They had a good thing going. YouTube was far from unprofitable. But the skyrocketing density and plummeting quality of ads drove people to adblockers.
I suspect though, the day will soon come when ad-space is no longer quite so valuable.
They had a good thing going. YouTube was far from unprofitable. But the skyrocketing density and plummeting quality of ads drove people to adblockers.
I suspect though, the day will soon come when ad-space is no longer quite so valuable.
"I need you to tell me how we can incorporate ai in our product."
"Ai? How could ai possibly benefit our product?"
"Don't ask me that. you're the engineer, you should know."
"Well, then I'm telling you the product has nothing to gain from incorporating ai."
"Fine, I'll keep looking until I can find someone with actual vision. See you at your performance review."
The way everyone talked about Linux, I thought it would be a transient interest I would eventually tire of. I've known a lot of professors who say they liked Linux back in the 90s, but decided they couldn't keep up with it, and have gone back to windows/apple.
I never anticipated that 4 years ago, when I booted up Linux for the first time, that it would also be the last time I shut down Windows. Furthermore, the likelihood of me ever going back seems to be getting smaller and smaller every day.
People make fun of me for preferring C above any other language, but I think I'm the one having the last laugh.
What is it about python users just refusing to adapt to other languages?
Honestly, I've only ever had problems with Wayland so far. So many times when I look up the issue tracker for a software I'm having issues with, the solution is always "switch to a DE that uses Xorg."
I get that it's not a mature software yet, but neither should people be pushing to use it until it is.
I deliberately said Windows instead of Mac, because all the apple users I know are the type of people who will never, ever try linux in the first place.
you either go back to windows, or turn into this guy. There is no 3rd option.
its the things I hear from real software developers that concern me:
the more i learn about software development, the more i feel I've dodged a bullet by changing my major to electrical engineering.
You know, I've always loved C and doing my own memory management. I love learning optimization techniques and applying them.
But you know what? Everybody around me keeps saying I'm being silly. They keep telling me I won't find any jobs like that. They say I should just swallow my juvenile preferences and go with what's popular, chasing trends for the entire rest of my career.
I don't think you can blame people for trending away from quality software. Its clearly against the grain.
The face of a man desperately trying to convince the world that c++ has made c obsolete, so that more people may share in his misery.