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Reddit’s engineering team and product complexity has seen significant growth over the last three years. Facilitating that growth has taken a lot of behind-the-scenes evolution of Reddit’s backend infrastructure. One major component has been adopting a service-oriented architecture, and a significant facet of that has been evolving service-to-service discovery and communication. As the number of se
Reddit is home to more than 100,000 of the internet’s most passionate and engaged communities, and we want to give all of them the best tools to express themselves and engage in deeper conversations. That’s why we’re excited to announce the extended rollout of Reddit video beta, which makes it easier than ever for redditors to capture, upload, and share videos and gifs with all their favorite comm
Niranjan Ramadas (u/nr4madas) Engineering Manager Earlier this year, our CEO, Steve, mentioned we are redesigning the site. Great! But how? Frontend engineering is in a very different state than it was when Reddit was first conceived. We have a large depth of options for just about every layer of web app development. From how to render views, style content, serve assets, and write code, frontend d
Neil Williams & Saurabh Sharma u/spladug & u/foklepoint We’re constantly deploying code at Reddit. Every engineer writes code, gets it reviewed, checks it in, and rolls it out to production regularly. This happens as often as 200 times each week and a deploy usually takes fewer than 10 minutes end-to-end. The system that powers all of this has evolved over the years. Let’s take a look at how it’s
Krishnan Chandra (u/shrink_and_an_arch) Senior Software Engineer We want to better communicate the scale of Reddit to our users. Up to this point, vote score and number of comments were the main indicators of activity on a given post. However, Reddit has many visitors that consume content without voting or commenting. We wanted to build a system that could capture this activity by counting the num
Brian Simpson, Matt Lee, & Daniel Ellis (u/bsimpson, u/madlee, & u/daniel) Each year for April Fools’, rather than a prank, we like to create a project that explores the way that humans interact at large scales. This year we came up with Place, a collaborative canvas on which a single user could only place a single tile every five minutes. This limitation de-emphasized the importance of the indivi
Get the latest product news, company announcements, and user insights from the official Reddit blog.
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