>he thing is, Dropbox is done (as in feature complete)
Dropbox is "done" but Dropbox didn't employe 2700 people just to work on dropbox.
They toyed around with other services, weren't as gamebreaking as dropbox, and in hard times (not necessarily for their business) they deided to just abandon those other experients or products. This isn't some "the job is done" scenario, it's "we're hunkering down for the storm that we pretend isn't happening out loud" scenario and people are still falling for the idea that "the economy is soaring". It's disgusting.
>It is "good" that the excess labour is freed up to go work on the next "building".
sadly there is no "next building" in these times. When everyone is "feature complete", you just have a purge, not a new opportunity.
>Software will undoubtedly go that way eventually.
given the 3rd wave of attempting to outsourcce large software out, and the AI bubble, I don't think companies are ever going to truly appreciate proper mature software. Just the bare minimum to pretend the machine is running until the next CEO deals with the fire.
Dropbox is "done" but Dropbox didn't employe 2700 people just to work on dropbox.
They toyed around with other services, weren't as gamebreaking as dropbox, and in hard times (not necessarily for their business) they deided to just abandon those other experients or products. This isn't some "the job is done" scenario, it's "we're hunkering down for the storm that we pretend isn't happening out loud" scenario and people are still falling for the idea that "the economy is soaring". It's disgusting.
>It is "good" that the excess labour is freed up to go work on the next "building".
sadly there is no "next building" in these times. When everyone is "feature complete", you just have a purge, not a new opportunity.
>Software will undoubtedly go that way eventually.
given the 3rd wave of attempting to outsourcce large software out, and the AI bubble, I don't think companies are ever going to truly appreciate proper mature software. Just the bare minimum to pretend the machine is running until the next CEO deals with the fire.