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Top 25 Google Articles on Substack

Latest Google Articles


May 31

Does Google know how Google works?

Platforms vs. LLMs. PLUS: "All Eyes on Rafah"
Greetings from Read Max HQ! In today’s newsletter: The Google “AI Overview” fiasco, why it was so funny/depressing, and what it tells us about Google A theory about the “All Eyes on Rafah” A.I.-generated Instagram image and why it (and not others) went viral
Max Read ∙ 48 LIKES
Deborah Carver
"What it suggests is that Google’s problem here is not so much a misunderstanding of what LLMs are good at and what they’re for, but--more troublingly--a misunderstanding of what Google is good at and what it’s for."
Yes, yes, and yes. I've been working with web analytics and SEO for a long time, and while most people click on the top answer on the page without thinking about it because we have trained them Google is always right, many others prefer the list of links. Thank you for articulating the "I prefer a list of links" point of view because most people in search, publishing, and marketing think that if you're not at position 1, all is lost forever. But the data says plenty of people click on the archival links, and often.
It also seems that Pichai/Raghavan's vision of Google is starkly different from Page/Brin's vision, in that they are executives looking to make more money, versus idealistic grad students trying to change the world with the product they built. Not that Page and Brin aren't profit-motivated dopes, but with the company's most recent responses insisting that audiences are wrong in pointing out AI-overview errors, I don't think Pichai is fully on board with Don't Be Evil.
That's what struck me from Zitron's piece a couple of weeks ago: why was Raghavan panicked about getting more clicks in 2019? Google consistently has an 80-90% global market share. Does any other company have an 80% global market share of anything? (that is an honest question) But they are trying to get more money-making clicks because their research product doesn't make enough money somehow.
I don't know Google is making significant edits to their existing wildly popular and profitable research product except to seem cool and relevant for all the SV investors and colleagues who went gaga over ChatGPT. And there are likely business reasons that I don't understand. Because the tech industry is obsessed with going up and to the right forever and monetizing every incremental opportunity instead of building stable products for smart audiences.
Jeff
One thing worth calling out regarding Google's AI answers is how it represents a massive shift in their business strategy.
As a platform, Google connected people who wanted stuff from the internet (answers, whatever) with people who had that stuff, and they skimmed a bit off the top via sponsored results.
Implicit in AI answers is a desire to keep people on Google itself. They no longer want their users to click through to that link to Reddit, or whatever. They have a bunch of users, and they want to keep them there. In that sense they're now behaving much more like a social media company: Facebook, Twitter, etc, which of course are notoriously hostile to external links. But if the underlying ethos becomes keeping users on google.com, then the value of sponsored results would seem to diminish in value. Why would I the advertiser pay for a link that you are actively trying to keep people from following?

What Apple's AI Tells Us: Experimental Models⁴

Siri versus the machine god?
I wanted to give some quick thoughts on the Apple AI (sorry, “Apple Intelligence”) release. I haven’t used it myself, and we don’t know everything about their approach, but I think the release highlights something important happening in AI right now: experimentation with four kinds of models - AI models, models of use, business models, and mental models…
Ethan Mollick ∙ 265 LIKES
Chris Barlow
When life gives you llms, make llmonade.
Rob Nelson
What a perfect summary of where we are: "the mere idea of AGI being possible soon bends everything around it." The question is how long will that continue when AGI is always 2-10 years away.
Self-driving cars, human cloning, and MOOCs were hyped, but they never had the initial success and huge investments of LLMs. I don't think there is a useful historical precedent for AGI.

Career from Engineer to CEO & EVP with Ethan Evans & Ameesh Paleja

Chat with Ameesh Paleja (EVP at Capital One, ex-Google VP, ex-OfferUp CTO, Atom Tickets CoFounder & CEO, ex-Amazon Director)
Welcome to this week’s free article of Level Up: Your source for career growth solutions & community by retired Amazon Vice President, Ethan Evans. If you’d like to become a paid member, see the benefits here, and feel free to use this expense template
Ethan Evans and Jason Yoong ∙ 16 LIKES

