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Podcast market is about to crash.


This. YouTube video sponsorships, too.


Would be really interesting to see a quantitative analysis of how this acquisition impacts the podcast/youtube ecosystem. I feel like Squarespace's podcast ad market share was a big deal 5 years ago but podcasts and youtubers have grown and diversified a lot since then.


Why do you say that?


They buy a lot of ads/sponsorships


My company uses Meet. It works great! I like it more than Zoom.


Counterpoint: I take probably 3/4 of my meetings on Zoom and 1/4 on meet. So on any given day I'm probably doing at least 1 on meet. If I look back on any day at all the meetings with unaceptable audio lag or very degraded video quality? They are always all "meet". It is just hands-down worse when networks are unreliable.

In addition meet insists I click on the same about 4 or 5 different "Got it" feature popups every single call, and every call also insists on asking me if I want to use Duet AI to make my background look shit which just adds to annoyance.


It's a lot better than it used to be. In 2020, universities that already had GSuite (which includes Meet) still paid to put their classes on Zoom. Personally I like Zoom more today, mostly because even my high-end laptop can struggle with Meet.


I like meet too, but the inability to send messages to breakout rooms is quite annoying.


zoom is horrible. Meet works for me.



this is conflating a lot of concepts. there's nothing wrong with being rational with regard to the development of your own beliefs, and there's nothing wrong with using rationality to determine the best way to achieve your goals. when considering whether to be blunt with someone, you should consider your goals. if telling them the bare truth is going to offend them, and that's not in your interest, it's not rational to do so. being rational doesn't mean acting like a truth-telling robot.


All fair -- except the context is there's sort of a self-proclaimed "rationalist" community which is known for eschewing social norms to the point of seemingly deliberately over-considering controversial ideas as a reaction (e.g. certain racial topics, pandemic, etc). I think those people are the type we're talking about.

A truly rational person would potentially never call themselves "rational" because they would know most people find it an alienating term and kinda an unfair self-assessment.


The related references don't appear to be real.


I've been using it and Google in parallel and have find it generally helpful, but I've had multiple instances where ChatGPT completely made up new library functions. Same for others I've talked to.


the main bootcamp in my city is still doing quite well, but it's not startups that are hiring - it's big banks and the companies the contract out to them. many of the bootcamp grads are only getting QA positions, but that's still a step up from their old work, and some are still getting entry level developer positions.


Would love to see Sorkin's version of the negotiation between SBF and Binance.


The Noonday Demon. A beautiful book on depression. Heartbreaking and life-affirming in turns.


It didn't correctly identify that FireBob1990's name was misspelled as "firebob" in the original comment.



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