most people on social media don't know how to text
they think starting with a greeting and waiting for a response is kind because that's telephone etiquette, but don't understand that doing that over text is like
someone calling you, saying "hello," then putting YOU on hold.
literally making the other person do extra work to find out what you want.
so I made this website Instead of spending time explaining them this concept (and maybe coming off as very rude), I just keep this in my bio or send them this link when they do.
Pick your name. Pick the greeting trigger. Get a link. (optionally select one of the 16 languages)
They get a friendly explanation of why leading with context matters. You save 10 minutes. Everyone wins.
Train your network to respect your time by being clear about what you need. Life's too short for message ping-pong with strangers.
PS: this builds on the legacy of nohello.net but adds the option of other greetings and adding custom names in the messages
also open source! https://github.com/Kuberwastaken/nogreeting
There are also people who don't know how to type multiline text. So, they type "hi", send it and immediately continue writing their actual message, possibly with multiple parts separated into several messages instead of single multiline message. So, they destruct their recipients by doing this, since one needs to wait until the whole message is written before starting answering it.
I send multi line messages all the time and I frequently accidentally hit enter before I’m done. Then I have to rapidly make edits and save them, hoping everyone sees the frequent updates and realizes messages is still a work in progress. There has to be a better way.
Would be nice if anything that supports multiline messages let you toggle into a multiline mode where enter always puts in newlines and a combo like ctrl+enter sends the message.
I've gotten in the habit of typing any long messages in my text editor first and them pasting them into Slack for this exact reason.
worse are people who wait for a response before writing the actual message
i have not as yet sent someone https://nohello.net/en/ but i've come close
I have that url on my Teams status.
somewhat guilty because I do that with texts with people I speak to often too LOL but yeah not the best practice
I must be the only person in the world who doesn't get annoyed by Hi
I don't get particularly annoyed by it, and I'm definitely more annoyed by the people who complain about it and/or reply with just the link to that "no hello" URL.
Not with people I know tbh, but truly random people, all expecting to play pingpong is so frustrating
I had a colleague who used to start dms with just “dude” (and then wait for you to reply) It was nerve wracking.
“Dude, how ya doing” Is friendly “Dude” Means WTF did you just do.
I used to get emails where the entire message was on the subject line. It's funny now when I think about it.
What wasn't funny was having my actual email submitted to chain letters or copied to all their contacts with every email they sent.
Training on the basics is a necessary good:-)
For real though, I've started to put this and https://dontasktoask.com/ in my bios lol
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