The problem with Kodak was the market most people who bought film were casual family photo types which they thought they could replace with cheap point and shoots that people would still go to drug store to print….and then the iPhone happened and all that was left was the pro market that Nikon, canon, and later Sony catered to.
That being said , it is interesting to see how Intel did not learn from the lessons of BlackBerry / Nokia / Blockbuster . They rested so heavily on their laurels while ignoring where people and the market were moving, even though it was cost to everyone else. Their latest problem might not be the final nail in the coffin, but it’s hard to tell if they’re not jumping in it on purpose.
It's interesting that Leo has finally allowed open comments on RUclips videos. With the engagement algorithm, he could've had over 1 million subscribers if he allowed comments from the beginning.
@@twit Which large YT channels pay people to moderate their comment section? The belief that you need moderators is correlated with why you don't have more subscribers and the reason you can't afford to maintain the TWiT studio. The comment section drives engagement/views which = more $. I understand why you have moderators on your own platforms but worrying about comment moderating on platforms where you are simply the content creator is delusional.
None. The people would need to be Twit employees like myself. I believe you are making broad assumptions. Unmoderated comments will and do turn into trash fires without moderation, which no one sees or has knowledge of scale unless they are actually moderating it. Ask me how I know:)
I can relate to Alex's comment about print media not getting it early on about moving to the web. Some 17 or 18 years ago I was laughed out of a PHP developers forum for suggesting it wasn't wise to only encrypt HTML forms during the POST or GET but that the whole thing ought to be done over an encrypted channel.
Intel spends more on R&D than AMD, nvidia, AMD TSMC combined. They arent failing because they lack innovation, they are failing because the transition to manufacturer leadership over the next couple years is killing their profits, requires workforce cuts because they will essentially be a different company, and requires patience for profitability because production takes time to ramp up
They're failing because they can't produce functional chips at even 10nm. I very much doubt they'll be leading anything, irrespective of how many new fabs they have.
The problem with Kodak was the market most people who bought film were casual family photo types which they thought they could replace with cheap point and shoots that people would still go to drug store to print….and then the iPhone happened and all that was left was the pro market that Nikon, canon, and later Sony catered to.
Bruhhh this is right on TIME. Meltdown on Twitter right now
That being said , it is interesting to see how Intel did not learn from the lessons of BlackBerry / Nokia / Blockbuster . They rested so heavily on their laurels while ignoring where people and the market were moving, even though it was cost to everyone else. Their latest problem might not be the final nail in the coffin, but it’s hard to tell if they’re not jumping in it on purpose.
It's interesting that Leo has finally allowed open comments on RUclips videos. With the engagement algorithm, he could've had over 1 million subscribers if he allowed comments from the beginning.
Why were comments turned off?
We would have also needed a small paid army to moderate the comments of a million subscribers as well:)
@@twit Which large YT channels pay people to moderate their comment section? The belief that you need moderators is correlated with why you don't have more subscribers and the reason you can't afford to maintain the TWiT studio. The comment section drives engagement/views which = more $. I understand why you have moderators on your own platforms but worrying about comment moderating on platforms where you are simply the content creator is delusional.
None. The people would need to be Twit employees like myself. I believe you are making broad assumptions. Unmoderated comments will and do turn into trash fires without moderation, which no one sees or has knowledge of scale unless they are actually moderating it. Ask me how I know:)
I can relate to Alex's comment about print media not getting it early on about moving to the web. Some 17 or 18 years ago I was laughed out of a PHP developers forum for suggesting it wasn't wise to only encrypt HTML forms during the POST or GET but that the whole thing ought to be done over an encrypted channel.
Intel spends more on R&D than AMD, nvidia, AMD TSMC combined. They arent failing because they lack innovation, they are failing because the transition to manufacturer leadership over the next couple years is killing their profits, requires workforce cuts because they will essentially be a different company, and requires patience for profitability because production takes time to ramp up
They're failing because they can't produce functional chips at even 10nm.
I very much doubt they'll be leading anything, irrespective of how many new fabs they have.
This is why Tesla is doing much better than the big three. Will they wake up in time to fix the problem or go the way of Kodak.