Doing Stuff with AI: Opinionated Midyear Edition

AI systems have gotten more capable and easier to use
Every six months or so, I write a guide to doing stuff with AI. A lot has changed since the last guide, while a few important things have stayed the same. It is time for an update. This is usually a serious endeavor, but, heeding the advice of Allie Miller
Ethan Mollick ∙ 374 LIKES
Kevin James O’Brien
I appreciate your posts. And look forward to playing with these projects this summer.
This spring I had to pivot as a high school English teacher trying to pitch the value of poetry to students. I was seeing writing with what I suspected had AI help to say the least, so I asked my students to write with integrity as they experimented with ChatGPT and poetry - asking big questions as to role of the poet in an AI world.
They had to credit AI where credit was due - indicating AI writing in bold font - as they wrote poems and reflections on…
Why write poetry?
Does poetry matter?
What’s the point if large language models can generate sonnets and sestinas in seconds?
They read various Ars Poeticas by poets and wrote their own. They researched and presented more than 90 poets and cross checked with ChatGPT. This fact checking is essential as AI churns out words, words, words - some true, yet some false. Discernment is an essential skill. They concluded that writers write with an authentic voice that reflected their lived experience - and context is everything: historical, biographical, political, and social.
Echoing Ross Gay, writing serves as an “evident artifact” to thinking, to struggling,
to investigating, to enduring,
to living - and to inspiring
by sharing with the world.
As educators, we will have to ask big questions as we rethink teaching and learning with this technology.
We must consider our students and their future as they develop their respective relationship with writing and reading.
Right now, more questions than answers.
And as Rilke writes:
“I want to beg you, as much as I can, dear sir, to be patient toward all that is unsolved in your heart and to try to love the questions themselves like locked rooms and like books that are written in a very foreign tongue. Do not now seek the answers, which cannot be given you because you would not be able to live them. And the point is, to live everything. Live the questions now. Perhaps you will then gradually, without noticing it, live along some distant day into the answer.”
“Writing is the evident artifact of some kind of change.” - Ross Gay
From slow stories podcast.
Daniel Nest
I especially love some of the "fun" use cases. A great way to dip your toe into working with AI while having fun in the process.

How to use Perplexity in your PM work

27 examples (with actual prompts) of how product managers are using the AI-powered search engine today
👋 Hey, Lenny here! Welcome to this month’s ✨ free edition ✨ of Lenny’s Newsletter. Each week I tackle reader questions about building product, driving growth, and accelerating your career. If you’re not a subscriber, here’s what you missed this month:
Lenny Rachitsky ∙ 205 LIKES
Richard I Porter
to help me prompt it.
Create a collection and steal my prompt 👇
"You are an expert at prompting perplexity in specific. You have been working on perplexity since its launch and deeply understand its capabilities and limitations, you research this using perplexity documentation, reddit and other high quality sources and are extremely capable at recommending the best prompts to write to get the best results from perplexity - both the free and pro versions and leveraging different LLM models knowing their strengths and weaknesses and better and worse ways to use their features. "
moitha gituma
Great one!

WEF and the COVIDcrisis Totalitarianism

Did the WEF-trained Young Global Leader network promote more severe COVID-19 Non-Pharmaceutical Interventions?
Voiceover: The US Government continues to promote uptake the genetic COVID-19 vaccine “boosters” despite the documented poor effectiveness, clear lack of safety, and rapid deterioration of immune response to yield “negative efficacy”. However, corporate media, the “medical freedom movement” and public attention has largely shifted to other topics. The …
Robert W Malone MD, MS ∙ 301 LIKES
Shelley
The WEF’s Event 201 Pandemic simulation surely contained NPIs. The one that Johns Hopkins did surely did also. IMO the not-so-deadly virus was used for only one reason ‘People Control’ and that generated two outcomes. Total Compliance with mandates and riches for BigPharma.
Schwab’s WEF was 50 years old and the Council on Foreign Relations was 100 years old when the plandemic launched. A smooth and autonomous NPI response occurred in the main western nations because those world leaders get instructions from their Intel agencies. They knew exactly what the next steps were. Brix was placed up front for the public by Intel. NHS knew immediately to modify its systems to control outcomes with hefty payments to the entire medical establishment, including funeral expenses in exchange for NDAs signed by family members of the dead. The Dem governors knew what to do and the GOP ones were afraid not to follow along. When nation leaders are members of Skull and Bones, CFR, Bilderbergs, the indoctrination is complete and they don’t need to be a YGL
Not much has happened in the world since the end of WWII that was not planned and executed by those whose only job was to tow the line of the powerful in control [named above].
P. B.
There was a little bit of kerfuffle about Tulsi Gabbard having been named via Twitter as a YGL by WEF in 2015. She denies ever being a part of the WEF. Another politician, from Canada: MP Michelle Rempel Garner, states (link below) that she attended a conference at her own expense and since she was "right of center" in her politics found herself making comments that went unchallenged. She alludes that it didn't appear to be a "cabal". My take is, if you don't pass their "test" they aren't going to show their true colors or motivations or plans to you.
Of course, you have to look at who published the above article.
Interesting piece Dr. Malone.

