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Congrats on launching this guys super impressed - we're using Carter internally and it's been great!


Thanks friend! Great to hear- let us know how we can help in any way :)


clickbait title


After reading the subtitle 100% agreed.


I read in bed on a Kindle and have found that lower brightness is helpful in calming before bed, regardless of whether I have the warmth up or down. The "dark mode" feature that inverts the screen I have actually have pretty poor experience with - I find it harder to read the words which leads to more straining which is counter productive. The only "benefit" I see of this feature is to decrease the overall light in the room which might be helpful for others sharing the bed etc.


Huberman concluded this too - dimming lights at night is better than blue-blocking [1].

I'd like to see a study using Flux on computers for those working late at night and then trying to sleep. Assuming the stimulation of a late work session would diminish sleep quality regardless of light color, but which is "better" at allowing the participant to fall asleep quicker/ higher levels of deep/rem would be helpful. If you're doing anything to do with design Flux is a big no no.

[1] https://x.com/hubermanlab/status/1453746475536510978?lang=en


How about a good dose of both? Both dimmer and warmer light?


Did they show any demo images of what the output looks like?


Congrats on the launch guys! This is a great feature, in a world where most companies try to increase lock in!

Huge fans of Porter, we've been using them for a number of years at Woflow and they've helped us scale effortlessly.


Meta is becoming more like Google in it's wide ranging products in disparate markets and ultimately shutting them down one by one. Unlike Google they seem to be more focused and therefore it's good to see the shuttering of Workplace given it's not a strong contender in it's market.

For most large businesses in order to move the needle they need to be making really large bets in a few really large markets to keep growth. A Slack alternative would never move the needle for them, given the most successful (Slack) sold at the top of the market for a "large" amount of money, which was $28B (only ~2% of Meta's market cap today).


I still find it incredible that innovation at Meta and Alphabet is so bad that they haven't built a highly profitable product at either company in their entire histories. They've only ever hit home runs with ad businesses.


I could write a book about large dysfunctional organizations. Organization’s goal is less important than the goals of influential individuals. And then wild things happen. We will never know what brilliant world changing or good business ideas were buried in the very early stage. It is hard to believe for me from statistics perspective, “that they haven’t built a highly profitable product”.

Edit: because I know some brilliant people from these companies starting really innovative businesses in the past right after quitting these big companies.


Your comment resonates with my experience -- often an idea devoid of substance will materialize from the ground up, and have 10^7 USD poured into it, all because an exec said one day "hey, it would be cool if we had a product that did insert-superficially-cool-gimmick-here" (said product might already exist, or have terrible !/$ or require massive patience to bring any returns, but it's all irrelevant, because an influential individual suggested it).

If you're willing to share some anecdotes, I'd love to read and commiserate.


if your opinion of the most profitable companies of the past 20 years with some of the most widely adopted products in the world is that they are not innovative or able to build profitable products, maybe your definition of profitability, innovation, and product development is a bit off


I've heard before that Google has never created a useful product, period - all the Google products that are worth using - Android, Gmail, formerly Search, ads (for advertisers), Reader - were acquisitions.


i feel like these comments are motivated by anti-tech animus more than the facts.

who did Google acquire gmail from? who did Google acquire Search from?


I think it goes to my earlier point that they're so massive now that they need to ship huge bets to move the needle even a little bit. Gmail and Search both are valid, but to an earlier point are now decades old. Both of these businesses have used inorganic growth for their needle movers - the acquisitions that changed the game for them: Meta was Whatsapp and Instagram; Google was Youtube and DoubleClick.


Search isn't profitable. Their ad business is, and both of those together are their original product. What big successes have they built since?

Gmail is widely used, but is it profitable? Last I checked, their office suite and cloud business were rolled into a single item in their 10K, so it was impossible to tell.


1. I was responding to parent who said all of these products were acquisitions.

2. Big difference between not being profitable and not being able to tell if it is profitable because they do not split their earnings finely. My guess is Pixel is profitable


The amount of comma splicing, (parentheses for extra points) -- and em dashes for good measure! that this post has makes it entirely unreadable.


This is common in Russian texts but I haven't found any other signs of that suppose.


Watching the new Fallout show on Prime has made me miss the original Fallout and Fallout 2 games. This is great!


Shutting down Drizly means shutting down it as an independent app - the same merchants are available on Uber Eats for the most part so you should be able to get alcohol delivered via the normal app.


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