>>ZacnyL+(OP)
This kind of stuff is unavoidable with what's going on at Twitter. Infrastructure changes, platform changes and mass layoffs all at once. I'm actually impressed they haven't experienced more and longer outages.
>>Mizogu+rh
Its a testament to how well designed and implemented the code base is, if the wheels havent started falling off yet (shockingly). I know we’re all supposed to shit on Twitter, but they had world class engineers working there before the mass layoffs and brain drain.
>>darkwr+Jr
I can easily visualize a wooden wagon rolling along a rocky slow descent forever and all of the reasons its wheels would eventually break loose.
In the case of a platform like Twitter, aside from random acts of god and weather, aside from money, what are the sort of stuff that slowly breaks its wheels off over time such that, without staff, it inevitably stops working completely?