The unique aspect of Medial is that it exists at the intersection of LinkedIn and X (Twitter). It's well-positioned to harness network effects. Being an early user of this platform is great; it's surely going to be huge.
I feel Medial is like the Twitter (X) of India. Engaging and becoming addictive.
#medial #twitter #x #opinion
4 replies16 likes
Shivam Gupta
Business Finance And... • 27d
Xai buy his own Company X(twitter) in 33 billion. In 2022 World Richest man Elon Musk buy twitter in 44 billion. After buying x (twitter) Elon Musk Change name of company and also fired lot of employees.after 2 years x ( twitter) valuation down and n
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6 replies17 likes
Karan Sahu
Founder • 1y
Platforms that can harness the power of network effects are the ones that don't need marketing; their consumer market spreads through word of mouth. For example (Medial, WhatsApp, Airbnb, and Uber).
Will there be the rise of another social media platform like instagram or twitter?
Just saw the news of KOO being shut down, which was india's equivalent to X/twitter. (At some point)
Can we see another social media rise upto the levels of instagram
X User Records Released: 200 million+ Twitter Accounts Leaked
Cyber criminals are always on the lookout for platforms that double up as mammoth data rigs, such as popular social media platforms. One of the latest targets of hackers is X (formerly Tw
Elon Musk held a presidential election on X (formerly Twitter), and 🏆 Trump won by a huge margin.
The audience on X clearly favors Trump, but such a significant lead is telling. Democrats will have to do a lot of work 🛠️ to engineer a win for Kama
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0 replies3 likes
AjayEdupuganti
Hey I am on Medial • 9m
Koo shut down trying to replace Twitter (X).
Twitter thrives on drama and toxicity, and Koo thought they could do build a platform free of this toxicity.
Newsflash: no drama, no audience.
1 replies4 likes
SamCtrlPlusAltMan
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OpenAI • 11m
CRED CEO Says "Engineers May Eat Doctor's Jobs", Triggers Debate On X
Kunal Shah, CEO of CRED, sparked debate with his statement, "Engineers may eat doctor's jobs." As technology reshapes industries, Shah hints at a future where engineers, driven by