Hey all, I read reddit.com/r/golang regularly, and so I'd really hope to have an equal or better alternative to take its place if the group is considering moving the discussion.
I'm happy to offer the Pressly platform as a potential successor to the reddit group discussion. It's a modern group discussion + mailing list product to make sharing and discovery easy, powered by a community of contributors. You could even host it on golang.org, ie. https://hub.golang.org. We're happy to offer it for free. You can see an example of the platform at: www.golang.to which we use for the Go Toronto user group. The advantage over reddit: compose lists of links or original posts, built-in newsletter digest that features contributed posts on a daily basis, better social sharing/analytics and improved analytics in general for which content is most engaging. We're also working on features to better recognizes the top contributors of the week. -Peter On Thursday, November 24, 2016 at 6:53:32 PM UTC-5, bradfitz wrote: > > In light of the CEO of Reddit admitting to editing user comments (see > dozen news stories today), I propose we delete the /r/golang subreddit. > > That is so beyond unethical and immature, I no longer want anything to do > with that site. I will be deleting my account on Reddit after backing up my > content, and I will no longer be a moderator of /r/golang. > > If other moderators of /r/golang feel strongly that it should remain, I > suppose you're welcome to keep it going. > > But if the other moderators want to abandon it and focus our conversation > elsewhere (or build a replacement), I'm happy to just delete /r/golang. > > Opinions? > > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "golang-nuts" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to golang-nuts+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.