issues to Reddit but not as bad, and the actual site is 100x better)
There's also a lot of sites with good, reliable info but only in specific areas:
- Technical documentation or specifications: MDN Docs, Rust Docs, pipi (Python) docs, Apple docs, ...
- Quality tech tips: refactoring.guru, CSS Tricks, ...
- Quality tech articles: fasterthanli.me, faultlore.com, xeiaso.net, lwn.net, ... (many more examples which post much less frequently)
- Figure out which libraries to use: "XXX github", "awesome XXX". or "awesome XXX github"
- Biased tech anecdotes, product reviews, opinions; and tech news: Hacker News
- High quality articles on random subjects: ciechanow.ski, ...
I'm sure there are good sites for other knowledge (cooking, cycling, etc.), but I don't know them. Which is the big problem Google or Reddit is supposed to solve. But I bet some people could make a shared list. Then, if you filter to these sites you get information with even better quality than Google or Reddit.
Also, I know this isn't true for most people, but there are a handful of Subreddits that are basically essential for my real life. For example, there is a subreddit for the neighborhood I live in. It has 50k+ people in there. It's better than any local news outlet. Getting all those people to gather at some other site would be extremely difficult if not impossible. If it disappeared our local community would be severely harmed.