Our unofficial team motto is “unfinished business.” The core team has been working on the bleeding edge of website tech for >50% of our lives.
If you are an elite web nerd, consider joining us on this mission—Make the web fun again.
Haven't been this excited to offer a Private Beta since we were handing out promo codes at BADCamp in 2011. Real time content integration w/Google Docs and the web; the first part of a bold vision for the future. Details in 🧵 below!
What if you could write, collaboratively edit, and publish to web right from Google Docs? Now you can.
Pantheon team shipped Content Publisher today.
Web publishing was busted. Pretty sure we just fixed it. Works for WordPress, Drupal, and Next.js.
https://t.co/WAR4admxOj
🚨 One more day to register online to vote for the March 5th election
Hey SF, the March 5th primary election is one of the most critical elections for San Francisco. How to confirm you're registered (2 min)👇🏻
First, take 1 min check if you are registered to vote in SF: https://t.co/lFPxLPo4wY
A) If you are not registered at all
Register here by 2/20 5 PM: https://t.co/VYkHTuAb8m
B) If you are registered, but not as a Democrat or elsewhere in CA
If you are registered No Party Preference or out of SF address, consider re-registering here https://t.co/VYkHTuAb8m under Democratic Party in SF by 2/20 5 PM to vote for the DCCC. The SF Dept of Elections will mail you a new ballot. Throw away your old mail ballot WITHOUT DCCC and make sure you use the new one!
C) If you are registered plus as a Democrat
You should have your mail ballot already. We'd love your vote for everyone on the @SFDemsForChange DCCC slate!
Note: you can still register after 2/20 in person at city hall (but why wait?): https://t.co/ieZ8fUS44D
Please like & retweet so we can reach ppl who haven't registered! A doc with more details you can easily share: https://t.co/6ULweGLdp1
Our family helped at 10+ rallies this past year. Knowing that effort has helped make JFK Promenade a permanent part of San Francisco makes all the late nights, weekends, and chattering on Twitter worth it.
NEW: Abundant SF — a group of tech workers raising families in the city — intends to become the next political power broker in San Francisco.
The group's founder says they'll pool $4-5 million a year for decades to try and transform SF policy on🏘️🚗👩🏽🎓🏞️
https://t.co/K4D7CzaYNB
6. Civic involvement works when it becomes a part of your identity and family & friends' life.
Some of the closest friends my wife and I have made in SF have been organizers we have met via the JFK Promenade campaign, or via the Abundant SF work.
Early analysis shows ~77% of SF voters voted for either Prop D or Prop E or both.
Both D & E proposed to streamline housing permits. (Prop E didn’t actually do so but was marketed as such.)
So a huge majority of SF voters supported streamlining.
One more reason not to give up.