NireBryce

reality is the battlefield

the first line goes in Cohost embeds

๐Ÿฅ I am not embroiled in any legal battle
๐Ÿฆ other than battles that are legal ๐ŸŽฎ

I speak to the universe and it speaks back, in it's own way.

mastodon

email: contact at breadthcharge dot net

I live on the northeast coast of the US.

'non-functional programmer'. 'far left'.

conceptual midwife.

https://cohost.org/NireBryce/post/4929459-here-s-my-five-minut

If you can see the "show contact info" dropdown below, I follow you. If you want me to, ask and I'll think about it.

posts from @NireBryce tagged #bigcorp

also:

thinking about how increasing the number of industries/fields we manage to shift to not needing credentials means students can protest more freely knowing that the possibility of losing their university credentials doesn't actually mean destruction of livelihood -- they already got the education.

a lesser example of this is how youtube has somehow become the platform of everyone giving away their university education for free as it comes to mind.



the unrelenting march of exponential progress is so funny because it means we never actually get any mature technologies anymore. Anyone with the capital to do it is busy in their red queen's race with each other where whenever someone develops something new, everyone drops everything else they're doing to pivot to that and gain parity and start another red queen race.

Because the corps are now big enough that even the slightest market lead lets you devour everyone below you. Ice them out with regulations you lobby for, buy them out, break them legally or through the media. Then buy them out.

so we never get iteration on a design. maybe we get two of the device, three if it's a small enough niche, before someone buys them out or puts them out of business and then moves on to the next thing, unless they're a bigcorp and then they move on even faster than that.

The people at the top asked for innovation and that's all we get now, very little product development, everything's in maintenance mode if it's not the flavor of the quarter. Anyone trying to actually develop a better product there often gets bought out if it's somewhere that's legal to do that, or buried in FUD if it isn't, well before they can make a second iteration after learning from their first. Because if anyone makes something good, all the bigcorps will have to pivot to actually making an up-to-parity version of it or their competitors might get far enough ahead to devour them.



In fact, I'd argue that investors โ€” not just those backing pre-IPO businesses, but also those investing in public companies โ€” have become entirely disconnected from production, to the point that an alarming amount of modern business is done to please investors over customers, turning product strategy into a form of symbolic marketing. Our economy isn't one that produces things to be used, but things that increase usage โ€” and the result is the public decay of creativity and innovation.



Oracle makes more sense as a company now that it's clear the way they treat acquisitions is "if your project fails we're cutting staff"

if no one left in your company has ever actually, actually caused a failure, you're going to keep having them.

thinking a lot about how the US Air Force spends tens of millions of dollars to recover downed airmen because the training and experience is worth more than the plane


ย