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by frou_dh 2546 days ago
Kooky "reaction GIFs" in work chat are so inane. I mean, there's certainly a time and a place for browsing funny GIFs on the web, but making it a first-class part of work chat is so juvenile it's unreal.
4 comments

For what it's worth, that's not the intention on freenode's side - we want to sand off some of the rough edges. As an example, it would be nice to have a common flow for speaking to services.

Once we have some sensible way, then clients can sensibly opt to pop a dialog for new users allowing them to register an account with nickserv without having to fiddle away in a query.

This mindset is alien to me. Humor is a generally positive thing and can't help but improve mental state while working.
> can't help but improve mental state

Unless you regard it as inane.

Throwing reaction gifs at a happy birthday/congratulation post is one thing.

Throwing them into the oncall production ops channel and context switch everyone so they can see Homer back into a hedge is another.

>Throwing them into the oncall production ops channel and context switch everyone so they can see Homer back into a hedge is another.

This is part of the reason I like the "reactji" of slack / discord / etc. They don't cause a new message notification.

Because of that, they're less interruptive, and you can do some interesting, useful things. Like lightweight interaction - we "seed" an up/down arrow pair for voting, people just click one. Or controlling bots more easily - we use one to add Qs to a queue, others to shut them up when they're being noisy, or there's fancier options: https://codeascraft.com/2018/10/10/etsys-experiment-with-imm...

How is that really any different from someone engaging in off-topic banter in an IRC channel? Humans are being human and I don't really see how the problem as you describe it is somehow specific to non-IRC mediums.
> Humor is a generally positive thing and can't help but improve mental state while working.

Humor is subjective. All you have to do is reference "Office Space"'s "looks like somebody has a case of the Monday's!" scene to realize she thought it was funny, the "someone" did not.

I just turn off notifications on Slack and only pay attention to it when I choose to. As a result, someone being silly with reaction emojis or memes in a channel just doesn't really bother me.
Tangentially, blog posts peppered with Tumblr-style gifs is the worst thing when trying to read the content. Thankfully it seems to be a trend that is dying off, but I don't understand how people read text without being distracted by the bright and bouncy gifs sandwiching it.
the resource usage for a partially buried idling slack window with a bunch of animated emoji and gifs is absurd
It is absurd, but that’s the fault of Slack, not the concept of an animated GIF itself.