Comment by ChipopLeMoral
1 day ago
Back when I was a Googler, I used to play a little game where I would think of a random word and then check if there was a Google internal project code named for it. It was a bit hard finding stuff that wasn't some system or project, and often there would be multiple ones. I actually found one that I thought would be a nice name and reserved the go link for it, but naming anything after it never panned out, when I finally got to design a system from scratch my manager wanted a boring descriptive name like "consolidated data system" (it was a bit more specific but that was the vibe).
Side note: I noticed that more "boring" and less sexy projects had cooler names a lot of the time, and my theory was that people were compensating for doing unsexy work.
I reserved go/poop years ago, but the ability to name a project with that name is diminishing
What happens to your go links when you leave Google?
This one is still up. I just checked it. I was underwhelmed by where it linked to.
Google eats their own with names. Their latest and greatest AI framewofk is Agent Development Kit (ADK). Not to be confused with the Android Development Kit...
Can't wait for Google to announce a humanoid robot project called "Google Android"...
I remember a comment on here years ago from someone in GCP who mentioned that they did not control the "Cloud" namespace. So any VP could launch a new project and call it cloud something and make people very confused about why it wasn't showing up in the cloud dashboard and API.
At least the internal name of that kit is a cool name. So we should blame the Cloud marketing people who likely don't know about Android since they're Cloud people.
Try being Microsoft and having two different LLM products and an entire office suite named Copilot.
Please no more "Project Espresso" nonsense that is entirely meaningless to anyone reading this.
Pick a descriptive name. Everyone else who is not in your team will thank you.
An alternate take that I tend to agree with:
https://medium.com/better-programming/software-component-nam...