There are few things more depressing than having to deal with companies like Accenture, EY, KPMG etc. It's a world of FUD, upsell, more consultants, nothing getting done, lots of slides, new "junior senior Global Consultant for Microservices" type stuff. They are literally a cancer on innovation and just getting things done.
They destroy the ethos of a company through deliberate intransigence.
I do love a good pint of Guinness. There's something very satisfying about how it looks; the more pronounced flavor than other globally available macro beers, and how it seems easier to have a few more than it would be with other beers.
Yes, it's very interesting that a concept that is now so widely used in general statistics was first used in a brewery. It helps that Guinness is still the best globally available macro beer (imo).
One of those quirky little intersections between mathematics and practical business outcomes.
I haven't been to Boston in 15 years, but I remember it having two very distinct accents when I was there.
There was the very Bostonian Irish accent with rolling R and very soft H. My mother always said Kennedy had it, but I can't pick that up in recordings apart from the use of lots of adverbs and a general flair for speaking.
The other is distinctly WASPish. It's the New England received pronunciation style. It's more Yankee.
With the same skepticism you should treat any technology that has lots of VC investment, sounds cool, has concepts that people initially don't understand, and will attract every sort of vulture that has finished picking off the blockchain/ICO/NFT/defi carcass.
Did your 2017 ICO not work out? Were you a little late to the NFT party? Now is your opportunity to get involved in the extremely profitable world of AI!
vBulletin, hilariously awful moderation, arguments over signature sizes, cliques, random outages, people who had just got DSL posting images that ruined the experience for posters still on dial-up.
Great times. The internet feels so banal these days.
That's a good question, and I cannot really give you a coherent answer tbh. I just find Windows to feel more modern. I suppose a few examples are:
Snap/Windows Management in macOS is a pain.
Using Brew as a package manager isn't exactly a wonderful experience.
The taskbar feels pretty ugly and dated - that little dot, and then having both the top and bottom bar in play just feels outdated.
Even having to use Parallels is a bit of a pain - build a hypervisor into the OS.
I'm the furthest thing from a designer, and I understand that Apple went with a different UI paradigm. It's just starting to feel a bit left behind. It's still my daily driver though.
They destroy the ethos of a company through deliberate intransigence.