Threads is rolling out a new feature called Dear Algo that lets you temporarily adjust what appears in your feed using a simple text prompt.
The feature, called "Dear Algo," lets Threads users personalize what content they see by publicly posting an AI prompt.
Jon has been an author at Android Police since 2021. He primarily writes features and editorials covering the latest Android news, but occasionally reviews hardware and Android apps. His favorite ...
The 11 winners of the latest JEC Composites Innovation Awards were announced during the JEC World Premiere, which took place on Monday 12 January 2026 in Paris. The University of Southern Queensland ...
Threads is exploring games in chats, beginning with a basketball game. A spokesperson for Meta confirmed to TechCrunch that the company is internally prototyping the game and that it’s not available ...
The Meta-owned microblogging platform Threads is about to launch a new feature called podcast previews, according to a Bloomberg report. The feature will enable creators to upload short clips of their ...
To continue reading this content, please enable JavaScript in your browser settings and refresh this page. Preview this article 1 min A Nashville-based company has ...
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. A conversation with the head of Threads Connor Hayes on creators, ads, and the fediverse. A conversation with the ...
Digital engineering and modeling and simulation (M&S) are transformative approaches that enable precision, efficiency and ...
Meta’s social network Threads is expanding the number of topics available through its newer communities feature, the company announced on Monday. This expansion might nudge people to use communities ...
Threads is testing a new way for users to manipulate their own recommendation algorithm. The feature, aptly called "Dear algo," allows users to post a message to the algorithm with the note "dear algo ...
Opinions expressed by Digital Journal contributors are their own. These days, everything runs on invisible digital threads—banks, retailers, ed-tech apps. One tiny hiccup, and suddenly, companies are ...