I didn't understand the term "ratioed" when I first heard it.
I thought the actual point was to have conversation about something and that a lot of people sharing different views was a good thing.
On the other hand, if the point instead is actually to brainwash people into a kind of fake "group think" then "ratioed" would be signficiant. It would mean a break away from a lemming-like thought-hive.
If the point was to have a conversation, there wouldn't be such a small character limit. All twitter is good for is getting in snarky jabs at your opponent.
sometimes ratios are fun and show things aren't as fucked as you thought they were (journalists sometimes get BTFO'd for really stupid takes), but they aren't a hard indicator of anything.
Here's something I found : Ideal Length of a social media update: 40-80 Characters. Posts that contain 40 characters or less earn 86% more engagement. A study from Jeff Bullas found similar results, including that posts with 80 characters or less receive 88% more engagement.
Instinctively, up-votes or down-votes without comments seems to be less engagement. They don't define what they mean by "engagement". Their statistics are self-referential and not helpful.
Sounds like he FA and FO
Top Kek
I didn't understand the term "ratioed" when I first heard it.
I thought the actual point was to have conversation about something and that a lot of people sharing different views was a good thing.
On the other hand, if the point instead is actually to brainwash people into a kind of fake "group think" then "ratioed" would be signficiant. It would mean a break away from a lemming-like thought-hive.
Is my take on this correct?
If the point was to have a conversation, there wouldn't be such a small character limit. All twitter is good for is getting in snarky jabs at your opponent.
sometimes ratios are fun and show things aren't as fucked as you thought they were (journalists sometimes get BTFO'd for really stupid takes), but they aren't a hard indicator of anything.
Here's something I found : Ideal Length of a social media update: 40-80 Characters. Posts that contain 40 characters or less earn 86% more engagement. A study from Jeff Bullas found similar results, including that posts with 80 characters or less receive 88% more engagement.
Instinctively, up-votes or down-votes without comments seems to be less engagement. They don't define what they mean by "engagement". Their statistics are self-referential and not helpful.
Ratioed to hell!
The comments are wonderful!