Slack
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About • History • Features • Reception and Online Presence • Related Memes • Search Interest • External References • Recent Images |
About
Slack is a messaging app favored by workplaces as a means for coworkers to communicate and collaborate on projects. It has become one of the most popular apps for professionals and is regularly referenced online.
History
Slack is an acronym for "Searchable Log of All Conversation and Knowledge."[1] It was created by Stewart Butterfield, Eric Costello, Cal Henderson, and Serguei Mourachov of Slack Technologies and launched in August of 2013. Using a "freemium" business model, Slack is free to access but paying members have access to thousands of archived messages. The company was hacked over the course of four days in February of 2015, causing some users' data to be compromised. Slack is compatible with Windows, macOS, iOS, Android, Linux, and Commodore 64. On December 29th, 2015, the Slack YouTube channel posted a commercial that gained over 15 million views (shown below).
Features
Slack offers features including private chats organized by topic, helping change it from a means of mostly professional communication to a chatting app similar to Facebook Messenger. It has integrated several different apps including Google Drive, Dropbox, GitHub, Runescope and others. One of the apps is "Memetizer"[5] which allows for the creation of memes one can use in conversation.
Reception and Online Presence
Slack has been praised and derided by critics. New York Magazine wrote that Slack has an addictive quality, calling it "a compulsion, a distraction, and a burden … another utility we both rely on and resent." After acquiring 8,000 users at launch, Slack has grown to have over 8 million daily users, 3 million of which have paid accounts.
June 2018 Outage
On June 27th, 2018, Slack went down for several hours, leading to a surge of jokes on Twitter among professionals reliant on the platform. User @mike_allton joked about the outage with a Simpsons GIF, gaining over 500 retweets and 1,400 likes (shown below, left). User @brittneyplz posted a GIF from Finding Nemo, gaining over 620 retweets and 2,800 likes (shown below, right). The outage and jokes about it were covered by Twitter Moments,[2] Chicago Tribune,[3] and USA Today.[4]
Related Memes
Party Parrot
Party Parrot is an emote used on the messaging and collaboration application Slack, featuring a multi-colored, animated depiction of Sirocco the kakapo parrot who was famously filmed mating with zoologist Mark Carwardine's head during an episode of the BBC nature documentary series Last Chance to See. In January 2016, the CultofthePartyParrot website was launched, providing various Party Parrot emojis to download for Slack (shown below).
On June 8th, 2016, the /r/PartyParrot subreddit was launched for discussions related to the Slack emote and BBC video. On July 19th, the Universal Party Parrot Chrome extension was released, enabling Party Parrot tags across all subreddits. On November 10th, Party Parrot emoji keyboards were released on iTunes and the Google Play app stores (shown below, left). In February 2017, a Party Parrot-themed 2048 game was created on the site 2048 Online (shown below, right).
Search Interest
External References
[1] Wikipeda – "Slack":Searchable Log of All Conversation and Knowledge
[2] Twitter Moments – When Slack goes down, chaos reigns
[3] Chicago Tribune – When Slack goes dark, Twitter erupts 'I talked to my colleagues … in the face'
[4] USA Today – It's not just you Slack back up after outage
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