Economic Termites Are Everywhere

Why is this economy so difficult to manage? The macro statistics are hiding the experience of being cheated.
Today I want to start with a comment by a colleague, Texas antitrust lawyer Basel Musharbash, observing a restaurant trying to do a renovation in Dallas. “Something funky is happening in the building materials supply chain,” he wrote . “A 3,000 sq. ft. commercial space in a strip mall shouldn’t cost $720,000 to renovate into an Italian food joint.” He’s…
Matt Stoller ∙ 453 LIKES
Ed Nuhfer
"Executives will get worried about being sued."
Executives need to be worried about doing prison before this will stop. So do politicians. The laizzez faire attitude "Everybody does it..." needs to be replaced by "Everybody does time..." who gets caught.
Michael Guerin
Amazon Web Services is the biggest termite of them all. It's the fixed cost of almost everything that runs on the internet.


Jun 16

What we ate (and what we did!) in Praiano & Edinburgh

It was an accidental euro summer, I have no regrets
When you’re planning a vacation and someone sends you a Google Map, you know you’ve won the lottery. AND HELLO! I’ve just returned from a whirlwind trip to Edinburgh and Praiano (well, London then Edinburgh then Naples then Pompeii then Praiano then Rome then Boston…an accidental euro summer), and wow, I did
Justine Doiron ∙ 78 LIKES
Kristen Luiso
What a beautiful guide! We stayed in Praiano and I too was smitten with Kasai and Marina de Praia and the whole Praiano is so much more local and undiscovered than the neighbors it's sandwiched in between vibe. :) Now to get to Edinburgh, and take all your tips along with!
Chloe Walsh
okay now i need to go back to scotland! i love edi sooo much

The Real Test For Consumer’s AI Appetite Is About To Begin.

Apple finally threw its hat in the AI ring with Apple Intelligence. With Apple, Google, Samsung, and Microsoft all releasing their own AI-powered devices, question is: will consumers take the bait?
«The 2-minute version» The world has (im)patiently awaited Apple’s AI plan for over 18 months, and it’s finally here. The result? Investors cheered and Apple shares leapt +10%, adding $250 billion to their market cap, surpassing Microsoft and becoming the largest company in the S&P 500 once again. But will consumer appetite to buy these devices match up …
Uttam Dey and Amrita Roy ∙ 83 LIKES
Dr. Pamela Rutledge
Nice post on Apple and AI. I appreciate the explanation on the misinformation about privacy risk (although recent research suggests that even speculation about potential risk encourages people to believe misinformation.) Still, it's important to keep trying to inject reason and clarity, so thank you. AI adoption is a fascinating race between excitement over innovation to make it actually useful and fear that it will be "too" useful. At least with Apple, the visual design and packaging will be very good.
Diana M. Wilson
Per usual...EXCELLENT. Thank you.

What happened in marketing: IG’s Reels Gift, YouTube Posts & Consumer Confidence 🌵

A lot happened, I mean it: IG’s best updates yet, Pinterest & Snap ads, new retail and airline media launches: 🧃 is ready!
Was there a feature shipping race this week? It felt like it 🏃 , hope you don’t skip any update you or your team should know. Before you go further, Attention is like money–you can waste it or invest it. If you invest it in my paid newsletter, you'll get dividends for years.
Jaskaran ∙ 6 LIKES

iPhone is about to get a lot smarter

Apple Intelligence is on the way...
Thanks for taking a look at my newsletter! Let’s get to it! This was a huge week for Apple as it laid out its plans for AI, err, Apple Intelligence. Yep, leave it to Apple to put their own spin on a common abbreviation. The company held its Worldwide Developers Conference 2024 in Cupertino, and I was there to watch the keynote and get in-person demos of ma…
19 LIKES

Why Has Trump Stopped Attacking Big Business?

