← Back to context

Comment by bitpush

1 day ago

[flagged]

A charitable view is that they intended "ideas that I had germinating for decades" to be from their own perspective, and not necessarily spurred inside Google by their initiative. I think that what they stated prior to this conflated the two, so it may come across as bragging. I don't think they were trying to brag.

I don't find it rude or pretentious. Sometimes it's really hard to express yourself in hmm acceptable neutral way when you worked on truly cool stuff. It may look like bragging, but that's probably not the intention. I often face this myself, especially when talking to non-tech people - how the heck do I explain what I work on without giving a primer on computer science!? Often "whenever you visit any website, it eventually uses my code" is good enough answer (worked on aws ec2 hypervisor, and well, whenever you visit any website, some dependency of it eventually hits aws ec2)

FWIW, I interpreted more as "This is something I wanted to see happen, and I'm glad to see it happening even if I'm not involved in it."

  • That's correct. I can't even really take credit for any of the really nice work, as much as I wish I could!

  • Could be either. Nevertheless, while tone is tricky in text, the writer is responsible for relieving ambiguity.

    • It's also natural language though, one can find however much ambiguity in there as they can inject. It hasn't for a single moment come across as pretentious to me for example.

      Think of all the tiresome Twitter discussions that went like "I like bagels -> oh, so you hate croissants?".

From Marx to Zizek to Fukuyama^1, 200 years of Leftist thinking nobody has ever came close to say "we can fix capitalism".

What makes you think that LLMs can do it?

[1] relapsed capitalist, at best, check the recent Doomscroll interview

Yeah it comes off as braggy, but it’s only natural to be proud of your foresight

  • Natural? Sure. Deserved? Not really, not unless we’re also forthcoming in our lack of foresight and the times we plainly got it wrong.