Damn this site sure does not want to let you use the arrow keys on your keyboard to scroll the page. It starts highlighting individual lines instead and completely consumes home/end.
What is the point of an arrow key highlighting individual blocks if the individual blocks aren't editable and don't have any actions associated with them?
I don't know much about Notion, but if it's trying to be a platform that allows you to share notes and documents, its keybinding ought to be rethought. These are really bad shortcuts for a document presentation platform.
And if it's not a document presentation platform, the author shouldn't have used it that way.
If someone linked me a document that was a read-only Excel file where every paragraph was a different cell, I'd complain about that too -- because the content doesn't fit the medium it's posted in.
From a content perspective, this is a document masquerading as an app. What about this page is an app? I can't edit it, there aren't any dynamic calculations happening, the data isn't clearly separated into a table format. When I click to expand a section, I get a loading icon... and then pure text pops up that could have just been embedded into the page from the start. There's nothing that distinguishes this from a normal webpage except that the shortcuts are unintuitive.
Go visit that "app" and use the arrow keys and mouse clicks, and form a coherent theory of how the arrow keys do something sensible. arrow down moves a highlight cursor down the page, until you click, at which point highlighting disappears, and arrow starts scrolling the page, or does nothing, depending on...something?
Having worked in ad-tech for the past 5 year or so, this is a pretty awesome list.
I think that there's still a lot of confusion and opaqueness when it comes to targeting and advertising -- the platforms (GOOG/FB/SNAP/etc.) make it purposefully confusing imo. There's probably some kind of start-up idea here (marketing/targeting for regular folks).
Just having all the targeting options under one dashboard is already a very significant improvement in the strategy step that any PPC manager must think about.
All the stress and energy spent going back and forth between ad platforms really only favors the installed players.
Notion is great, but I cancelled my account immediately after finding out they use fullstory. Yes I can opt out, but the risk is too high for private notes, especially when using different browsers or multiple machines which I often do.
I should say that I have nothing against fullstory, we use it for our own saas application.
Agreed. For enterprise usages there are legal obligations around confidentiality that serve as the backstop for "what if something happens with the data that Fullstory or the app developer sees?"
For private usage, there is no good recourse. I'd rather not trust it anywhere near consumer apps.
For context, Fullstory basically records a replay of the state of the DOM when you use the app, which means the app developer can literally rewatch your entire usage session.
I like how it looks but I’m never going to shovel my private data into some random startups silo. I already trust Apple Notes but the chance of it going away or them doing something bad with my data is pretty slim and it’s still locally in my backups.
Hehe indeed. I love how it's a big database with the ability to create different visualisations for tables and records.
E.g. you create a folder (DB Table) and then you create pages inside (DB records)
Or you create a board(DB Table) and then you create Columns(DB Records) and tasks inside each column(DB Records with connections another table).
Would also be amazing to open their API, lots of integrations would come out of it.
Furthermore, based on CrunchBase, they are a small team with a seed fund[0].
I manage millions in ad spend. Targeting with individual, manual options is not efficient for most advertisers. Most performance advertisers target using lookalikes and algorithmic targeting based on optimizing for conversions.
This is 100% correct, but this list is more about knowing if some ad platform can be a good place to launch ads to a cold audience (that are more targeted for the product) - because, after a while, every single one of the 6 ad platforms allow for lookalike audiences and those will be much more profitable.
From my experience social, namely the largest one - Facebook - delivers way better results than any solution from DSPs.
People forget that the medium itself is important, not just the data.
(Let's not forget that the data directory reach, from the first page of search results has the reach of part of US Households, it doesn't have the global reach a social network like Facebook has).
So I disagree: some social platforms have great targeting compared to open web.
I'll probably do it in a version 2.0 of my knowledge base, but almost every platform offers the exact same type of retargeting, so it's not that insightful.