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I'm sure Google email suggested replies are a pretty good representation of the most useful of such replies, but I'm wondering if we get to a point where they find certain standing wave functions that can be crystallized into a single click: the thumbs up emoji is probably the best example of this.
Or do you feel that short email replies still rely on a lot of nuance, which would make me think that suggested responses aren't helpful in those cases.
102 sats \ 5 replies \ @optimism 15h
Hmm I think that a short but concise response beats an emoji when actually talking about something meaningful. For FB/insta I don't care.
Like, when it comes to email, but also on for example on GH issues and pull requests. Worst feature GitHub ever added were these emojis. Now all the coding AIs use emojis in their comments and issues and life is awful. ~lol
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Emojis in text is pretty bad in a work context and is more often than not a sign of AI
But I do like the reaction emojis. They're a quick concise way to signal things like "agree", "looking into it", "good job" etc
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67 sats \ 3 replies \ @optimism 6h
Let's say I do a PR. No one posts any reply, the feedback is
❤️ 1 | 👍 3 | 👎 5 | 🚀 4 | 🤣 6
now what?
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Heh, then it's time to post a reply asking for actual feedback lol
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the laughing and crying face emoji is inscrutable to me.
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🤣
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