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I built a breed identifier for cats

http://catbreedfinder.com


Why can't be one loyal to an app?


having a concept of "loyalty" for apps and corporations is beyond me


Loyal user is a well-recognised term in marketing among other areas meaning someone who keeps using the product over a long period of time. It's not more complicated than that.


Yes, but "loyal user" is in the same box as "target audience" and all the other terms in the marketing vernacular. This is a language of people taking advantage of others, talking about their victims. It makes little sense to use such language voluntarily on yourself.


Marketing speak is mostly drivel to me, but you'll have a hard time convincing most people that the language is somehow oppressive.


It's not oppressive, it's objectifying; it treats you as a resource to be exploited with little to no consideration to your well-being. No reason to voluntarily use it on yourself.


Well this is just the nature of operating a business at scale. Even little corner shops don't recognise customers on an individual basis.

> It treats you as a resource to be exploited with little to no consideration to your well-being

There are companies which I feel loyal to (Valve/Steam, for example) because they treat their customers well. I believe they deserve my money because they're a good company so I will give them the benefit of the doubt if they do something wrong.

Ultimately we want to reward good behaviour in the market, no?


What has the app ever done to deserve your loyalty?


You might be taking "loyalty" a bit too literal, but that question seems odd on a forum that's broadly aligned with a community that features the editor wars (emacs, vi!), operating system wars (BSD, Linux, macos!) and countless other ways of attaching one's identity to pieces of software.


my 2 cents: there is rarely a shortcut available and is hardly a 6 months course work designed to get into google or the alike unless you have a friend or family member who guides you through the whole process and points you to the right direction, not least giving hope and motivation.

you have to develop a sustainable long term learning habit to hone your skills without being getting burned out and without hoping a dramatic success in the short term.

To get noticed or get an interview you have to identify people there and somehow get them forward your CV and/or build some proof of your skills in form of personal projects which many others like you dont have. Chances you are, you will get atleast an interview somewhere at big tech, if not at google.


> some proof of your skills in form of personal projects which many others like you dont have.

I have quite a bit of personal projects, actually.


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