|
|
|
|
|
by jrochkind1
1510 days ago
|
|
I work in academic libraries. At the point Google Books and Google Scholar (two things that were relevant to my work) were being developed or very new, maybe 10 years ago now, I could actually talk to Google engineers about questions on how I could/should best integrate on my end, or problems or bugs (I did find some, that the google contacts agreed were). (It's true that cooperation from libraries/academic sector was something Google needed to succeed there too, to some extent). Two years later... forget it. There was no way to get anyone's attention or a response about anything. This includes actual bugs and problems. It was pretty clear to me then that there was nobody driving the bus on these projects anymore. There had been excited invested smart people around for the development, but once the thing seemed stable... there didn't seem to be anyone around at all anymore? I started to notice that this was how things worked at Google generally -- after a new product was deployed, there seemed to be simply nobody around anymore with the time and interest to act on bug reports, or talk to external partners, or just care at all. Without having at that time heard anything from inside the walls, that became my theory of how things worked at Google -- everything is abandonware. So, yeah it's visible. |
|