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  • If you say so. We use it for work really heavily and it's 99% productive.

  • None of that is new to Slack. They could've written an article to make a decent critique of the questionable UI changes Slack introduced, but instead they targeted features that were already there for years, like reactions and huddle.

    The new interface just wastes space and hides the notification count of unfocused workspaces. I just wish Slack would start making interface changes like these optional.

  • This is the stupidest thing I’ve read in weeks. And to be clear, I have read a lot of monumentally stupid nonsense in the last few weeks.

    I’d say more, but @Aurenkin nailed it, so I will defer to their comment.

  • I liked slack when i had it. Microsoft and zoom have been eating some of their market share.

  • 2023 SEPTEMBER 14 TECHNOLOGY
    Slack Is Basically Facebook Now

    Slack’s redesign suggests that keeping up with Slack is the only work worth doing.

    By Ian Bogost

    “Oh,” I slacked my Atlantic colleagues earlier this week, beneath a screenshot of a pop-up note that Slack, the group-chat software we use, had presented to me moments earlier. “A fresh, more focused Slack,” it promised, or threatened. On my screen, the program’s interface was suddenly a Grimace-purple color. I sensed doom in this software update.

    Slowly, over the days that followed, complaints about the new Slack started trickling into our chats. “folks I cannot handle this new version of slack and will be taking the rest of the month off,” one Atlantic staffer said. “I am reverting to sending physical memos on personal letterhead,” posted another. “all my slacks are: I hate the new slack,” slacked Adrienne LaFrance, the magazine’s executive editor. (Later on, she messaged me separately to see if I would write about Slack’s terrible new format.)

    Ian Bogost is a contributing writer at The Atlantic.

30 comments