The results only showed 'LaTeX' and 'me_irl' (a meme subreddit).
Good results for 'php', 'ruby', 'node', 'pascal', 'haskell'
It might be because of our training data, as perl gets less popular, our training data might simply not having enough good data. : )
Funnily enough r/k8s was not on the list.
Even entering "FreeCAD" as query there is no r/FreeCAD in output, but instead there is r/Fusion360.[0]
IMO, Subreddit Finder is useless toy.
There are a couple different clients for it on GitHub
Maybe something worth looking into as may affect other topics. (:
This is an outrage
Not really relevant results.
At one point, we had communities of people, and discussions, and things were ok. Then came a mountain of commercial, automated, focused psyops against users: spaming, shilling, astoturfing, censoring, profiling, brigading, ab testing, engagement tracking, JS, ad auctions, eye tracking and on and on.
Reddit used to be a community and now it's dead site walking.
The site may crumble under its own weight in the coming years, but it won't be because it offers no discussion.
The challenge is, as soon as you start systematically introducing psyops into a quality discussion, every message becomes suspect and the quality retreats. What would happen if every thread on /r/askhistorians has someone popping in and saying "I see you're talking about the Battle of Gettysburg! Did you know there's an etsy shop you can buy official artifacts over [here]?" And more to the point, how will /r/historians defend against professionals steering discussions about, eg, slavery or the annexation of Tibet or the religious views of the Signers? I am worried.