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When playtesting your game the most import thing to do is shut the fuck up. Don't help them. Don't tell them how to solve their problem. Just watch. Study the things they tried. Do this for a long time. Live their pain and confusion. Then go back and address what they struggled with. I see too many devs that jump in and help, then never fix the problem. Live their confusion.

Circuit breaker trips are like dog barfs.

Once? Don't think twice about it.
Twice? Start to get concerned.
Three times? Seek professional help.

Sitcoms that mock Walmart greeters are an important reminder that Walmart used to hire humans.

Whenever I encounter a breakdown in an organization or professional interaction, I remember the attribution pyramid.

It’s most likely people’s incentives aren’t aligned then they simply don’t understand the problem and least likely that they’re jerks.

There's a lot more overlap between "writers scared will cost them business" and "game developers scared will cost them business" than most people realize.

In both cases, you're not really losing money, because the people who want these subpar/pirated products never wanted to pay you for your art to begin with.

One way the myth of tech as a meritocracy is being demolished is that tech employees can see how you could be good at your job but your CEO & CFO are bad at theirs but you’re the one that gets laid off.

The executives get to say “Oops, we over hired” and are rewarded with 📈

I'm sure 81% of Nazi Party members said the same of the Jews back in the day. (That 47% overall agree is terrifying.)

#trump #fascism #gop

Your yearly reminder that ‘layoff season’ is an American invention that infected the rest of the world.

Layoffs cost a company 35% more than retaining a core staff over 3 years.

The only purpose is for inflating investor reports.

Layoffs in tech immediately degrade the product, reduce security, create safeguarding issues, and inevitably destabilise the future of a given product.

(reposting from @ianbetteridge@writing.exchange instead of reblogging because mastodon don't feel great about quote reblogs)

Back in late 2021, when I was still working for Automattic, the Chief of Money Things presented the revenue goals for 2022+ his team decided based on a forecast they spent months working on. The goals were incredibly ambitious, because they were based in the growth the company had experienced during 2020 and 21.

Back in the day it didn't make any sense to me, basing the goals of the company on the results of a year where, because of COVID, all the online products were experiencing 2 or 3x more growth than any other year before seemed incredibly stupid. But I told myself "Javi, there may be a hundred different factors you don't see and these people do: it's not your field, this seems dumb , but trust those who know".

But time passed. People stopped being locked at home for 23 hours per day. And surprise surprise: online activity went back to normal levels. Who could have guessed uh? Well, not the C-suite of most tech companies. Not the C-suite of my company.

Flash forward to early 2023: we are told that it's clear we are "underperforming", so the company needs to go into "antifragile" mode (a term from one of those self-help for businessmen books the CEOs like so much): benefits start being cut down, salaries get frozen, the CEO tell us that working 40 hours/week is now considered below the bare minimum expectations, and the execs announce the hiring is frozen and the new goal is to make the company "lighter" by "managing people out". Mind you, the company was making more money than ever (except for 2020/21). The revenue was growing, handsomely. But it wasn't growing as much as the investors were promised, so we were underperforming.

Did the people responsible for setting stupid goals based on inane ideas admitted responsibility and suffered any consequences???

Of course not! They just blamed it on "execution issues". Because hey, admitting that they took some decisions so dumb that any average 13-year-old would find them laughable, would mean that maybe it's not justified for them to earn millions per year.

Every year it becomes more clear that success in the business world and being smart, or even competent in your job, are totally unrelated variables.

So yeah, there are a lot of not-too-bright but incredibly confident people in positions of power in the business world, taking absurd decisions that end fucking thousands of workers, and never suffering for and kind of repercussions themselves.

The system is entirely broken.

Proposal: A package delivery service that slightly increases the priority and speed of your package every time you refresh the tracking page.

It breaks my heart to see people thinking that copyright is going to help them, and that making knowledge more accessible, universal, and shareable is going to hurt them.

This is more dystopian than most dark fiction i've read.

Why the hell would they sue Boeing directly? If anything, they should sue the airline, who should then sue Boeing if it's their fault.

But the media has convinced everyone it's Boeing's fault before the investigation has hardly started and now everyone just assumes that's right.

Hype / Aerospace News  
Passengers File Suit Against Boeing Over 737 MAX 9 Incident - By LAUREN ROSENBLATT https://www.seattletimes.com/business/boeing-aerospace/alaska-a...

Because they're not complete idiots like some of their customers.

Anders Eknert  
Someone on LinkedIn pointed out that #OpenAI doesn’t use an LLM for their support chat, but has instead opted to use some extremely limited decisio...

Tonight at 10pm PT, the California Science Center will start live streaming as they raise and install the External Fuel Tank onto Space Shuttle Endeavor!

This will be the only Space Shuttle on display in its launch (vertical) configuration with ET and side-boosters! #space #losangeles

youtu.be/XLTd1a-5j-4

Vehicles that make frequent stops (like school buses) are the sweet spot for battery-electric power. Regenerative braking recovers energy and makes the friction brakes last far longer.

It’s also safer and cleaner for everyone, especially kids.

Kudos to the Biden administration for investing in cleaner, greener school buses.

EPA awards $1B to 280 school districts to purchase clean school buses - Daily Energy Insider:
dailyenergyinsider.com/feature

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