I sent a message just to have a digital souvenir of one of the dumbest things ever.Would love to have been a fly on the wall for the conversation that convinced/coerced Mush to agree to that (unless Yaccarino was allowed to make that decision /s).
It’s as if the marketing people who worked on the branding of Twitter were actually on to something.The main problem remains that when trying to say the action, tweet rolls off the tongue in those languages, and X is hard to say. Without an easily pronounceable verb, Twitter will continue to be Twitter.
Well, I hope this will be a lesson to once-reputable newspapers for farming out their newsrooms to an endless barrage of Man in the Tweet quotes.I honestly wonder how many websites were actually put into that little “timeout”. We know a lot of the big ones, but there may be more that just weren’t tested. Then again, the thought has crossed my mind that there was some insider info being given out about this. As for the actual impact of this in however many sites were affected, if anyone thinks it’s not a big deal, Google estimates that pages that a website that takes even three seconds to load lose 53% of views. This was 5 seconds before the page even started loading. That’s obviously going to do some harm, and there’s no indication that it isn’t the site causing the problem (which is the point).
There was some more technical discussion in the Lounge thread on this topics, but it revolved around the issue being one with Twitter checking if you have cookies (if you clicked on a link a second time, it loaded immediately). But the delay didn’t hit all sites, and the sites affected were…very specific and VERY different scales (NY Times vs Mastadon).
There’s also this, from the WaPo journalist who broke the story, showing a timeline of the delay (this was shared via Bluesky posts)
View attachment 61091
Any generic explanation of this being a normal configuration thing looking for cookies goes out the window for me when I see it be this consistent and then experience a rapid decline when the news breaks. I don’t think there’s much shot of this being an accident.
I've taken to pronouncing it like an Aussie: "icks"No one will ever just say X.
This is so dumb and petty that despite knowing how dumb and petty he is it is still almost unbelievable that this was done on purpose rather than it being caused by some kind of coding screw up. Almost.
"Brand X" is literally the term for something generic that many of us old people grew up with. And by old people I mean people who are a few years younger than Musk like me.
It can't just be X and be meaningful. It needs to have a noun or something attached to it - like X-Windows or DrainX or the X-games. "X" by itself is just so meaningless as to kind of make you try to fill in the gaps yourself.
(Calling it X-social is actually my preferred one. Because it actually also serves as a description of how I use Twitter - I used to, but now I don't. And I'm honestly surprised he hasn't grabbed the domain name for x.social.)
The existence of these two items does not mean Twitter should get a pass on any of the shit it pulls, but here's two types of people who are still using Twitter:Why are there still people using it?
++People keep using X. The problem lies there. They forgot how to vote with their feet.
Some day, when Yaccety Sax writes her memoir complaining about she was always having to rein in Musk's leash; I will have zero sympathy and I will not buy a copy of that memoir.The eventual autopsy/biography of this debacle should be titled How to abuse your userbase and destroy a platform in 10 easy steps
What a petty small little man Melon Mush is. He's revealed himself to be a cruel, vindictive, selfish, egotistical, manipulative, dishonest charlatan
NYT says reason for delay “unclear”
I'm sorry, I don't buy it. Massive internet communities have withered away and people found alternatives before. They always do. I've been part of many of these exoduses. Flickr, MySpace, GeoCities, Yahoo! Answers, Tripod, Slashdot, the list goes on. I don't know if you realize the irony of your first example, because Backpage used to be synonymous with sex work until it was forcefully shutdown. And I guess everyone moved to Twitter? They'll move again when Elon Musk becomes too unbearable.The existence of these two items does not mean Twitter should get a pass on any of the shit it pulls, but here's two types of people who are still using Twitter:
1. They need to do it as part of earning the money they use to buy food. Sex workers fall into this category. Twitter is the only place where they can advertise the product they actually sell, instead of needing to point at an Instagram that points at a Twitch stream that has a profile pointing at a link page that points at their OnlyFans. These folks are stuck in the same boat re Twitter as game streamers who wish they could leave Twitch or video makers who hate YouTube.
2. Their support network is there. There are a bunch of communities (mainly disabled people) who formed on Twitter and without it, they're cut off from being able to stay in touch with people who are going through the same things they are and can help with the struggles they're having. It takes a lot of work to rebuild a network once it's been broken. Sometimes the energy that would go into that work has already been bookmarked for survival.
There are probably others, and again none of this gives Twitter a pass, but there are still people who either can't leave or can't abandon their peer group.
What if she's literally reining in Musk's leash? I mean, the memoir might be worth it for the salacious details.Some day, when Yaccety Sax writes her memoir complaining about she was always having to rein in Musk's leash; I will have zero sympathy and I will not buy a copy of that memoir.
That’s funny. Never heard of that. I’d pronounce it as “Ecks”.I've taken to pronouncing it like an Aussie: "icks"
Never bet against Poe's Law.Given the focus on Frodo, I think some people are missing the tongue-est for the cheeks
Musk should read their article on this issue, and then he can conclude they are pro-Musk.Musk called the NYT a "racial genocide apologist."
I guess when the NYTimes reported Nazi speeches in the 30s, they were pro-nazi. Or were they pro-Stalin when they reported his speeches?
With car names of S, 3, X, and Y, are you certain in your belief that Musk didn’t have a say in the names?If Musk would have really the say at Tesla even just about names, the company would have tanked ages ago.
Ok, fair, I was basing it off a cartoon dog and the VA may be a Kiwi.That’s funny. Never heard of that. I’d pronounce it as “Ecks”.
Now I can’t say that about NZ’ers. They do weird things with vowels.
So Musk equates "free speech absolutist" with being "against censorship that goes far beyond the law." He is saying that he is not against censorship unless it is far beyond the laws. This means that he will censor to the absolute limit beyond which effective legal restraints will be triggered, if there are any legal restraints.Musk has famously called himself a "free speech absolutist," said he intended to protect free speech on Twitter, and that he is "against censorship that goes far beyond the law."
I prefer the suggestion of referring to it as Xitter and one can send a Xit. Of course I pronounce similar to xylophone. Short and communicates sentiments as well. So pop a Xit to your friends and spread the word.For someone who also reads mandarin and Japanese part of the web, I can assure you that everyone still uses the word Twitter, possible for a very very long time.
The main problem remains that when trying to say the action, tweet rolls off the tongue in those languages, and X is hard to say. Without an easily pronounceable verb, Twitter will continue to be Twitter.
Which also works if you go with the "sh" phonetic!I prefer the suggestion of referring to it as Xitter and one can send a Xit. Of course I pronounce similar to xylophone. Short and communicates sentiments as well. So pop a Xit to your friends and spread the word.