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Small-Scale Question Sunday for January 7, 2024

Do you have a dumb question that you're kind of embarrassed to ask in the main thread? Is there something you're just not sure about?

This is your opportunity to ask questions. No question too simple or too silly.

Culture war topics are accepted, and proposals for a better intro post are appreciated.

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Has anyone else noticed Twitter being really buggy since Elon Musk took over? It's worse than Facebook Messenger. For example, it has had trouble loading images for the last day. I don't get why people have concluded that you can fire all these people and have everything be fine. The content moderation is better, but Twitter as a piece of software is obviously much worse now.

I'm not saying that means firing those people was a bad idea. Maybe having software work perfectly is not worth the cost, and the stock market's reaction to the mass layoffs at FAANG suggests they weren't pulling their weight. But that brings me to a related question. Why was it so common up until recently for people to say that, despite the very high salaries of software engineers in California, they were actually very underpaid given the amount they made for their employers? This now appears not to be even close to true. Why did people think this? Was it just some dumb profit divided by headcount calculation?

Twitter has worked just fine for me since the purchase, barring the issues from dumb decision making like the rate limiting and so on. I can't say the actual experience of using the site is any worse overall, so I draw the exact opposite conclusion, that the aggressive culling of the employees was warranted.

Weird, I've had near constant issues. It's probably the buggiest app I use on a regular basis.

The app is indeed weirdly buggy. But it has always been that way for some reason

I don't use the app, just the mobile site, and it works about the same as ever.