Can all these NIMBYs just pack up and move to Tallahassee already? Seems like they'd be way happier there.

Either way it's still a software restriction that can be bypassed with other software.

Most corporate communications are unnecessarily fluffy to begin with because it makes it look like more work was done. Most of the time I don't even understand why I'm explaining something and it feels like the only requirement is to have words on a page.

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The Concrete Pyramid (community.destinovate.com)
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Meaningless corporate gestures (community.destinovate.com)

Because a lot of them probably have undiagnosed ADHD or Autism and don't realize what they're trying to help by doing it or why it's helping.

As if there's any secret to Twitter that any person couldn't figure out, we're talking about 280 character messages. I hope they both just cancel each other out.

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Oh no or else they might have to do real work and actually start modding the site!

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Hey at least we're at the point where people are asking the questions! Literally three days ago nobody needed to summon a dermatologist.

Really looking hard at how the intention of building a community to sell it at a profit has turned out for Myspace, Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr and now Reddit. People are burned out from constantly trying to chase the next big app. It's at the point now where everyone knows playing into corporate social media will only result in its eventual death, so what's the point in engaging?

On one hand, it's likely exactly what they wanted. They get a vanilla app with vanilla content, perfectly tailored for vanilla investors. The part they forgot is that the beacon of internet culture will never be vanilla.

How it started: what if we built a platform where people create and moderate the content, but we just make all the money?

How it's going:

It would be illegal in the US too and business get sued every day because of it.

Coming to a comment thread to reply "this" feels so cheugy. When I think of the heydey of reddit, I think of 2011 in my dorm room doing the grow a college subreddit. And here we are twelve years later and the best experience you can get now is exactly that same experience.

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tourist

joined 1 year ago
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