@wtrmt ZERO consequences. It’s astounding.
@wtrmt ZERO consequences. It’s astounding.
@Daojoan the unsaid part is that these are the majority.
@Daojoan "don't dent other peoples' universe"
said no technology luminary, ever.
@Daojoan it's like that for academic grant funds too. Strong emphasis on being innovative, no funding for long-term continuous monitoring of things, even though the datasets those produce are far more valuable than flash-in-the-pan whatever's-trendy.
@Daojoan I once did a contract with a Seattle s/w company, happy there until I overheard the president say "I love selling software! You can ship broken software, charge them to come 'troubleshoot', and charge them again for a newer version. Repeat!"
I closed the contract, walked away.
@Daojoan it's overlooked work, but it's what I professionally do in higher education information technology. Keep systems operating for hundreds of thousands of users.
@Daojoan the top expression of this destructive tech bro language has been DOGE.
It is really eye opening how walking that talk can destroy institutions, and people’s lives without consequences for the perps.
@Daojoan I feel this in my bones. The only indispensable employee of my massive uni was for the longest time the ancient COBOL dev who maintained our homegrown student information system. For decades, seriously. No one will be as important to the institution as that guy ever again. (Which I fear is part of the point.)
@Daojoan I feel this in my bones. The only indispensable employee of my massive uni was for the longest time the ancient COBOL dev who maintained our homegrown student information system. For decades, seriously. No one will be as important to the institution as that guy ever again. (Which I fear is part of the point.)
@Daojoan Words that are used in a society are very telling indeed.
But… conservationists? It’s in the name. Librarians, maintainers… they exist. It’s just that they are valued less (found boring) than innovators under all different names
@Daojoan Robert MacFarlane, nature writer in "Is a River Alive?" 2025 gives us the words to animate rivers in promotion of the global movement to recognize rivers similar to the status of corporations. Macfarlane explores how modern industrial language treats a river as a "resource" (a thing to be used), whereas many Indigenous and emerging legal frameworks treat it as a "relative" or "person." Magpie River (Canada)
@Daojoan the balancers
@Daojoan
which is particularly odd in a time when people who call themselves ‘conservative’ are in the political ascendance...
@Daojoan
Move slow and repair things.
@Daojoan great article. It feels like too much in our modern world is falling apart from lack of maintenance, from public infrastructure to core parts of our democracy. We definitely need people to do the hard work of maintenance.
@Daojoan duh, because there is no big profit margins in it.
Tech companies struggle with simple IT support tasks, even when receiving lots of money they can't be bothered to engage because "opportunity cost" says someone is trying another crypto coin and they should be first to pick it up to short it high.
Society somehow understands that maintenance is important but this not a question you will see be driven politically 🤷♂️
This overheated world, however, means we cannot try to keep existing things from falling apart when so many of the things that we have in here I’m talking about infrastructure and modes of production cannot operate in the environment, the global financial and industrial core has created.
I do not use the word “we” because it is not what the majority of people asked for and because we are only allowing the options they produce, we are forced to choose.
..