In 2016, Donald Trump went after CEOs so often that the Wall Street Journal set up a tracker of stocks whose leaders he insulted. No longer. What happened?
"Who wants open borders? Who wants men playing in women’s sports? Who wants all electric cars?" - Donald Trump, this week at a Nevada rally This week, Donald Trump met with the Business Roundtable, which is the most important business lobby in America. Composed of roughly 200 CEOs of top corporations and private equity funds, many of whom are in the cros…
Matt Stoller ∙ 215 LIKES
Arthur Benson
There certainly seems to be one easy answer to the question posed in your title to this piece: Trump needs their money! He is desperate for contributions both for his campaign and to pay his legal and business debts.
James Livingston
Thanks for this. You're tracking a classic corporatist/syndicalist turn, which informs populism as it drifts rightward, relinquishing its anti-monopoly, anti-corporate (big business) rhetoric and program as it gains in popularity and the CEOs begin to realize they can "do business" with the firebrand. It happened in Italy, then In Germany, ca. 1922-1938, and it's happening now, right here in River City. We tend to forget how anti-capitalist fascist movements were at their inception, and for much of their political-ideological development. Trump's working-class and petit-bourgeois base responds to this dimension of his message; his new constituents on Wall St and in Silicon Valley are more afraid of his social-democratic opponent than they are of Trumps' residual populism.

How Apple, Google, and Microsoft Can Help Parents Protect Children

The case for device-based age verification
Introduction from Jon Haidt: Ravi Iyer first contacted me in 2007 to ask if he could take a questionnaire I had developed (the Moral Foundations Questionnaire) and put it online. Ravi was a graduate student in social psychology at the University of Southern California at the time, and he quickly became a close research collaborator and friend. He created the website
Ravi Iyer ∙ 89 LIKES
Iris
To be honest, I would like to have something like that on my device for ME (adult) as well. So I don’t get bothered by trolls and don’t see content I didn’t ask for pushed in my face regularly :)
Chris McKenna
Thank you, Ravi. Device (operating system)-level verification is the least-restrictive means. Apple and Google hold the keys to child protection, they know millions of kids have their devices, and they have failed in their responsibilities. It's tough at the state level due to interstate commerce constraints, but in partnership with NCOSE, we co-authored SB104 in Utah, the country's first device-level bill: https://le.utah.gov/~2024/bills/static/SB0104.html.

Bootlicking On Spec

AI promoters in media and the arts keep sharpening the blade on the knife that's trying to stab them. Maybe don't do that?
Welcome to The #Content Report, a newsletter by Vince Mancini. I’ve been writing about movies, culture, and food since I started FilmDrunk in 2007. Now I’m delivering it straight to you, with none of the autoplay videos, takeover ads, or chumboxes of the ad-ruined internet. Support my work and help me bring back the cool internet by subscribing, sharing…
Vince Mancini ∙ 37 LIKES
Schnitzel bob
I work in government policy, my department has a team devoted to tech and "transformation," and of course AI is the latest darling.
They did a demo recently to show what it can do. You can enter a prompt and it will write a policy!
But as I told my boss recently, do you know how hard it is to write the actual policy? I can fart one out in an hour. Writing the thing is not the hard part!
Most of policy analysis is figuring out why people aren't implementing policy that's already been written (does it not make sense, is it not possible with current caseloads, are people acting in bad faith, etc). AI won't help with any of that.
The problem is it will probably take ten years of trying to make it work and laying people off before the people who make these decisions give up. I'm sure some fucker in a state or municipal governement somewhere has already drafted plans for getting rid of the people who think about government problems for a living on the belief that AI can do this instead.
Is that belief sincere? I honestly don't know. I'm not sure it makes a difference, although I'm with you, Vince: the people that piss me off the most are the ones that cheerlead how we're all going to get robofucked. They want AI to be Data from Star Trek, instead it's a Sybian duct taped to a mannequin.
Kuato
I write corporate communications for a living. I want to have an open mind. Therefore, on a few occasions, I have asked ChatGPT to provide me with research sources that support a certain claim. It generates a list but when I go to the direct source there's nothing there.
So I ask ChatGPT for the links to the source it provided. Every time I do this the links lead to nowhere. Not even a 404 error. Just a link that does nothing when you click it.
I think the most astute assessment some have made is that AI is "eager to please." Like a hopeful, idealistic, young intern, it doesn't dare tell you "I don't know." Rather, it makes up shit on the spot to save face.
Of course, AI evangelists have wasted no time responding to this legitimate criticism by reminding people that they "need to get better at writing their prompts." That's right, they think the problem is that we've asked the wrong question, not that the answers come up empty.
No matter how many times and ways I think about all of this I keep arriving at the same conclusion, we all just need to go outside more.

