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  • This Week in Ed Zitron

    Ed Zitron is the CEO of EZPR, a public relations firm based in Las Vegas. He's best known to me as the most entertaining critic when it comes to technology, particularly Silicon Valley technology companies. His newsletter, Where's Your Ed At, and podcast, Better Offline, are both worth subscribing to.

    He made 2 memorable podcast appearances this week. The first was as a replacement for Leo Laporte, who is on holidays, on This Week in Google on the TWiT podcast network. The second was as a guest on the Tech Won't Save Us podcast hosted by Paris Marx.

    Ed can be too caustic for some people. He can be insulting about people he doesn't like and is more confrontational when products don't meet the hype. There is a danger in this approach that you can be too dismissive of new technology that is not ready for prime time. However, he seems to be right about cryptocurrencies and the metaverse at this point in time. I'm not sure he's wrong about AI yet.

    One of the topics covered included an interesting story from The Information about Amazon and Google trying to quietly bring down expectations on generative AI.

    → 11:36 PM, Mar 16
  • 4,000 Of My Closest Friends

    The Markup published an interview of Dorothy Gambrell by Gabriel Hongsdusit, the visual designer of site. It covers a number of topics including the importance of publishing to your own site even as your audience move towards platforms and how publishing on the Internet has changed since she started writing Cat and Girl in 1999.

    The main topic of the interview is Gambrell's response to finding out her art was used to train Midjourney, an AI image generation model. She wrote a beautiful piece about her journey as an artist that captures the struggle to make work that you find meaningful and the fear of that work being taken and abused.

    I've included it below under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 License. The final 6 frames are heartbreaking.

    4,000 of My Closest Friends (Dorothy Gambrell/Cat and Girl) Shared under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 License

    2024 01 09 cg4000 web.
    → 12:47 AM, Mar 7
  • Google: The Beatings Will Continue Until Morale Improves

    Dare Obansanjo (a great follow on Mastodon) shared a LinkedIn post from Diane Hirsh Theriault, a staff software engineer at Google. The atmosphere at Google sounds grim. The fact that Sundar Pichai notified Google employees that there will be more layoffs this year wouldn't have helped.

    This post does run into the danger of reading too much into one person's opinion. However, this is not the first instance I've heard of people complaining about the leadership and lack of morale in Google. Praveen Seshadri wrote this in a Medium post after he left Google last year.

    The way I see it, Google has four core cultural problems. They are all the natural consequences of having a money-printing machine called “Ads” that has kept growing relentlessly every year, hiding all other sins.

    (1) no mission, (2) no urgency, (3) delusions of exceptionalism, (4) mismanagement.

    The maze is in the mouse (Praveen Seshadri/Medium)

    That's a real indictment of the culture and management in Google.

    A couple of things stood out from the LinkedIn post to me.

    1. Leadership, or lack thereof, is a major problem

    Theriault starts her post like this:

    My hot take: Google does not have one single visionary leader. Not a one. From the C-suite to the SVPs to the VPs, they are all profoundly boring and glassy-eyed.

    Diane Hirsh Theriault on LinkedIn

    and it only gets worse from there. There appears to be a lack of direction and a problem with communication. People are being let go seemingly at random which is disrupting functioning teams.

    Google has had the benefit of the money machine that is their search for such a long time that they have taken their eye off the ball in terms of new products.

    The Google Graveyard is a real problem because whenever Google launches a new service, people are not using it because it could be gone again in a few years. I don't trust Google to maintain their services. That has become their brand to me.

    2. There is a fine line between excitement in work and exploitation

    There is a pervasive sense of nihilism that has taken hold. "Well, I guess I will just do the job until they fire me." A lot of people have golden handcuffs situations and aren't going to walk away from the salary, but nobody works late anymore. The buildings are half empty at 4:30. I know a lot of people, myself included, who used to happily do extra work evenings and weekends to get the demo done or just out of boredom. That's gone. 

    Diane Hirsh Theriault on LinkedIn

    I work in the IT industry and I enjoy my job. I have done the long evenings and weekend work. I regret some of that now.

