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  • @isaach My uninformed guess is that it has to do with the quality or position of the wifi antenna/hardware, and possibly even the speed of the processor in each. cc @ChloeS

  • TIL: I’m reading a book in the Kindle app on my phone. I came across a word I’ve seen before, but never knew what it meant. I tapped it, intending to copy and paste it into Google. Instead a little dictionary popped up right on top of the text. I love when tech works like this.

    • 2 retweets
  • @finkel I have a sweet tooth, and like sugary cakey things. But yes, multiple times I’ve tried a piece of cake or cupcake and thought, wow, this is too sweet to continue eating.

  • @jmspool Didn’t you and I exchange some tweets about this a while back? I remember you citing some research or results for how the approach was working.

  • “Fight for the things that you care about. But do it in a way that will lead others to join you.” —Ruth Bader Ginsburg

    • 8 retweets
  • If you could jump 2 months into the future and see the outcome of a vote/election that didn’t go the way you hoped, what are you going to wish you could/would have done differently?

    What’s stopping you from doing that now?

    • 4 retweets
  • @kfury I seem to remember some of those working in the early days of @summize and just after the acquisition. Maybe not that exact format or in as natural language. But close. Certainly date ranges worked.

    • 1 retweet
  • @stop If only early Twitter employees had reserved certain keywords for search shortcuts, we’d be able to perform simple searches like “from:me searchterm”, or “in:likes searchterm” and Twitter would know how to alias [me] and [likes] based on the user doing the search.

    • 1 retweet
  • This evergreen tweet still proves useful to me about once every 3-4 months. Instead of memorizing the keyboard shortcut like I probably should, I search Twitter for “from:stop mouse” and I have my solution. twitter.com/stop/status/10…