For example, it’s a tiny bit of a pain to quickly and cleanly access subscribed communities. There’s a “subscribed communities” box beneath the right-hand sidebar for the instance you’re in, but it seems to me like it should be a stickied item on the left-hand side of the screen, like this:
The devs are pretty hammered right now with the big influx of users. I wouldn’t bother them with feature requests in the issues section at GitHub. Need a dedicated community for feature requests which we don’t have, maybe [email protected] is the best place at this point. I have a few I’d like to put in myself.
Someone should reach out to the kids there and see if they can pitch in to organize feedback for the devs
The issues section is the correct place and should be considered to be the dedicated forum for feature requests and bug reporting. It’s designed for that sole purpose and gives instructions to issuers on how to reduce load when making a request. The devs will prioritize issues as necessary.
A Lemmy post or any Reddit-like forum in general is not good for requests since the posts will be forgotten over time unless they get cataloged on the issue tracker.
https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy-ui/issues
For the Lemmy UI Frontend all bugs and suggestions go here. Be sure to check if something was already posted first. More info about contributing is here.
I’m pretty sure that the devs have asked to not put non-technical discussion on Github, the devs are overloaded enough as it is.
Interesting. My experience is that GitHub issues are very easy to moderate. It’s easy to add someone to triage issues if that’s an issue, and any load problems usually come from passionate issuers and commentators not following the rules rather than people making well thought out requests.
If there is a real load issue then there needs to be an announcement telling people about it to link to, since what currently exists are guides telling people to use the appropriate places for feature requests and bugs. You also can’t tell people to not report bugs for reasons which should be obvious.