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by fxtentacle 301 days ago
He's a bit sensationalist, yes, but I am thankful that he saved us from buying affected Intel CPUs.
4 comments

He's a "student" and friend of late Gordon Mah Ung. He's carrying his torch forward.

This was Gordon's style, and Steve is continuing it. He has the courage to hit Bloomberg offices with a cameraman, so I don't think his words ring hollow.

We need that kind of in your face, no punches held back type of reporting when compared to "measured professionals".

Absolutely - this is the sort of direct citizen journalism I expect (sort of hope?) we'll see more and of as traditional investigative journalism dies its slow death.
Yes. When he's right, he's right. However the main issue I have with GN is how Steve tends to go full Leeroy Jenkins pitchforks and torches for 9 out of every 5 actual scandals in the tech industry.
When it comes to interpersonal drama, the "Shoot first, ask questions later" style of reporting is terrible. However, for consumer advocacy it's basically the opposite, especially because in most cases it's easy for companies to turn the narrative around by simply handling the issue well. It's almost more about how they handle it than the actual issue in many cases.
I felt the same way, but over time I have come to respect those with the Crusader personality archetype, we need these people to do their thing and they need us to balance them out.
Not sure of sensationalist or just doing great reporting. I take him as one of the last good tech journalists on the platform.
GN wasn't the first to break the story the 13/14th gen was defective. The thousands and thousands of users experiencing the issues collectively noticed pretty quick. If anything, there was a period where he was saying "We've talked to Intel but we won't say anything yet until they do."