Content
@
0 reply
20 recasts
20 reactions
Murtaza Hussain
@mazmhussain
One thing Warpcast might benefit from is the ability to write threads in the style of Twitter/X. They are useful for stringing together complex arguments or unpacking information in a sequential way. In my experience they also drive engagement because it can be exciting for other users to see what comes next in a particularly captivating thread and incentivize them to wait around until it finishes playing out. Some particularly erudite or evocative threads live on as reference points that people can return to in order to cite certain information and arguments. Personally, I really enjoy sharing important passages from books in threads that others can follow along with and that I can also return to for citations. It lets others get the key arguments of the book and also serves as a reference point for myself for future.
12 replies
68 recasts
343 reactions
Maretus
@maretus.eth
I kinda think blog posts from paragraph serve the purpose even better here. Have you seen those? It condenses a blog post into a single frame that you can click arrows thru to read paragraph by paragraph. Here is an example: https://paragraph.xyz/@maretus.eth/lesson-on-liquidity
1 reply
0 recast
1 reaction
Murtaza Hussain
@mazmhussain
I have, honestly its good but I'm just so used to threading
1 reply
0 recast
1 reaction
Reid DeRamus
@reidtandy
Totally get it, threading can be a great way to organize thoughts... Maybe the read in-line experience may evolve into something that takes the best of threading from a reader *and* writer perspective.
1 reply
0 recast
0 reaction