Only Netflix content is worse than their algorithms. I've completely stopped surfing the platform and stick to my own watchlist or search for specific movies based on the recommendation lists out there.
You're right. Meghan appears to have been treated worse than PC.
My understanding is that there is an overall negative image of PC, but he does not constant coverage, so that helps his case I guess.
unsolicited advice- please pertain work to a desk/ one place of the house, and not spread it to the entire house.
This can help restrict resentment to that one spot and not your entire place.
I think while Robinhood has benefited more users by giving them a cheaper way to access stock markets, users still feel betrayed, everytime such news gets out, especially after GME.
This perhaps could have been averted easily if Robinhood clarified their mechanism.
But in reality, their modus operandi has been to work with the big hedge funds and brokers.
As a consumer, it has served me well to explore every new city by checking out top rated eateries on yelp. I hope they sort their business out with restaurants. Their relationship should be pretty symbiotic.
I have not attended any bootcamps myself but r/datascience and other similar forums seem to indicate that bootcamps are useless.
Especially with your PhD, I think an overview course like the one offered by Andrew Ng will get you upto speed. You can add others like AWS certification, Tableau etc.. based on your needs/jobs you're applying to.
finally someone said it out loud. It is so hard to even get a call if you do not go through a referral.
Hard to say it is a google problem as the pool they can access is one of the biggest in the world.
interesting counterpoint, but from what I see on forums, candidates who want to get into Google are very deep into leetcode prep, so I am expecting there is a good chance for them to get in.
Very interesting analogy but not a good equivalence IMO.
Soil and rotation are pretty standard in that the best permutations are already known, unless you want to experiment something new.
Websites do not have such known standards- a crappy looking amazon website works better than most UI experts would suggest.
It makes sense when you put it that way. Still beats me how there isn't a regulation on this. Manually over-speeding vs being able to let my car drive itself at 100mph does not make sense.
To me, Google seems like a company completely run by engineers, and perhaps these techies in their silos compete so much, that they do want to "integrate" their stuff with broader teams.
Like say, Waze team does not want it's features integrated into GMaps.
How else is there so little order? A complete opposite of Apple it seems.