Any Way You Can--Ketogenic Diet as a Therapeutic Strategy by Dr. Boz

Profile in Valor with Dr. Annette Bosworth
By Peter A. McCullough, MD, MPH Dr. Annette Bosworth, a board certified internist and expert on the ketogenic diet appeared on our radar screen a few months ago with her online review of the review by Mead et al that concluded the COVID-19 vaccines are not safe for human use.
Peter A. McCullough, MD, MPH ∙ 200 LIKES
Allie
Nature, in the form of food, has some of the best medicine. Some nutraceuticals are quite potent. People don’t realize that much of classic cancer chemotherapy was derived from plants and microorganisms, Taxol from the bark of a yew tree, doxorubicin and daunomycin antibiotics and others. These, obviously, are quite toxic. The parent form of ivermectin was discovered in the soil in Japan. Nicotine from tobacco is showing promise in the treatment of brain cancers, Parkinson’s and other diseases. Nature, indeed, is a great provider.
Franklin O'Kanu
With the obesity crisis and big pharma recommending expensive drugs with side effects, diets like keto and DASH can offer the same effects without the negative side effects: https://unorthodoxy.substack.com/p/the-hidden-struggle-in-health-care

 Apple: AI for the Rest of Us

The big announcements from WWDC explained
Welcome to the Friday edition of How They Make Money. Over 120,000 subscribers turn to us for business and investment insights. In case you missed it: 💻 Microsoft: AI Inflection 🛡️ Cybersecurity Earnings 📊 Earnings Visuals (5/2024) 🤖 NVIDIA: Industrial Revolution
App Economy Insights ∙ 39 LIKES
Beachman
Love this broader take on the Apple AI developments. I could not agree more with everything you said above. Cheers.
John Shelburne
What happens to the electricity grid when 100 million devices send requests to GPU powered servers? Did anyone ask that question at WWDC? This will be a sloookw roll out. Texas will probably be patient zero since a bunch of good ol boys run ERCOT.

Apple + OpenAI Math: Notebook From a Week in Silicon Valley

Thoughts and observations from a week inside (and around) Silicon Valley's tech campuses.
The scene at Apple’s WWDC this week was, in a way, emblematic of the times. The tech giant’s AI announcements were massively hyped ahead of the show. The products themselves were interesting, but not the “next iPhone” some expected. Still, the market loved it,
Alex Kantrowitz ∙ 45 LIKES

Why Did Google Ban Winslow Homer?

The artist's sketches of Confederate soldiers aren't “dangerous or derogatory content"—they're historical evidence.
Claudia Strauss-Schulson has been running Schulson Autographs, which sells historical documents like letters signed by presidents or a doodle by Marlon Brando, for around 15 years. Strauss-Schulson, speaking to me from Millburn, Ne…
Suzy Weiss ∙ 56 LIKES
Mickel Knight
I was given a month's suspension from Facebook for posting unacceptable things. The post? A meme posted on D-day with two pictures. On one side Hitler doing his open-handed salute. The other Churchill holding up the peace sign. The caption was "Scissors beats paper".
Thinking my post must have been flagged by a bot, I appealed. My appeal was denied just a few minutes later. Either my post was never seen by a human, or said human was a complete idiot. I tried elevating the issue but that went nowhere. I was given a month-long suspension. I personally gave Facebook a lifetime suspension.
James Radebaugh
One of Winslow Homer’s most famous paintings depicts a lone black man lying on the deck of a sailboat with a broken mast. The wind and the waves are kicking up, and the boat is surrounded by sharks. The symbolism is obvious. Homer’s sympathy for black Americans is obvious. Winslow Homer is an artist for all Americans to cherish.
If any of the Google coders responsible for Homer’s digital denunciation happen to see these words, know that we see you for what you are. You are small. You don’t understand art. And truth be told, you don’t really like humanity very much, do you?

💰 Hedge Funds' Top Picks in Q1

Google, Amazon and international stocks shine
Welcome to the Friday edition of How They Make Money. Over 100,000 subscribers turn to us for business and investment insights. In case you missed it: 📊 Earnings Visuals (4/2024) ☁️ Amazon: Wild Margin Expansion ⚙️ Semiconductor Titans Visualized
App Economy Insights ∙ 40 LIKES

Google AIO 24

Threats AND opportunities.
A warm welcome to 57 new Growth Memo readers who joined us since last week! Join the ranks of Amazon, Microsoft, Google and 12,500 other Growth Memo readers:
Kevin Indig ∙ 13 LIKES
Ebike Funs
What should be changed about e-commerce SEO?

a really simple meal plan v.11

what to cook this june!
We’re so excited about this month’s meal plan!! It’s packed with beautiful and delicious summer meals that are easy enough to execute any week this month — but also special enough to save for a summer vacation, if you’re looking for a menu for an upcoming beach trip, lake week, etc.
Caroline Chambers and Molly Ramsey ∙ 113 LIKES
Angela Garvin
I can't wait to try some of these!!!
Cameron Patterson
These are some of my favorite WTC meals… the balsamic chicken marinade + dressing is in our regular rotation and I never tire of it!!

