
Here Is Snapchat's ‘Disruptive’ New Redesign
“There is a strong likelihood that the redesign of our application will be disruptive to our business in the short term.”
“There is a strong likelihood that the redesign of our application will be disruptive to our business in the short term.”
The proposed changes do seem user-friendly, but how will users actually respond to the changes?
Spoilers: a lot.
These major changes could push away some of Snap’s 178 million daily users, which the company can ill afford right now.
“Excess” camera sunglasses have cost Snapchat’s parent company Snap $39.9 million in the last three months.
A year after their debut, “hundreds of thousands” of unsold Spectacles are reportedly collecting dust in warehouses.
Everything at Snapchat is absolutely fine.
It’s intriguing to watch artists and corporations fight over space invisible to the naked eye.
The security measures surrounding its big announcement aren't exactly hard to bypass.
Making sure kids and teenagers understand what they're agreeing to, since nobody reads the long complicated T&Cs anyway.
Safe Browsing is now at work on three billion devices—up one billion from May of last year.
Snapchat’s problem isn’t that it’s not popular—it just isn’t growing as fast as investors want it to.
Did we say "snitching"? Sorry, we meant "fighting terrorism." Or something.
On Tuesday, Facebook announced the rollout of Watch, what it is calling “a new platform for shows on Facebook.”
"Check out the haemorrhaging on THIS."
There's a new geofilter designed to get people down to the polling station.