@KeithChristma10 @KatyMontgomerie Counter Social is a customized Mastodon server. You should be able to log in to your account here: https://t.co/yNxFZXH6v2
(That's what I accidentally did, and honestly I find just the plain Mastodon experience much better, after adding various people from Twitter.)
@mmasnick@TheLyons@pwnallthethings I only joined in June, but the difference between then and now is night and day. I basically didn't pay attention to it until a few days ago, and now it is clearly giving me a lot of what I was looking for on Twitter.
@StutteringLabUW@ElsaSkold@mehdirhasan Also https://t.co/E7MmKWANVc is really useful for seeding who you are following, since Mastodon does not try to help you find people. (And everyone on Twitter should add their Mastodon info for tools like this.)
@condalmo@mehdirhasan@MollyJongFast Yeah I let my Twitter account sit for years and basically didn't use it because it didn't make sense, but when 2016 rolled around I had the incentive and figured it out. There is a learning curve on Mastodon as well, but it's not major and seems like a good Twitter replacement.
@mycenotaph @mmmmmmbeer@mehdirhasan Servers block other servers they don't want, you can see here a list of servers that are being blocked: https://t.co/IIpZspy4Rd
It is really worth trying out.
@OpinionsbyShane @Windarth2 @joshtpm It's really simpler than that, it's conservatives seeing the world as they can do what they want and others can't. Like, boycotts of movies where they didn't like the religious representation in was happening years ago and apparently that was fine as long they were doing it.
@DrSpEdinNV@WendellSherk@rajagainst@joshtpm In the U.S. at least, the super charger network and really good route planning are still clear advantages they have. But if they lose those as advantages...
@THEjoevols@AlecMacGillis@dwallacewells@chrislhayes I mean, do you remember what was happening in places like Italy and NYC at the beginning, with morgues overloaded with bodies? And at the beginning people really didn't know how it was spread. I see this largely as liberals being socially responsible and caring about others.
@THEjoevols@AlecMacGillis@dwallacewells@chrislhayes You sure are making up fantasies. How about this: liberals believed there was risk of a major pandemic, took the reasonable recommended measures to avoid it being a potential major disaster, and adjusted behavior as science better understood and vaccines were ready.
@tone_e_dee@photo_bb@david_shane@GoAngelo In the 60s you got your opinion out through TV, the press, and radio. All highly content moderated, way more than Twitter and other social networks are today. Your 60s fantasy never existed, in fact today there is way more freedom to get your opinion out in front of people.
And probably worth adding a serious omission of that article: Apple and Google didn't bet their companies on smartphones at the time. I was very convinced smartphones would be a Big Thing, but I wouldn't have bet a successful company on that and their own platform succeeding.
I just ran across the article https://t.co/4SPjbBkEpU which I hoped would give good perspective on platforms and VR, but sadly has some major mistakes that make it very misleading. Let's look at those. (1/19)
So the key difference from VR: iOS and Android were being developed when mobile phones had already become a widely used and desired product; VR is far away from that and still trying to figure out what it is as a product, and how much people will want whatever it becomes. (19/19)
@michinebeling That is one of the reasons Android is open source, also why it was fundamentally designed to allow open app installs, there is a strong separation between the core AOSP platform and the services Google puts on top, etc.
@michinebeling That was something we thought a lot about in designing Android: if mobile is the next big computing platform, and one or two platforms tend to dominate, what do we want to look like. So we wanted to make Android more open than Windows, reducing the control of a single company.