Getting rid of the Twitter brand makes no traditional business sense, of course. But it makes sense to Musk, who answers to no one and is continuing to shape the platform how he, and only he, sees fit. If you still work at the company formerly known as Twitter these days, you’ve come to peace with that fact or perhaps even grown excited by it. Now that Musk has stripped the company down to the studs, with only about 200 engineers and a handful of product managers left, I’ve been wondering: what’s in it for those who remain?
Apple Pencil functionality compromised with third-party iPad parts
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