The Morning After: Thread’s latest feature is stealing Bluesky’s starter packs idea
According to reporting by TechCrunch and others, Threads is tapping into one of Bluesky’s best new features: starter packs of people to follow. Chris Messina, who invented the hashtag (!), posted a screenshot of the tool to the social media app. You can see an early version of the tool by pasting “installedbarcelona://recommended_follow_lists” into Safari on iOS if you have the latest Threads app. The version likely coming to Threads should work like Bluesky’s version. The lists of users are “handpicked by people on Threads” and can be about pretty much anything. (Engadget has its own starter pack with many of its writers and editors — follow along!) Threads has pulled in several Bluesky features this year. The platform recently rolled out custom feeds and the ability to change the default feed to people you follow. — Mat Smith Get this delivered daily direct to your inbox. Subscribe right here! The biggest tech stories you missed Steam’s Autumn Sale has deep discounts on Steam Decks and select games Shuhei Yoshida is leaving PlayStation in January after three decades The 50 Black Friday tech deals worth shopping right now Bluesky has a verification problem The company is trying to verify more accounts, but its approach is flawed. Bluesky has its own problems. As the upstart social media service surges, the platform is facing some growing pains, like a wave of scammers and impersonators. Unlike many of its rivals, which offer checkmarks and official badges to government officials, celebrities and other high-profile accounts, Bluesky has a more hands-off approach to verification. The company encourages users to have a custom domain name as their handle to “self-verify.” Engadget currently has the Bluesky handle engadget.bsky.social. But if we wanted to “verify” our account, we could change it to Engadget.com. It’s more complicated than just switching your handle, demanding a string of text to the DNS record associated with the domain. It’s all manual and… complicated. Continue reading. Investigators say Chinese ship deliberately dragged anchor to cut undersea cables Russian intelligence is suspected to be behind the operation. European investigators believe a Chinese-owned commercial ship deliberately dragged its anchor to sabotage the two undersea telecommunications cables cut in the Baltic Sea earlier this month. However, Western law enforcement and intelligence officials don’t believe the Chinese government was involved — the probe is focusing on whether Russian intelligence persuaded the vessel’s captain to drop anchor. Continue reading. Casetify's latest AirPods case is a giant Gundam head If your giant robot tastes are a little more retro than Evangelion. Casetify Sure, there are cases and lanyards and MagSafe chargers, but let’s be real: It’s all about this giant pointy Gundam head case for AirPods. Continue reading. This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/general/the-morning-after-engadget-newsletter-121931628.html?src=rss
According to reporting by TechCrunch and others, Threads is tapping into one of Bluesky’s best new features: starter packs of people to follow. Chris Messina, who invented the hashtag (!), posted a screenshot of the tool to the social media app. You can see an early version of the tool by pasting “installedbarcelona://recommended_follow_lists” into Safari on iOS if you have the latest Threads app.
The version likely coming to Threads should work like Bluesky’s version. The lists of users are “handpicked by people on Threads” and can be about pretty much anything.
(Engadget has its own starter pack with many of its writers and editors — follow along!)
Threads has pulled in several Bluesky features this year. The platform recently rolled out custom feeds and the ability to change the default feed to people you follow.
— Mat Smith
Get this delivered daily direct to your inbox. Subscribe right here!
The biggest tech stories you missed
Steam’s Autumn Sale has deep discounts on Steam Decks and select games
Shuhei Yoshida is leaving PlayStation in January after three decades
Bluesky has a verification problem
The company is trying to verify more accounts, but its approach is flawed.
Bluesky has its own problems. As the upstart social media service surges, the platform is facing some growing pains, like a wave of scammers and impersonators. Unlike many of its rivals, which offer checkmarks and official badges to government officials, celebrities and other high-profile accounts, Bluesky has a more hands-off approach to verification. The company encourages users to have a custom domain name as their handle to “self-verify.” Engadget currently has the Bluesky handle engadget.bsky.social. But if we wanted to “verify” our account, we could change it to Engadget.com. It’s more complicated than just switching your handle, demanding a string of text to the DNS record associated with the domain. It’s all manual and… complicated.
Investigators say Chinese ship deliberately dragged anchor to cut undersea cables
Russian intelligence is suspected to be behind the operation.
European investigators believe a Chinese-owned commercial ship deliberately dragged its anchor to sabotage the two undersea telecommunications cables cut in the Baltic Sea earlier this month. However, Western law enforcement and intelligence officials don’t believe the Chinese government was involved — the probe is focusing on whether Russian intelligence persuaded the vessel’s captain to drop anchor.
Casetify's latest AirPods case is a giant Gundam head
If your giant robot tastes are a little more retro than Evangelion.
Sure, there are cases and lanyards and MagSafe chargers, but let’s be real: It’s all about this giant pointy Gundam head case for AirPods.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/general/the-morning-after-engadget-newsletter-121931628.html?src=rss
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