Massoud

@accesstoken
40 Followers
44 Following
9 Posts

Data Scientist & Software Developer with a formal background in Computer Science and AI (especially Graph Theory). Passionate about music and photography.

#GreatApe #SpaceHost

#AI #DataScience #MachineLearning
#fedi22

GREATAPEhttps://github.com/reiver/greatape
GITHUBhttps://github.com/accesstoken
CrowdBuckshttps://staging.crowdbucks.fund/@acces[email protected]

Draft & Schedule Posts for Later

@fediverseux

One feature that is currently missing on PixelFed (and something I wish they had) is the capability to compose a post as a draft and schedule it for later publication.

#FediverseUX #Pixelfed #draft #schedule #MissingFeature

@atomicpoet

Myself and @accesstoken created technology to detect bots on social-media networks about a decade ago.

I hate ads!

Nothing ruins a peaceful moment like an obnoxious ad popping up while listening to a relaxing music.

Nothing kills the mood like an annoying, repetitive ad popping up while watching a video.

Back in the day, #YouTube was just a place where folks could share videos without any ads getting in the way. The main goal was to give people a spot to post their content and get it seen by a bunch of people.

In the realm of social media, the first platform is widely acknowledged to be Six Degrees, which was founded in 1997. Six Degrees enabled users to create profiles, list friends, and send messages to other users. 



Friendster, MySpace, and LinkedIn were some of the early social media platforms that followed Six Degrees. However, it was not until the launch of Facebook in 2004 that social media gained tremendous momentum and became a widely accepted phenomenon.

Unlike today's social media, where the primary goal is to keep users on their platforms, the early internet was a hyperlinking adventure encouraging users to explore new websites and discover new contents.

On the old internet, individuals created personal websites. Some of those personal websites evolved into blogs, where people could regularly share their thoughts and experiences with others. Blogrolls were used to link to a few other blogs with similar interests, similar to how people introduce us to others in real life.

The old internet was open, decentralized, and no one controlled it.

Hello World!