Data source: swyx's twitter data
id | user | created_at | full_text | retweeted_status | quoted_status | place | source | truncated | display_text_range | in_reply_to_status_id | in_reply_to_user_id | in_reply_to_screen_name | geo | coordinates | contributors | is_quote_status | retweet_count | favorite_count | favorited | retweeted | possibly_sensitive | lang | scopes |
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1437048380958679042 | 33521530 | 2021-09-12T13:40:07+00:00 | Valuable peek into what it is like to debate syntax inside @TC39, from someone who was actively involved but no longer is. This sort of thing is above my paygrade, but standards work affects us all, and I’m glad people this passionate have a voice in the future of JavaScript. https://twitter.com/BenLesh/status/1436890184449236994 | 1436890184449236994 | 95f3aaaddaa45937ac94765e0ddb68ba2be92d20 | 0 | [0, 277] | 1 | 1 | 33 | 0 | 0 | 0 | en | |||||||||
1473991924285538304 | 33521530 | 2021-12-23T12:20:34+00:00 | I wrote down my personal “rules of Twitter” in my @Coding_Career book and love it when newcomers find it useful! Twitter can be so confusing with the firehose of hot takes, petty squabbles, and serious announcements, but it’s a career hack for dev networking when done right. https://twitter.com/th_clarence/status/1473962147965112320 | 1473962147965112320 | 95f3aaaddaa45937ac94765e0ddb68ba2be92d20 | 0 | [0, 277] | 1 | 2 | 33 | 0 | 0 | 0 | en |