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I don't know about others, but because a lot of IT news comes to me from American medias, I _always_ consider it hype. The reason is cultural: american can't seem to do without superlatives. They didn't eat good carrots yesterday, there were AMAZING carrots. They don't introduce me to their friends, but to their VERY BEST friends. They are always EXCITED to do X and SO something about Y. The result is that none of those words have any value anymore. Louis C.K had a very good bit on that. And then you add agenda, ads, and geek bias toward the new, and you got a recipe for over hype for pretty much everything (NoSQL all the things, Microservice all the things, PWA all the things, SPA all the things, OOP all the things, FP all the things, rust all the things, typescript all the things, etc). So yes, my default assumption is that stuff on HN are over hyped (although interesting), until proven otherwise. |
Americans always phrase their questions as, "What's the BEST pizza?" or "What's the BEST sushi?"
As if they would die (or could even tell the difference) if they had the fourth or tenth best option in the city instead.
And if you recommend a place too expensive or too far away it becomes immediately clear they don't actually want the best.
All they actually want is a decent place to eat at a moderate price level.
But as Americans they can't say that. They have to pretend they deserve nothing but the BEST.