I think that Twitter is an anomaly that shows the strength of the architecture they built. Certainly you don't need those people around to keep the lights on, but if you want to attract new users with new features, someone needs to design those to work at scale, and then implement them. As far as I can tell, X has basically added subscriptions since the acquisition. In the meantime, they've lost many users and advertisers. (I only see ads for drop-shipped crap, which probably isn't too profitable compared to someone like Disney.) It is very unclear whether this is sustainable for X; as tech debt accumulates and real debt becomes due, the situation could be pretty dire. With equity you are strongly encouraged to grow. With debt you have to grow faster than the interest payments or you're literally dead. It is unclear to me whether or not X is growing; a lot of people are at the very least supplementing X with Bluesky and Mastodon. (They say they've moved away, but I kind of doubt it.)
Musk would probably be the last person on Earth to admit that X isn't doing so well, so I wouldn't really trust him. The most insightful thing he's said is "Fuck you, Bob Iger" which doesn't sound particularly indicative of advertising success. Meanwhile, he's advertised X payments, X email, etc. and these have not materialized (much like "FSD is a year away" in ... 2017).
AFter 15 years, what could they possibly that would actually add to the bottom line? I mean, craigslist never seemed to add a single feature and yet they dominated for well over a decade and then some.
For some products, at some point it makes sense to hunker down and go into maintenance mode. Not every business can keep growing exponentially.
I agree with that. But you don't borrow 44 billion dollars from a bank to buy a company in maintenance mode.
I think Elon's vision is to make X an "everything platform" like they have in China. Someone is going to have to type in a lot of code to make that happen.
Musk would probably be the last person on Earth to admit that X isn't doing so well, so I wouldn't really trust him. The most insightful thing he's said is "Fuck you, Bob Iger" which doesn't sound particularly indicative of advertising success. Meanwhile, he's advertised X payments, X email, etc. and these have not materialized (much like "FSD is a year away" in ... 2017).