Well, that's because threads are just first citizen in Zulip, even more than in Slack!
Basically, a thread is visible at a first glance from the UI, while that's not true in Slack. Also, you can kinda replicate Zulip structure by just using channels with naming conventions, so you have:
- generic channels, e.g. for status update for many stakeholders
- specific channels for each feature
- threads in each channel where you discuss a single point
Basically, a thread is visible at a first glance from the UI, while that's not true in Slack. Also, you can kinda replicate Zulip structure by just using channels with naming conventions, so you have: - generic channels, e.g. for status update for many stakeholders - specific channels for each feature - threads in each channel where you discuss a single point