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I just hope that after a century people have smartened up and the instantaneous and global news cycle on social media can make a difference in how we react to the completely natural of change:
getpocket.com/explore/item/geo

Quite scenes on twitter right now! After scrolling though a dozen such scenes I couldn't help but share.

With the worldcup coming up, won't be surprised to see free live streaming on Twitter soon.

Tell me how Twitter isn't dying?

“The meaning of life is that it stops”
Franz Kafka (1883-1924)
One of the greatest writers of 20 th century, who created amazing characters in absurd and surreal situations where the term “kafkaesque” entered into the English language.
Woodcut print... inspired by Anthony Russo illustration.
#printmaking #printing #print #mastoart #woodblockprint #printmaker #woodcutprints #woodcutprinting #grabado #socialistart #atheist #secular#humanist #humanrights #civilrights #democracy #antifascist

Have been here about 3 weeks now, so am happy to share some information with new arrivals.

1. The T in Mastodon is silent to discourage the use of letters found in the word Twitter

2. That guy in the corner is Abe, he bites redheads and shouldn't be woken between 2pm and 9.15pm

3. The colour verdigris is not banned but is strongly discouraged

4. Question marks are now commas

5. Jokes must be exactly 173 characters long and/or in rhyming couplets

6. Fun is mandatory but rationed, for safety

I believe the Twitter purchase was an act of war and intentional sabotage. Former employees, or others who have information regarding this, may contact me via Signal at +1-410-570-5739. Thanks.

Who here do I follow for such quality content/relevant news articles as readily available on

Please list suggestions 👇🏻. I need some funnies to follow.

The list of things that have gone wrong at Twitter is, well, extensive. But the simplest one happened at the very start, was exacerbated by Musk’s subsequent communication, and was extremely, IMHO, predictable.

So, let’s talk about the difference between startups and established tech companies.

I worked at a startup as my first job out of college. Put five years in. It was an amazing experience and I was truly fortunate to have it; I was thrown into the deep end, learned things about software architecture that would serve me well throughout my whole career, and wouldn’t trade it for anything.

I also:

  • broke off a date with my future wife because I was the only one of three team members who could make a demo work for the next day. We pulled an all-nighter.

  • became well-familiar with the biker gang that pulled up to the bar across the street from our office every Saturday night; could set my clock by them arriving. Did often, on account of all the seven-day weeks.

  • got the sickest I’d ever been, out three weeks. Week two, my CEO calls and checks to see if there’s any duty I could take on because we had no other hands to do it. I wrote some user-facing documentation. Three months later, someone caught all the obvious typos and asked “What idiot wrote this?” I dead-panned that I think I missed some issues on account of all the vivid hallucinations.

  • had a conversation with my doctor about the indigestion that was waking me up at night. He suggested I relieve stress. I responded “I work at a startup, so what are the options that don’t require a career change?”

And eventually, I left because I was ready to stop living like that.

Here’s the thing: there is so much of the software dev ecosystem where you don’t live like that. You live like that because you’re working on something you’re willing to sacrifice yourself for it (I’m not talking about being passionate about the work—you can be passionate and have a work-life balance—I’m talking actual sacrifice; things you won’t get back) or you are expecting a huge payout relative to the invested effort. If those ingredients aren’t there? You don’t take that gig. And companies that aren’t willing to offer that payout or the kind of we-are-here-to-change-the-world opportunity don’t get those employees.

Twitter was once such a startup. It’s not anymore. It went public. Once a company goes public, it’s no longer a startup; it’s a place people who want a reliable paycheck and a reasonable work-life balance go to work. At Google, we were counseled to have a “startup mentality” by leadership, and people certainly tried to give it their all, but… You just don’t work like you’re at a startup at a 100,000-person company. You can’t. The buy-in isn’t there. It does you no good to pull seven-day weeks when the database team you’re relying upon works five-day weeks, holds all the credentials to modify the DB, and just won’t answer their email on a Saturday. What’s the point then? Go home, love your spouse, work on your house, hike in the park, touch grass.

Musk tried something I don’t think I’ve seen before: he tried taking a company that “won the game,” as it were, and roll it back to a startup. He took a place people had a stable job making a product people use and tried to make it a place where the future was uncertain again. And then he confirmed that, yes, he was expecting those employees to work seven-day weeks to realize a vision… A vision he didn’t even enunciate.

Twitter was a place steady hands were working to maintain a mature product for a reliable paycheck. A mass exodus is entirely expected. I don’t know why he didn’t expect it.

Birdsite has the most users ever right now because nobody can look away from a burning oil truck that crashes into another burning radioactive truck on an 8 lane highway.

Elon bragging about creating this whole shitshow of a situation is weird.

Hello everyone from #India who are just joining in!

We are using #MastIndia as a gathering point to find other folks. Please give your #introduction there.

Two things you can do right away:

1) Just start talking to random people, don't worry too much about how this place works. It's like birdsite, only better.

2) Use hashtags to explore content :)

(Pls boost for good karma)

Hubble Space Telescope shows 2 of the galaxies in the galactic triplet Arp 248 — also known as Wild's Triplet — which lies around 200 million light-years from Earth in the constellation Virgo. The 2 galaxies visible in this image — which flank a smaller, unrelated background spiral galaxy — seem to be connected by a luminous bridge. This elongated stream of stars and interstellar dust is known as a tidal tail, and it was formed by the mutual gravitational attraction of the 2 galaxies.

#space

Given Twitter's seemingly bright prospects, I decided to get on here and give it a try. I was wondering if there's any good tutorial/explainer video on how best to use this space and something that covers all aspects of it?

Also, is there any quick way to find people I already follow on Twitter and follow them here as well?

Qoto Mastodon

QOTO: Question Others to Teach Ourselves
An inclusive, Academic Freedom, instance
All cultures welcome.
Hate speech and harassment strictly forbidden.