- cross-posted to:
- reddit@lemmy.world
ask-historians-archive.netlify.app
- cross-posted to:
- reddit@lemmy.world
After the whole reddit API fiasco, I wanted a way to browse the AskHistorians subreddit on my phone without using the reddit app or website. It also bugged me to have all this valuable information on a site that might make it disappear on a whim.
So, I present to you the AskHistorians Archive. It allows you to browse past submissions to the subreddit, it’s ad-free, works on mobile, loads fast, and works without JS.
For now, it only contains some of the most recent posts up until 2022-12-31, but I’m planning to upload more over time.
I hope this is useful to some - happy to hear and implement any feedback!
Thanks for making this. I’ve been reading it a ton during my “break” from reddit.
One thing I noticed is that multi-part replies aren’t captured by the archive. Here’s an example with part 2 of a comment missing: https://ask-historians-archive.netlify.app/posts/zpjnpi.html
Anything that can be done about that, such as detecting comment chains where a person replies to their own comment?
Other than that, this is really a superior way to browse askhistorians. There are no moderator comments to skip over, and no threads with 30+ replies that are just a sea of [deleted].
Glad you’re enjoying it, and thanks for the feedback!
I plan on just showing all comments, I think in other cases there might be interesting follow up questions as well.
Thanks for this! Ask Historians was the one thing that made me really hesitate to completely cut ties with Reddit.
It looks great, but I think it should give the names of the commenters on each comment for credit and transparency.
I’ve added the usernames now :) also added a way to collapse comments
I feel like a lot of other reference subs could use this treatment, too.
Technical subs, particularly, would be a great target for something like this. /r/homelab is, in my experience, one of the most reliable sources for solid information when playing around with and setting up home infra, and I’d love an alternative that didn’t push Reddit’s engagement numbers up.