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Joined 10 months ago
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Cake day: November 13th, 2023

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  • Common language used to dismiss bad decisions like this:

    • We need to track and meet our metrics for the quarter
    • Engagement for $FEATURE is down, so we have to take measures to get people to take notice
    • It’s opt-in/opt-out, so it’s the right thing to do
    • It’s only a one time thing and then the system remembers1 what the user selected
    • Only new users are affected - our power users will put up with it
    • It’s just a minor inconvenience, really
    • It’s just a website

    1 - Oh, did you turn off cookies or clear your cache? Sorry about that.




  • It has been pretty depressing to me that the tech literate have been so easily lulled into accepting such things in the name of “cool toys” and “security” virtually everywhere in modern life besides the PC/laptop/server spaces.

    From my exposure to supporting said folks with PC related problems, its easy to see the reality here. Phones provide a streamlined experience with zero frills. They don’t want super flexible computing devices, they want appliances. More to the point, the level of care and maintenance needed to have a top-shelf PC experience is time and effort most people would rather not expend. Doing this right was inconvenient to begin with, and left the field wide open for anything that would be easier.



  • Think about it like a diamond-encrusted mouse.

    Oh good grief. Do they really think they can adopt the subscription-for-heated-seats model, and get people to use their high-end computer peripherals as some kind of flex? I just don’t see people holding their “Logitechtm Gamer PC Lease” over anyone else’s head.

    My optimism has me thinking that this CEO is deliberately tilting at windmills in order to appease shareholders, because Logitech has been around long enough to be steady-state (not growing much) at this point.


  • It’s gotta piss them off.

    That’s not unusual, sadly. Sometimes, someone brings in a contractor in attempt to foist change, as they’re not tainted by loyalties or the culture when it comes to saying ugly things. So anger and disruption is the product you’ve actually been hired to deliver; surprise! What pains me the most here is when I see my fellow contractors walk into just such a situation and they wind up worse for wear as a result.

    Edit: the key here is to see this coming and devise a communication plan to temper your client’s desire to stir the pot, and get yourself out of the line of fire, so to speak.