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Businesses Social Networks Software Twitter

Twitter Built a Messaging App But Never Released It (buzzfeed.com) 31

Twitter spent more than a year building a stand-alone instant messaging app that never ended up seeing the light of day. The product -- which provided a single interface for tweets and instant messages -- was built by Twitter's Indian engineering team at its office in Bengaluru, reports BuzzFeed News. The company shelved the app when it shut down its engineering center in the country in September, according to sources familiar with the matter who spoke to BuzzFeed News. The app was envisioned as a tool to ease new users on to Twitter's flagship platform. It did this by allowing users to subscribe to groups based around topics such as news, politics, and sports. The people within the groups could chat among themselves, and subscribe to additional accounts, pulling their tweets into the conversation. This kind of functionality is already available in Slack channels, and was tested in Facebook's now-defunct Rooms app (which itself may be making a comeback, if recent reports are to be believed).
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Twitter Built a Messaging App But Never Released It

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    The probably couldn't make it work at all.

    • by cayenne8 ( 626475 ) on Thursday December 15, 2016 @10:55AM (#53490211) Homepage Journal

      The probably couldn't make it work at all.

      Oh it worked...the problem was, no one could understand what was being said....

      ;)

    • Re:Written in India? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by DrXym ( 126579 ) on Thursday December 15, 2016 @11:26AM (#53490437)
      That would explain why they shut the group down. It'd be interesting to know the reasons why but my own experience of supervising a team in India is that culture, language and staff retention are serious problems. Whatever you think you're saving by paying less you could more than lose in terms of productivity and code quality.
      • by I4ko ( 695382 )

        Also "senior" in India does in no way relate to person's abilities, it just means they have been with the company for more than 1 year. They can continue to produce garbage as they did in their first year. Even "principal" is given based on years and not on actual abilities.

        • by DrXym ( 126579 )
          The people I worked with came and went in months. Apparently a lot of multinationals were opening big support centres in Bangalore so they basically hopped around from place to place trying to get work visas and suchlike.

          Aside from that I really couldn't stand the total passivity of the people I worked with. Every email / call was "How do I fix this problem?" rather than "I found a problem but I have this solution I want to run by you", or "FYI I found a problem but I fixed it". It was like they couldn't

  • Something unheard of, but it looks like the marketing drones had a little common sense (or too much guilty consciousness to ignore) and didn't want anyone else to suffer from something developed in "Bengalaru".

    Who am I kidding, the marketing drones don't have consciousness of any kind.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      I think they saw the past and understood what would happen. The brand would become a term that allowed two or more people to chat without and need for the brand.
      The mention of the brand would then be to pass on details to allow for a chat/cam/mic protocol to work.
      No user base, no public comment, no trends, no marketing. Just two or more people using the brand's tools and bandwidth to chat and then quit.
      Better to keep the herd of users commenting in public to attract and keep users than just letting the
  • Signal. Although they didn't build it themselves.

  • The app was envisioned as a tool to ease new users on to Twitter's flagship platform.

    This is Twitter's flagship [staticflickr.com] platform, in case you were wondering. Hey, it hasn't sunk yet.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    We cobbled together these things back in college, scaleable and everything. A half dozen coders probably bashed this thing together in a week. The login functions they already have from twitter itself. That's like 1/4 of the work right there.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • We don't need 100 messaging apps that do the same thing. Unless you can provide something that other apps don't do.

  • Education in the US is primarily oriented toward job training. It is about 'how to please your employer'.

    In other times and places there is a quite different attitude that might be called 'how to survive in spite of your employer'. One of the prime lessons in this thought pattern is that you must make yourself indispensable. There are many ways...

    For one; you might want to discover company secrets that would destroy the company if the taxman or competition learned about them. You become so powerful with thi

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