    There are times when extra hours are required. Sometimes you just need to drive through to hit a deadline.

    When I see people being encouraged to stay late by peer pressure when there is not urgency to the work, that is a red flag for the workplace. What I regret from working in environments like these is that all my social relationships were tied to work. Companies that encourage this behaviour will drain every drop of effort they can from their employees.

    The problem is that, oftentimes, I enjoyed myself while working. There's a real feeling of accomplishment when completing a project or learning a new language, framework or technology. There was a sense of camaraderie that developed in teams when hitting targets we weren't expected to. Most times, we didn't receive any benefit. Maybe a pat on the back, some drinks and dinner. Then get back to work.

    If you find yourself in a situation like this, take stock if this is something you want. Is this a temporary work schedule? Is this expected even during quieter times during the year? Can you keep working this way until retirement? What will it do to your relationships?

    If you plan to be in this industry for the long haul, consider what is sustainable for you. Keep adjusting that baseline as you get older. You could say life gets in the way. That's wrong. Life is what's important but work can get in the way of that.

    → 11:33 PM, Jan 21
  • Yes, Google Results Have Gotten Worse

    404 Media reported on a study published by German researchers from Leipzig University, Bauhaus-University Weimar, and the Center for Scalable Data Analytics and Artificial Intelligence titled "Is Google Getting Worse? A Longitudinal Investigation of SEO Spam in Search Engines".

    Google isn't the only search engine dealing with this issue. Jason Keobler writes:

    Notably, Google, Bing, and DuckDuckGo all have the same problems, and in many cases, Google performed better than Bing and DuckDuckGo by the researchers' measures.

    Google Search Really Has Gotten Worse, Researchers Find (Jason Koebler/404 Media)

    The research does highlight how much damage search engine optimization (SEO) has done to the ecosystem of the internet. The release of generative AI is only going to make the problem worse. Amazon is dealing with product titles and reviews being generated using ChatGPT.

    David Roth had a good piece on Defector about the promises made by the developers and boosters of AI and its actual use in the present day.

    One reason it is not very interesting is that everything they have touted as the future of some essential human thing or other—the future of art, or money—has mostly crashed out in ways that left behind very little useful residue. Another is that the ways in which AI is used in the present, by your lower-effort plagiarists and scammers, are so manifestly not the future of anything that works, but rather both the present and the future of shitting-up web search results, which is roughly analogous to saying that robocalls about homeowners insurance are the future of human communication.

    The Future Of E-Commerce Is A Product Whose Name Is A Boilerplate AI-Generated Apology (David Roth/Defector)
    → 11:09 PM, Jan 16
  • The TextFX Project

    I heard of this project on This Week in Google and it looks to be an interesting application of LLMs with writing. I haven't found it useful so far but it can worth playing around with.

    https://textfx.withgoogle.com

    → 2:02 PM, Sep 1
  • Kashmir Hill on Life Without the Tech Giants

    While reading Kashmir Hill's profile of Mike Masnick I was reminded of the series she did on "Life Without the Tech Giants" while she was working for Gizmodo in 2019.

    It was eye opening to see how much of the digital infrastructure runs through such a small number of companies. Sometimes there is no alternative as their services have been embedded into business and government systems and can't be avoided.

    I remember being surprised at how many services ran through AWS. I thought someone with the size of Netflix would be running their own infrastructure.

    I'd be interested to see how many services are being run through the 3 largest cloud providers today: Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud Platform.

    The series is still worth reading and viewing today.

    • Life Without the Tech Giants
    • I Tried to Block Amazon From My Life. It Was Impossible
    • I Cut Facebook Out of My Life. Surprisingly, I Missed It
    • I Cut Google Out Of My Life. It Screwed Up Everything
    • I Cut Microsoft Out of My Life—or So I Thought
    • I Cut Apple Out of My Life. It Was Devastating
    • I Cut the 'Big Five' Tech Giants From My Life. It Was Hell
    → 3:01 PM, Aug 7
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