Why are you so angry about her ability to generate revenue? I dont like the values she promotes, but clearly there is a market that really responds to her. Learn from her dont hate.
Because tech isn't an industry any more, it's part of mainstream culture, and thus tech "news" has to be watered down or diluted to suit the mainstream audience, hence tech "news" segments being filled with celebrity news and opinion pieces on how evil the industry is because men got into it first.
I attended the Dublin Web Summit[1] recently where talks were given by industry giants including Peter Thiel, John Sculley and many more [2]. It also included a talk by Eva Longoria which amounted to a bizarre and comparatively unsubstantial interview about the life of a celebrity and yet the same tech media reported it as the highlight of the week. Indeed it was the most tweeted about talk of the entire event.
So this is the direction mainstream tech culture is going in, and as tech remains "cool", and being a "geek" remains a quirky attribute people stick on their Twitter profiles, we can expect much more of it to come.
B. “That chick” is quite successful, plus people actually like that game, you know. Even if you really dislike free-to-play what she does is no more morally repugnant than what many startups do.
I love ideas that are popular topics, that are have a null intersection with things programmers care about. It is much easier for me to be successful as a mediocre programmer.
When I was learning to code iOS, my learning project was Kim Kardashian themed app called "Tap a Dash". I gave up because I wasn't really skilled enough, but became skilled enough to make progress on an actual work project.
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[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 19.1 ms ] threadYeah... No thanks to Blackberry.
http://nypost.com/2014/10/28/kim-kardashian-loves-her-blackb...
Is there anything this chick won't do for a buck?
And why does the tech segment even give a crap?
Because tech isn't an industry any more, it's part of mainstream culture, and thus tech "news" has to be watered down or diluted to suit the mainstream audience, hence tech "news" segments being filled with celebrity news and opinion pieces on how evil the industry is because men got into it first.
I attended the Dublin Web Summit[1] recently where talks were given by industry giants including Peter Thiel, John Sculley and many more [2]. It also included a talk by Eva Longoria which amounted to a bizarre and comparatively unsubstantial interview about the life of a celebrity and yet the same tech media reported it as the highlight of the week. Indeed it was the most tweeted about talk of the entire event.
So this is the direction mainstream tech culture is going in, and as tech remains "cool", and being a "geek" remains a quirky attribute people stick on their Twitter profiles, we can expect much more of it to come.
1. http://websummit.net/ If you haven't already heard of it
2. http://websummit.net/speakers Speakers list
B. “That chick” is quite successful, plus people actually like that game, you know. Even if you really dislike free-to-play what she does is no more morally repugnant than what many startups do.
When I was learning to code iOS, my learning project was Kim Kardashian themed app called "Tap a Dash". I gave up because I wasn't really skilled enough, but became skilled enough to make progress on an actual work project.