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shanev | 6 years ago
I made an app called Blink that did exactly this a few years ago: https://www.producthunt.com/upcoming/blink. Build it and they will come, not :)
shanev | 6 years ago
I made an app called Blink that did exactly this a few years ago: https://www.producthunt.com/upcoming/blink. Build it and they will come, not :)
rconti|6 years ago
Stories are great for the platform. They drive user engagement, and, hence, advertising.
As far as I can tell, they're terrible for the users. You have to constantly be active to not miss something, you can't just check back in after a few days. For some reason, comments are private only, which is almost never what I want -- as a poster, as a commenter, or as an observer. Contrast that with (say) a "normal" IG/FB post of a picture from the beach, where comments are public and a community of people and comment on it and reply to each other in a social way. Stories are basically broadcast-only. They're also MUCH more time-consuming to create.
I've only done a few stories, always when traveling solo, so I have time to kill and it was useful to learn something new the first time. The only positive thing I can say about them is that, because they're ephemeral, I feel less bad about posting some stupid snapshot of something unimportant/trivial.
That this is coming to Twitter is even more concerning, because it's already the most shouty, least-community driven social network, with the largest multiplier on saying trolling/annoying/controversial/stupid things in the pursuit of clicks and likes and retweets.
nicoburns|6 years ago
You're right that you miss things if you don't check it at the right time, but that's ok, you don't have to see everything.
josteink|6 years ago
I generally agree. Anytime I see a platform move towards "stories", my engagement with that platform drops like rock.
That said, I belong to the 40+ segment and I suspect there might be a generational gap going on here. Basically just like with Snapchat is being intentionally terrible to use, to drive away us "elderly" from a platform designed primarily for the youth.
ptero|6 years ago
Which will, I suspect, drive analytics enhancements to help get under one's skin and/or sell users more junk. The tweet disappearing from the user-facing view will not prevent its being dissected and its information stored. And the point will be likely missed by most users...
Jonovono|6 years ago
mLuby|6 years ago
brown9-2|6 years ago
johnchristopher|6 years ago
Right. /s
RandallBrown|6 years ago
My friends will mostly post one or two amazing photos from their trip/event/whatever, then post various stories showing lots of casual moments along the way.
Some people put a LOT of effort into their story, but from watching most of my friends, and what I myself do, it's usually pretty casual.
tehjoker|6 years ago
gsich|6 years ago