> Honestly, the long form tweets became a signal to just ignore that tweet. I unfollow or block users that tweet long form often.
Even though I don't use Twitter much any more, I fully agree here. Whenever I see the "[thread emoji] 1/?" I'm already done.
I can't even fathom why anyone would put the energy in these "thread" style tweets. Twitter content will forever remain fundamentally ephemeral: it's hard to find my own tweets from years back, let alone someone else's I found insightful.
The normal tweet format works well for ephemera, it's a medium for shower thoughts and sloganeering. Similar to how a typical child's sand shovel is correct tool for building sandcastles. Twitter threads feel like someone is handing out full sized shovels for work you know will be lost for ever when the next tide comes in.
>Even though I don't use Twitter much any more, I fully agree here. Whenever I see the "[thread emoji] 1/?" I'm already done.
Some of the best content on Twitter is on threads 1/? - from programming lore, to story telling, to any kind of analysis.
Small tweets are usually just advertising (in different guises), gossip, juvenile attempts at humor, hate, or (at best) some breaking news, you can find elsewhere with more depth.
> Twitter content will forever remain fundamentally ephemeral:
I've bookmarked a "thread of threads" from a user or two. Even that was a half-baked solution though. Since they've started limiting public (not logged in) access again i haven't bothered.
Even though I don't use Twitter much any more, I fully agree here. Whenever I see the "[thread emoji] 1/?" I'm already done.
I can't even fathom why anyone would put the energy in these "thread" style tweets. Twitter content will forever remain fundamentally ephemeral: it's hard to find my own tweets from years back, let alone someone else's I found insightful.
The normal tweet format works well for ephemera, it's a medium for shower thoughts and sloganeering. Similar to how a typical child's sand shovel is correct tool for building sandcastles. Twitter threads feel like someone is handing out full sized shovels for work you know will be lost for ever when the next tide comes in.