tomofhyrule wrote: »I’m waiting for this bubble to burst.
AI is unprofitable. The only reason everyone (or at least all of the tech bros) is throwing so much money in the dumpster fire that is AI is that it might eventually not be unprofitable. It’s completely propped up by potential.
Sam Altman has even said his costs are astronomical right now. And eventually, someone will have to pay them.
I foresee all of these AI things eventually going the way social media did:
- Wow, you mean we can say whatever we want to the entire internet? This is awesome!
- Oh, we need a lot of servers to hold all of this data so people can post pictures and thoughts.
- Oh, servers are expensive. Data storage is expensive. How can we make money?
- Maybe an optional subscription so our most valued users will get some little benefit, and then we can get some income.
- Oh, that’s not enough. And if we charge everyone, then they’ll leave. Maybe we can put in an ad. One ad. A tiny one. Nothing major.
- Ok, maybe one more ad.
- And another.
- Oops, all ads.
- Oh, and it’s affecting kids’ development and actively reducing peoples’ IQ and ability to socialize.
- Wait, that’s not a problem. They’ll just need to use it more! Can we add in anything to make it even more addictive?
- Oh, and we’ll also sell all of this data to the highest bidder since we have so much and everyone has spilled their guts.
- Profit!
- (Also let’s also pay off some sleazy lawyers and pseudoscientists so they can ‘prove’ we’re not destroying the environment. But AI needs that water more than those stupid humans, amirite?
It won’t be long before you ask ChatGPT to write your English paper and it’ll be like “Sure, I can get that. And since you’re so good at saving time by having me write your paper, you can also save time cooking by grabbing a nice Big Mac! Mmm, I’m Loving It!™️”
And then when you submit it without proofreading, your teacher wonders why you’re got a line in there reporting on Tom Sawyer’s trip to Starbucks to try their new Matcha Pumpkin Spice Latte.
The vast majority of people hate AI everything. It’s hard to find anything outside of ‘kicking puppies’ that has this negative of a reception. But since the rich people stand to make more money on it, they want it. And they’re shooketh that we unwashed masses aren’t lapping it up like good little peasants.
[snip] AI. Burn it all down.
So that's probably why she was chosen over Sarah Bond, daughter of a CEO and Harvard MBA graduate.
So that's probably why she was chosen over Sarah Bond, daughter of a CEO and Harvard MBA graduate.
Wikipedia also says that Sharma has a business degree from the Carlson School of Management. Is that really that different than Sarah Bond's MBA from Harvard? I think what matters more is the blurb in Wikipedia about how Sharma started playing video games only in 2026 so that she could "learn and understand" gaming.
You see, someone who already "understands" gaming would probably understand that, for a player, a MMO is a long-term investment. They would understand that players are not likely to invest time and money in a MMO if they aren't sure that this world will continue to be around and thrive. And that's not something that you learn from a business school; that's something you understand by being a player.
Other than the tragedy of all these wonderful people losing their gigs, this point you make is what concerns me the most. It's a tale as old as time, of course:
We need a new Captain for the flagship of our navy, sir! Let's choose someone who has never been to sea!! Or even rowed a canoe on a backwater creek! What could go wrong?
https://youtu.be/Kfao1s3Tiek We need a new Captain for the flagship of our navy, sir! Let's choose someone who has never been to sea!! Or even rowed a canoe on a backwater creek! What could go wrong?
14 layers of management is more layer than the military, that is insane,LootAllTheStuff wrote: »If you'd kept reading, they would have opened wide at this bit:Today, in some parts of the company, work passes through as many as 14 layers of management.
That is some insane management bloat right there, and explains a lot about MS decisions over the last while. I suspect that Zenimax was never that bad. At least, I hope not!

Other than the tragedy of all these wonderful people losing their gigs, this point you make is what concerns me the most. It's a tale as old as time, of course:
We need a new Captain for the flagship of our navy, sir! Let's choose someone who has never been to sea!! Or even rowed a canoe on a backwater creek! What could go wrong?
Freelancer_ESO wrote: »karthrag_inak wrote: »khajiit has to wonder why they purchased these studios to begin with.
My impression was that Microsoft wanted to turn gaming into a subscription service similar to what Netflix has done with tv shows and movies.
this may be unpopular but the eso team did not deserve better.
this may be unpopular but the eso team did not deserve better. The game, a flagship franchaise, was neglected for years and years with low quality generic updates sold as full cost games. There were multiple poor decisions from management especially in regards to the combat system and the generic updates. Once it was stabilized after a poor reception launch it was managed as an afterthought a couple of expansions in.
Thats not to say people didnt work hard at it, but for a world class franchiase eso achieved only mediocrity when it could of ( and should of) been great and thats on the management of this game and the designers. They took few risks and this is unfortunately the reward for playing it safe. Now we see that making some money isnt enough. These types of products have to excel and stand out.
there are an endless number of elder scrolls fans but eso could not reach or retain them. Im actually suprised it made it this far. All things considered 10+ years is a major accomplishment with this management style. This industry has killed itself with lack of innovation and endless bloat.
this game relies on microtransactions to survive, but microtransactions are no longer popular, if they ever were. It was a good call to let this die on its own to make way for es6.
karthrag_inak wrote: »khajiit has to wonder why they purchased these studios to begin with.