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Do you guys think tech layoffs will continue the whole year?

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Sure hope so

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Probably

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Google has reached the point where they stopped innovating. If this were the 80s or 90s they'd slide into a decline imo but they are essentially a quasi governmental organization now

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They'll be another IBM is they're lucky.

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I feel like IBM still makes tangible products so it's not a direct comparison, google makes tons of stuff and lots of it is essentially free. Google is competing on a lot of fronts at once and moving everything to India is not a good sign

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:#marseyhesright:

IBM has business contracts, Google's business segment isn't that profitable.

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What does IBM even do nowadays?

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Corporate software and government contracts afaik

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And SPSS, because social science majors are too r-slurred to use R.

Their departments force colleges to pay $500 a year per student because asking psych and business majors to write a line of code is literal violence. Yet another reason why the cost of higher ed is spiraling.

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God I love corporate contracts like that. I wonder how much of it is r-slurred students and how much is IBM "consultants".

Saw it a lot in embedded systems. The big players would send free consultants to engineering firms and basically give them free boilerplate spec sheets which then translated directly into sales as each project by that firm required their product

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Mainframes for government and enterprises structured like themself. There aren't many other companies that can handle huge contracts or get hardware powerful and reliable enough.

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I'm not sure after the split they did, but they mainly sold mainframes, server hardware, and support for said hardware.

Edit: this article breaks it down: https://www.investopedia.com/how-ibm-makes-money-4798528

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This is the end for the 2 trillion dollar company.

:marseysal:

USA is going to collapse any day now.

Japan is going to rise any day now.

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The end of innovation. They are no longer the underdog dethroning the incumbents via innovation and novelty, they're a gigantic corp clearly doing their best to shed costs as they maintain status quo.

Their driverless car program failed, they are not the first choice in online meetings, they don't have a good suite of corporate software and they seem to be lagging behind in AI.

Search has only regressed and they are tarnishing their brand image imo

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Honestly I was very surprised with how good Google Meet/Chat works compared to Teams or Zoom, but I only got to try it out because the meeting itself was with Google employees :marseylaughpoundfist:

Nobody wants to touch lesser known Google products and invest time in learning how to use them because they kill them after a few years tops anyway

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This is normal for a lot of succesful companies. They become so succesful, they replace their competition and have nowhere to go but to cut costs and increase efficiency.

That's because their entire business model is so strongly tied to their current products and services, they're almost incapable of the kind of meaningul innovation that made them big in the first place.

Boeing is another example. Their experience developing the 787 spooked them away from new designs, and they're just cutting costs and outsourcing now. Which is probably why their safety reputation has crashed (pun intended) recently.

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I listened to a rly good podcast about KFC and taco bell where they brought up this exact scenario

I think it's inevitable once a company gets to a certain size. They inherently become risk averse and with software it drives away good talent. Really good devs are not going to want to be stuck doing boring work

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>driverless car program fails due to driverless corporate structure

Ironic

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The 2 trillion dollar company with a bazillion legal patents has forgotten how to innovate and its not that they aren't going to put in more effort until profits go down.

:marseysal:

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The 2 trillion dollar company with a bazillion legal patents has forgotten how to innovate

But unironically

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>IBM will never be dethroned, they're just too big.

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Curious. Are other corps funding open-source python dev?

https://media.giphy.com/media/1zKdb4WSHgY4QKAsjo/giphy.webp

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I have so much more respect for zuck after he released that AI for free

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Honestly if Facebook treated VR like they are treating AI now, it would have taken off.

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Fr, if they'd released a cheap dev kit or smth it could have been a game changer

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They're getting there. they're licensing the OS they made for other people to make hardware for now. I suspect it might be more open in a decade or so.


:#marsey:

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Pythonstrags BTFO!!

:marseyrope:

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Lol jokes on them and that whole indentation driven r-slurred shit.

T.Node codecel

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What are they gonna switch to, go?

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assembly language. they will code it directly onto the chips.

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That would actually be kino as shit

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i know, right? I thought about that after I wrote it and it changed from a joke to a great idea LOL

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Until you start writing it

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An optimized hardware LLM will not be developed in the office by the pooping street

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They have their own language called go

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PERL CHADS RAISE UP

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Can a codecel explain why this would be a good idea for jewgle? I thought most ML libraries are written in Python :marseyconfused:

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Not a codecel but I can only assume theyre cooking up some LLM that will only interact with the google suite and won't use python

They'll release it to mixed reviews and drop support in about 3 years when it becomes clear no one has adopted it

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Turns out that hiring github jannies for FOSS shit may not be conducive to shareholder value.

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