Elon Musk buys a big chunk of Twitter
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@Doctor-Phibes said in Elon Musk buys a big chunk of Twitter:
@Aqua-Letifer said in Elon Musk buys a big chunk of Twitter:
I fail to see the problem with taking the internet's nastiest dumpster and setting it on fire to sanitize it some.
Didn’t you say it wasn’t actually that bad a couple of months ago?
My own corner of it isn't that bad.
"See? Ignore the rusty corners, leaky effluent and the hot garbage & shit smell from the wino in the corner, you can still read the 1-800 number on the back. The dumpster's fine, just fine!"
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@89th said in Elon Musk buys a big chunk of Twitter:
... Buildings closed. Let’s hope no IT systems need to be restarted in the meantime.
Can be managed, automatically and remotely, using something like this:
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This is the Tesla saga writ large and now paid attention to by the whole culture. These same feelings of watching a man and his company self destruct through incomprehensible CEO antics, were a thing for years before Tesla skyrocketed a couple years ago.
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@Axtremus said in Elon Musk buys a big chunk of Twitter:
It’s very different between having employees with large chunks of pre-IPO stock options and having employees with token amounts options of a publicly traded stock. Trying to run the latter like the former is unlikely to work out.
I am very interested in the answer to the question, how many employees does a website actually need?
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@Horace said in Elon Musk buys a big chunk of Twitter:
I am very interested in the answer to the question, how many employees does a website actually need?
Yes.
Someone posted a comment along the lines of, "Well, if the website is working, what are the 'engineers' for, other than to add
bugsfeatures?" -
@George-K said in Elon Musk buys a big chunk of Twitter:
@Horace said in Elon Musk buys a big chunk of Twitter:
I am very interested in the answer to the question, how many employees does a website actually need?
Yes.
Someone posted a comment along the lines of, "Well, if the website is working, what are the 'engineers' for, other than to add
bugsfeatures?"I doubt my observation, as an employee of a 10000 employee company, is rare. That entire groups of employees are justified by hand wavy claims of business impact filtered up through increasingly detached managers. Basically entire groups of employees exist and are paid based on the promise that they matter, made by someone who people trust, but whose fundamental interest is to increase the head count under him.
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@George-K
Don’t think of it as one web server. Think of it as hundreds of thousands of servers distributed over dozens of data centers across the world, where the “demand” can suddenly, drastically increase in different parts of the world. One moment, it maybe because of a protest in Iran, the next it maybe because of a stupid announcement by a Florida man.And that assumes no change in the underlying code (e.g., no security bug fix, no expiring licenses for 3rd party software components/services, no mandated policy change due to shifting local regulations anywhere in the world), no accidental hardware issue (e.g., cable cut, network switch leaking smoke), no utility (power supply, HVAC) issue, etc.
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@jon-nyc said in Elon Musk buys a big chunk of Twitter:
In my experience there are often executives in charge of a big program and they are the ones that often have to wrestle it to the ground and are heavily involved and have the political power to remove obstacles.
Then there are “project management office” types that run around with gant charts and spreadsheets and ask people when their milestone will be met.
There are a lot more of the latter than the former.
A colleague of mine used to call them project management bunnies. That was politically incorrect even then.
Bunnies..... coffee everywhere. I love it. Most of them are whiny little worrywarts. Tracking things is all well and good. But on almost every project it eventually comes down to whether or not you can instill fear in one or more team members. Methodology does not negate human nature.