Alexander S. Kunz that'll always be a difference between topics and threads. At least G+ has formatting in its comments, and supports long-form replies rather than having to split it over multiple chained comments.
Jason ON I always found that, when conversations got longer it's impossible to "jump in and catch up" on Google+ - who said what in reply to whom precisely is impossible to figure out - at least if you're not IN the conversation right as it happens and is "active".
Maybe it takes time to get used to how things work on Twitter, but I find its conversational features quite useful, actually. You can click on individual replies & see where the conversation went from there in the thread view, right on the site (I don't use any social apps on my phone so I don't know what it looks like there).
I don't have longer & more meaningful conversations on any social media site anyway, and I always wonder why people are SO eager to bury conversations in some social networking site they have no control of.
If it's something meaningful that I have to say and want to preserve, then I post it to my website (or personal blog) anyway.
Filip H.F. Slagter most things I have to say in a casual conversation easily fit into Twitter's 500 characters, or I can "thread" them by paragraph (and maybe add a /1 /2 /3 etc. for those who catch up later). I guess I'm fairly used to it because Twitter is by far my favorite social site.
Filip H.F. Slagter oh you're right! I have no idea how I got 500 in my head... must be because 280 feels like so much, still. ;-) (especially since the @ mentions don't count anymore)
Alexander S. Kunz maybe because Mastodon has a 500 character limit instead? :) Mastodon's 500 character limit better suits my needs, though I still tend to run into it. I'll probably end up running my own Pleroma solo-instance with a much more increased limit, and federate that with Mastodon instead. :)
Alexander S. Kunz I'll agree that some of the longer comment threads on G+ can be cumbersome to follow due to not being able to pick up where we left off, but 280 limit is just non-conducive to a discussion.
Of the two of them, we now know which one Vlad "the Mad" Putin believes is the girl in their relationship. For a "macho macho man" like #DonaldTrump that's going to hurt. #TrumpNation http://www.denverpost.com/2017/09/05/vladmir-putin-donald-trump/
So, I asked Andrew Tamm, who filled my Stream with a hundred (sarcasm there) animated gifs and cat pictures to remove me from whatever Circle he has me in where he posts the animated gifs and cat pictures. It was either that or unfollow him and I didn't see any reason to unfollow him. Me asking https://plus.google.com/112885755521259735422/posts/78dwnvvgh4p Then he plusses me onto Public posts of animated cat gifs : https://plus.google.com/u/0/112885755521259735422/posts/EuuR1tnU3vJ https://plus.google.com/u/0/112885755521259735422/posts/8r6Grcm2Jpj https://plus.google.com/u/0/112885755521259735422/posts/74PgSu6iL2s Then one of his friends (or Circlers) starts plussing me into posts of animated cat gifs : https://plus.google.com/u/0/107120198886093172821/posts/gRW9JhWLs5T Don't get me wrong, I'm all about sarcasm and messing with people, but this seems sort of childish to me. Am I the only one who thinks so? So far I have only blocked people who have overtly spammed a thr...
Comments
https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1060511898347692032.html
https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1060925606966296576.html
But yes, G+'s comments system is far from ideal.
On a side note, it took me three - 3! - tweets earlier to reply to a simple request from someone on Twitter.
Ridiculous.
Maybe it takes time to get used to how things work on Twitter, but I find its conversational features quite useful, actually. You can click on individual replies & see where the conversation went from there in the thread view, right on the site (I don't use any social apps on my phone so I don't know what it looks like there).
I don't have longer & more meaningful conversations on any social media site anyway, and I always wonder why people are SO eager to bury conversations in some social networking site they have no control of.
If it's something meaningful that I have to say and want to preserve, then I post it to my website (or personal blog) anyway.
Mastodon's 500 character limit better suits my needs, though I still tend to run into it. I'll probably end up running my own Pleroma solo-instance with a much more increased limit, and federate that with Mastodon instead. :)