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Post: Serious Mood and Fewer Perks: Silicon Valley Enters Its Hard Tech Era

Serious Mood and Fewer Perks: Silicon Valley Enters Its Hard Tech Era


San Francisco: In tech news, The New York Times explores why Silicon Valley has entered a hard tech era. Veteran tech reporter Mike Isaac explains the ideological shift happening today. A decade or so ago, Silicon Valley was dominated by Web 2.0 – consumer internet businesses like music streaming and photo sharing – famous for its counterculture vibe with colorful beanbags, free meals, and flexible schedules. That era is now mostly ancient history. Today, tech is more hardware-focused and serious; perks are fewer, hiring has slowed, and employees work under closer scrutiny. The political landscape has shifted too, moving toward a socially conservative stance combined with an anti-government approach to business regulation.



According to France24.com, plastic pellets, also called mermaid tears, are deliberately small to ease transport and are classified as primary microplastics, used in products ranging from single-use water bottles to televisions. Often released en masse from industrial sites via pipes or land spills, these pellets accumulate on coastlines and riverbanks worldwide. In the EU alone, around 184,000 tonnes of plastic pellets escape into nature each year. One particularly devastating incident occurred in 2021 when a cargo ship sank near Sri Lanka, releasing 11,000 tonnes of industrial plastic into the sea. The environmental impact was severe – sea turtle eggs were crushed beneath the weight of the plastic debris. As these pellets travel, they attract toxic chemicals on their surfaces, which are then ingested by fish and crustaceans, entering the food chain and ultimately affecting larger animals and humans.



Former CNN journalist Jim Acosta has sparked debate after releasing an interview with an AI avatar of Joaquin Oliver, a young man killed in the 2018 Marjory Stoneman Douglas school shooting. Acosta, who once had his White House press credentials revoked by Donald Trump, posted the video on his X account yesterday. The Guardian reports the video was created by animating a real photograph of Oliver with generative AI. In the interview, Oliver – wearing a beanie – is seen responding to questions about his death, though his movements are unnatural and jerky. The AI interview was made to commemorate what would have been his 25th birthday and was conceived by his grieving parents to raise awareness about gun violence. However, the project has drawn criticism for choosing an AI avatar instead of featuring living survivors.