“No, you don’t want to have to compare yourself to that”

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2023 Resolution

In 2023 I’d like to upgrade my game to: “you’re sure as cuss not gettin’ any worse.”

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Everything is a tool, one that keeps you employed at current compensation levels, hopefully

GPT and my own career trajectory

👆

Tyler continues his embrace for The AI. it opens up new ways of working for writers (and “creators”) across the creation lifecycle: inspiration, structuring, writing, and re-harvesting additional content (talks, articles, etc.). This positioning is something like embracing the automation and productivity that The AI brings and using the freed up time and resources to do something “more valuable.” The hard part is finding what they “more valuable” is and making sure it doesn’t lower your revenue and overall power. I mean, I don’t think automation or globalism helped factory workers that much.

Still, I agree with him if only for my own survival. That position is overly dramatic - most of us will “be fine,” as people like to say. Like so many of my peers, I like technology for itself, and I like tools for figuring out new and interesting things to do and ways to do them.

The selfish question here is “how can I use The AI to make my work better, to make me more valuable.” The troubling question is “what types of work will The AI make obsolete or totally valueless/cheap.”

For example, it looks like voice over work for audio books is under attack. Rather, the humans who do now are under attack. I suspect writing copy for websites and glossy PDFs are under attack (again, what I actually mean are the people who do that work). A lot of journalism too.

As a nerd, I get excited about what technology can do, but as a human, I’m often tired of trying to find “more value.” I’m a big believer in reaping the value of work already done, stopping the capitalist quest to constantly grow and improve.

Related: The web will be full of (good enough) text from the AIs. To maintain your human edge, be more weird (or “unique”) and talk with other people IRL more.

I’ve spent a lot of time this year helping out with our annual conference, SpringOne. It’s January 24th to 26th. If you’re a developer, doing operations, DevOps tooling and platform engineering stuff, or an executive in charge of getting better at software, you’ll get a lot of useful info.

My Content

ENGAGE WITH MY BRAND.

  • Five Strategies to Control Cloud Costs - I go over exactly what the title says giving a nudge on how to start putting together a strategy. The most helpful insight from the Thought Leaders last year was that your application architectures drive a lot (most of?) your cloud costs. Developers may not have really (had to) think too much about what their decisions cost.

  • Should I Start a Podcast?, Software Defined Talk #395 - great episode from two incredibly experienced podcasters on doing podcasts. If you have any notion of starting a podcast, you’ll get everything you need to start here. There’s a lot, but as the title says, the answer is that you should do one. I’m not on this one.

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Wastebook

  • “Sloppy dead.”- “He’s completely lost his mind.”

  • “I know a better hiding place. Come.”

  • “liminal incivility” here.

  • This 1899 TV show is a sort of triumph of what we used to call “foreign movies.” There’s a lot of languages way beyond English, and you need to subtitles. Spanish, French, German, English, Danish (but then the subtitles label shifts to Norwegian), Cantonese, Japanese.

  • “nesting and vesting” here.

  • “I’m just not in the know, so I wouldn’t know.” Overheard somewhere in Austin.

  • American wine is so syrup-y.

  • “It irked him to think that art - he did believe in art - could turn into just another thing to make people feel stupid.” -Mouth to Mouth, Antoine Wilson

  • And: “There are two kinds of idiot in this world, Jeff. Those who hope for the best, and those who prepare for the worst. I am neither.”

  • Improvement is a young person’s game.

  • Americans are bonkers for any beer that’s not a lager. They love IPAs. I don’t really want to drink a log, I prefer a lager.

  • “We tend to survive whether we want to or not.” Merlin.

Act your take, not the value you create for others

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Your Coworkers Are Less Ambitious; Bosses Adjust to the New Order, Apple News link.

A long piece on “acting your wage,” full of interviews and surveys.

In a November survey of more than 3,000 workers and managers by software firm Qualtrics, 36% said their overall career ambitions had waned over the past three years, compared with 22% who said their ambition had increased. Nearly 40% said work had become less important to them in the past three years, while 25% said it had grown more important, according to researchers at Qualtrics, which provides software to businesses to evaluate customer and employee experiences.

My take, “ambition for what?”:

  1. It seems like half of the people are still interested in being “go-getters.”

  2. I mean, if you’re not getting paid for work, you’re getting ripped off.

  3. With the huge wealth inequality gap (and gender/class/etc. gaps), management has obviously been taking money from all these “go-getters” who’ve been working for free and handing their cash (or “value” in the form of share price) over to the wealthy…so…yeah?

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