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> Mark Zuckerberg has blocked recruitment of artificial intelligence staff at Meta, slamming the brakes on a multibillion-dollar hiring spree amid fears of an AI bubble.

> amid fears of an AI bubble

Who told the telegraph that these two things are related? Is it just another case of wishful thinking?


Whoever designed this should be fired: https://ibb.co/yGHf2yB


Fun.


upvote


> The interesting thing for me about this particular tale is the commercial genesis of Airbus and the incentives of the management team have led it to catch up despite Boeing have a 20-year head start.

But Boeing introduced several new planes during these 20 years. If anything, they abandoned the idea of a new design and introduced 737 MAX as a response to the competition - A320neo.


I guess that's also a natural evolution of many industries and societies, which has happened many times.

First you have rapid iteration and lots of innovation.

Then the projects become more complex, there's less quick wins, and cycles get longer.

Then it gets so bad you won't have anyone working anymore who has finished any new projects during their career, everybody's been working on the same decades long projects since time immemorial. Some new ones are started, some are cancelled every now and then but none are finished.

Then the organization will not even try anymore and accept to live in the ruins created by past generations.

Then it could happen that all artifacts crumble, all documentation disappears and even the people propagating the intergenerational verbal history forget or die and nobody will even know that anything existed.


> Then the projects become more complex, there's less quick wins, and cycles get longer.

The problem with Boeing is mostly a business side one, not an engineering problem. Boeing invested in buy backs instead of creating good products, and that has been its philosophy for a while.

Interesting read: https://qz.com/1776080/how-the-mcdonnell-douglas-boeing-merg...

"Since the start of the jet age, Boeing had been less a business and more, as writer Jerry Useem put it in Fortune in 2000, “an association of engineers devoted to building amazing flying machines.”

"Everything seemed to be changing—the leadership, the culture, even the headquarters, with a move from Seattle to Chicago in 2001."

"Many employees struggled to adjust, or resented what they saw as a changing of the guard, where investors took priority over passengers."


Yes, I agree. But the whole business area has also changed and matured. B737 is 56 years old, but A320 is 38 years so not very new anymore. Certification takes very long nowadays, for any company. So the financialization might not have happened in a vacuum or because of some villain, but motivated by the situation that there was less money to be made with engineering anymore.


>>But Boeing introduced several new planes during these 20 years.

Most of Boeing's Ls seem to have come from quality issues, and that seems to come downstream to cutting spending on engineering, testing and in general overall technical ecosystem.

There is no point in making 20 or even 200 new planes, if you don't make them well.

“People think focus means saying yes to the thing you've got to focus on. But that's not what it means at all. It means saying no to the hundred other good ideas that there are. You have to pick carefully. I'm actually as proud of the things we haven't done as the things I have done. Innovation is saying no to 1,000 things.” - Steve Jobs


"Friend" has multiple definitions, including:

> someone who is not an enemy and who you can trust

Here's another:

> a person who you know well and who you like a lot

Don't you think it's beneficial to trust and like your colleagues? I personally find it helpful. Few of us do jobs of our dreams, so having friends at work is nice. You don't have to invite them to your birthday and family events to call them friends.


> The reason SPAs became the default wasn’t because they were better. It was because, for a while, they were the only way to deliver something that felt fluid.

So they were better.


> As it has become more and more untenable for anti-EV propagandists to deny the air quality benefits of EVs, a common refrain from them has become “but tailpipe emissions aren’t everything, what about brakes and tires, huh?!”

What is this website? Tell me about the story, don't argue with imaginary haters and trolls. The writing is so poor there.


When I tried Threads for a bit I was getting almost entirely this kind of content (not just about EVs but these kind of inaccurate concern-trolling bad-takes about renewable energy etc. also) - I think its algorithm was targeting me with it because it was trying to rage-bait me into responding because that's "engagement".

Used to see a bit of it on Twitter before it went downhill under Musk and I abandoned it, but its algorithm used to be better at keeping that kind of stuff mostly siloed so mostly people who wanted to see it would.


There are plenty of these sorts of comments here on this post.


So that nonsense didn't even help? Great.


I can't really tell what you're frustrated about, but how can I help? The statement you just made doesn't follow from what I said. Can you communicate completely about what you want?


The cookie banner reappears indefinitely on this website when I click 'only necessary' lol.


Sorry about that, I'm my newsletter provider (Substack) which is very buggy sometimes.


Probably because it is overly complex system.


by option or incompetence because serving text over http is very well abstracted nowadays.


if only there were some simple solution to host a static website without cookies and other garbage

https://cloud.google.com/storage/docs/hosting-static-website + pick your favorite OSS CMS


Thankfully I dont see a cookie banner at all. Did you try moving continents?


or ublock and adding all the cookie blocker lists


But why? These apps are ineffective. If you want to learn a language, don't waste your time on Duolingo or this...


Yeah, I was thinking the same. How we "talk" to llms is more about us than about them. For me it's natural to say "please" without thinking twice. I didn't even think about that until recently.


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