(Reposted because I accidentally posted in the wrong place)
A question about using substack: Is there a way to highlight new comments, ones that I haven't seen yet? New top-level comments will show up at the beginning (or end, depending on how they're sorted) so they're not a problem, but new replies to other people's comments will show u…
(Reposted because I accidentally posted in the wrong place)
A question about using substack: Is there a way to highlight new comments, ones that I haven't seen yet? New top-level comments will show up at the beginning (or end, depending on how they're sorted) so they're not a problem, but new replies to other people's comments will show up elsewhere and be hard to find without reading through every previous, existing comment. Reading through them all is fine for, say, 10 comments, but not for 100.
I'm hoping there's a way to do this, too. Some of our discussions get really big in terms of post volume, and a quick way to find new stuff is pretty critical. In gamer terms, a big "quality of life" issue...
A way to mitigate the problem as a reader is to use your browser's search facility to look for "hr ago". That should lead you to only comments and replies from the current day. Still not nearly as convenient as SB Nation, but it helps.
If there's no way to do this, a workaround would be to respond in a new comment, with a reference to the comment being replied to. Very clumsy; I hope someone has a better suggestion.
(Reposted because I accidentally posted in the wrong place)
A question about using substack: Is there a way to highlight new comments, ones that I haven't seen yet? New top-level comments will show up at the beginning (or end, depending on how they're sorted) so they're not a problem, but new replies to other people's comments will show up elsewhere and be hard to find without reading through every previous, existing comment. Reading through them all is fine for, say, 10 comments, but not for 100.
I'm hoping there's a way to do this, too. Some of our discussions get really big in terms of post volume, and a quick way to find new stuff is pretty critical. In gamer terms, a big "quality of life" issue...
A way to mitigate the problem as a reader is to use your browser's search facility to look for "hr ago". That should lead you to only comments and replies from the current day. Still not nearly as convenient as SB Nation, but it helps.
If there's no way to do this, a workaround would be to respond in a new comment, with a reference to the comment being replied to. Very clumsy; I hope someone has a better suggestion.