How to Build an AI Data Center

This piece is the first in a new series from the Institute for Progress (IFP), called Compute in America: Building the Next Generation of AI Infrastructure at Home. In this series, we examine the challenges of accelerating the American AI data center buildout. Future pieces will be published
Brian Potter ∙ 190 LIKES
Wayne Kozun
Why not build data centers where there is lots of power and cooling is less of an issue due to cold outdoor temperatures - like the James Bay area of Quebec?
Peter Gerdes
I'm kinda surprised at the NIMBY issue. I mean a data center is in some sense the perfect neighbor as they will occupy high value real estate and have virtually no burden in terms of transit nor burden most city services.

What do GenZ software engineers really think?

Young software engineers discuss values, what frustrates them about working in tech, and what they really think of older colleagues. Responses to our exclusive survey.
👋 Hi, this is Gergely with a free issue of the Pragmatic Engineer Newsletter. In every issue, I cover topics related to Big Tech and startups through the lens of engineering managers and senior engineers. To issues like this every week, subscribe: Before we start, I have a small favor to ask.
Gergely Orosz and Elin Nilsson ∙ 169 LIKES
wasteman
Awesome article, that is actually quite timely for me as I work for a large tech company and we had a recent leadership training on "Connecting with Gen Z" as preparation for new grads starting this summer. A lot of what was discussed in this blog post provided the same info, but a few things worth noting that weren't discussed here that I think are relevant.
1. Compared to previous generations, Gen Z feels more anxious and overwhelmed compared to other generations at the same stage in their career. I don't exactly know the cause of this, but it does change the approach I would take in coaching/mentoring considering that this might be how they are feeling.
2. Much of Gen Z started their careers during Covid or in a post Covid world of remote/hybrid work. Many people can attest that human interaction is much more difficult in the remote world than it is in person, making onboarding and learning quite challenging. But one thing I overlooked was that feeling social connection with peers, is a large factor in how well many people learn and improve. The training we were provided also sourced various studies showing that lack of social connection to the workplace was their number one predictor of lack of job satisfaction, and seems to be affecting Gen Z much more than it has with other generations in the post COVID world.
Brian Austin
Interesting insight and worth considering as Gen Z moves into the workplace.
As a parent of a late Gen Z, and future software engineer it’ll be interesting to see how sentiment shifts. No doubt Gen X will increasingly become the annoying old guys. But how will post COVID work practices and an entirely new set of development tools impact this group?
A couple of antidotal examples: A tendency to savor in person events if they are high quality. Flexibility to work from anywhere during a time when they are most productive.
I’m personally very skeptical of tech influencers and it seems like the Gen Z bullshit detector is fairly sensitive. I don’t find personal value in Theo and Primeagen’s content but if it resonates with younger devs I won’t hate on it.
I will say that many younger Gen Z are critical of hype, AI and crypto in particular. It’s just technology and they seem annoyed when older people rave about it.
Above all I believe Gen Z is a hardworking generation that benefited from a lot of changes in the K-12 education system (in the U.S.). Their level and mastery of mathematics is beyond where I was in high school. Likewise, the number of Gen Z that were exposed to programming at a young age via code camps can only help but influence the number of students that pursue computer science related degrees.

All The Life Coaches Have Life Coaches

Notes About Music, Primates, Bedclothes, Eggs And The Future Of The Universe
If you’d like to support my writing by becoming a full annual paid subscriber to this page (which is a little cheaper than taking the monthly rate), I will send you signed hardbacks of my books Villager and Notebook, wherever you happen to be on the planet (if you are far away and would like to assist with postage that’s great but if you can’t afford th…
Tom Cox ∙ 255 LIKES
Helen Sunter
I have to admit to being an inveterate band name maker-upper, the one I'm most proud of is 'Nervous Germans' which I imagine were an 80s synth pop band. My talents also extend to pub names. I'm determined that I shall purchase and retire to a cosy village pub I shall name 'The Pig Tickler's Arms' where customers can indulge in this life affirming pastime whilst quaffing a pint of locally brewed ale. :)
Patris
This kind of post is why I’m here. 🌸