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What the mentality of the dotcom era can teach the AI generation

2 pointsby Multicomp12 months ago

3 comments

k31012 months ago
IMO, the landscape has shifted. &quot;Back in the day&quot;, before we could use computers, we had to build them. Technology was new and we were growing with it. It was enormously liberative, but not all use cases were. A couple of us wanted to open source and give away a school information system database schema so that anyone could built upon it, and there could be data portability between proprietary silos that locked people in and stifled innovation. That didn&#x27;t work out.<p>Young people have great tools as a foundation, and it&#x27;s my hope that they focus on use cases to liberate people instead of trapping them in walled gardens.
h2odragon12 months ago
&quot;There&#x27;s investors to be fleeced!&quot;<p>I don&#x27;t think the &quot;AI generation&quot; missed the lesson, tho.
Multicomp12 months ago
Posted this because I want to get HNs take on it. On the one hand, I did grow up steeped in the tech Utopia thinking, drank the Kool aid distilled in such product marketing tools as the Windows XP Tour, namely that this was a tech movement and by bringing in this technology we could make our work go so much further.<p>The collective We haven&#x27;t had that attitude for tech since 2015 or so as the costs of &quot;free&quot; services has come due.<p>Meanwhile I do see people entering tech who are not nerds for a given technology. I started in Windows (and still have a bucket list to program a non toy application in Win32) and have landed in at least MPL and sometimes going to AGPL style FOSS works on Debian KDE, preferring offline things that I can actually own, physical media, self hosting, all that digital homesteader stuff.<p>So I see people my age and younger not knowing how to use filesystems (not a fault) and (here is where I want to judge) being totally disinterested in trying to learn, even though we have books and the web to teach us many many things for free.<p>So I&#x27;m conflicted on this article. On the one hand I see the call for one to have enough initiative to work towards a goal, not assume life will be handed to you on a silver platter.<p>On the the other hand, this article reads like a submarine Boomer mentality. You young people should be glad to have the job I deign to give you, be glad you work the job of a CMO for a decade before we actually get around to acknowledging you and paying you appropriately. Oh and a side order of RTO virtue signalling.<p>So. Am I too cynical about this article, or does it really have some merit?
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