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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 2nd, 2023

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  • Since 2020, my specific team only meets in person 3 times per year, with one or two members deciding to come into the office once every 2 weeks (because they want to).

    We discovered early on that we were more productive WFH (with metrics to back it up), so we only have live meetups to organize big projects. We then take those big plans home with us and get it done remotely.

    I can’t say it would work for every team, but I definitely don’t see the value in “being in the office” as someone who works entirely on the computer.

    I see a lot of propaganda about how teams are more productive when they have “spontaneous interactions around the water cooler”, but in my experience that was never really a driving factor of our work.






  • What’s going on with tech, recently?

    Netflix cracking down on password sharing, reddit’s API changes, every streaming platform raising their prices, YouTube fighting against adblockers and potentially charging creators for visibility… the list goes on and on, and it seems to be coming from every direction all at once.

    Am I missing some huge financial change in the tech investment sphere that has affected Silicon Valley (ie. freakout due to the SVB collapse)?

    Or is this just a case of companies seeing each other get away with squeezing consumers, and following suit?



  • You’re right — PWAs can be feature rich and versatile. I’m glad they exist.

    However, as much as I like wefwef (especially coming from Apollo), I don’t like having the URL bar perpetually taking up real estate like it does on iOS. I’m also much less likely to trigger browser-specific functions if I’m using a dedicated app.

    Assuming the Lemmy platform remains open, I don’t have any issue supporting a developer for making a great app for it.

    The issue with Reddit is not that devs were making third-party apps for it… it’s with the people running the platform.