yeah, i would like to eventually have a threads developer portal with API and universal links documentation hosted, but wanted to share these out for now
Just curious (but I already suspect I know the answer to this question). Can the columns be narrowed or widened?
This was inherent in Tweetdeck when it was first released, but then it was removed along the way. I felt like that was a bad decision on someone’s part. Taking away a key component to make the usability less was not good, IMHO.
i remember when this happened so vividly, the feeling was so visceral like we were actually going to war.. back when a 'lockdown' meant life or death for the entire company.
as a bright-eyed bushy-tailed intern in 2011, coming in to work on the weekends, only because everyone else at the company was doing it. getting an impromptu email to gather around the aquarium like a general addressing his troops. its crazy how different working in tech back was then compared to now.
we just focused on making the product better across all fronts, from product to infra. we accelerated the analogous 'circles' privacy feature (which no one really used), and a few other things that i forgot. ultimately, it just came down to better execution on the parts that mattered.
super proud of our small but mighty web team for winning 2 @thewebbyawards for threads.net. happy to see the hard work the team poured into building the website with responsive design and high craft being recognized by the industry.
lots more exciting web features coming very soon, check out the threads.net experience if you haven't already!
there should be tech companies with teams of data scientists and software engineers that leverage AI/ML, CV, and massive amounts of historical/current data to offer deep analytics for teams to optimize their players and strategy. the competitive advantage would be enormous.
think: moreyball-as-a-service (MAAS). anyone familiar with this industry and whether there are already companies doing this?
yeah so true, they probably got to the big leagues without this so why do so now? if this kind of tech can be cheap enough to implement even at the HS/college leagues maybe it would only take one generation to change that mentality
finally watched moneyball (2011) and found myself intrigued by the GM role in professional sport teams. it feels like there are parallels with tech exec roles in that you're responsible for building a XFN team, managing a budget, navigating politics, and making data driven decisions to win in your product market.
are there other sports movies that focus on front office drama rather than players?