This isn't a product landing page, nor am I affiliated with Monzo. It is a company policy page showing effective principles to communicate with customers.
For mobile, “Control Panel for Twitter” has a paid safari extension for iOS or a free user script version for any browser that supports a user script manager. Unfortunately solutions like these only work on the web app, rather than the native app.
Poor attempt at trying to make the URL unique possibly and prevent it from being blocked. Someone could easily block the domain or use regex to block comments with that domain.
There is a segment in a recent Linus Tech Tips video [1] that showcased media asset management software [2] where you can search for portions of locally stored videos via natural language. e.g. Person X holding object Y, working on task Z. If this type of AI video tagging comes to mobile I think it will be a game changer.
There's an interesting phenomenon, where certain keywords in your post will trigger bot rings to advertise their services. Keywords such as: "Crypto", "Metamask", "Hacked", "IPTV".
Linus Tech Tips covered a Chinese smart TV [1] that had a preloaded car commercial when you boot it up. The TV was not even connected to the internet, the video file was preloaded from the factory.
- The lack of a web interface to browse Threads is frustrating, you can only view a specific thread someone has shared a link to before it forces you to download the app.
- No following feed, so I've had to mute dozens of media/political/brand accounts that appear on the homepage.
- No chronological feed is annoying.
- You also can't search for keywords/hashtags. I primarily use twitter to receive real time commentary on events, so this is the biggest downside in my opinion.
Overall, Threads feels like a beta product that was rushed to release to take advantage of the rate limits implemented on Twitter. We'll see in a few months if Meta can follow through in building an app with the feature parity of Twitter.
I've came across Haskell in my computer science class at High school/Sixth Form. It's in the AQA Computer Science specification [1] and you are expected to know the basic concepts of functional programming as well as interpret code in the written exam.