Silicon F…! Valley

It’s a podcast from France Culture that introduced me to Arte’s new series, Silicon Fucking Valley. I’ll take two sentences from it: “Stories that are sometimes well-known but always necessary to recall in order to participate in our digital culture and allow everyone to be able to decode our connected world a little” and “I had a little more trouble with the sometimes frenetic pace of the episodes, which are stuck in 15 short minutes. A voice-over, very present, which accompanies the viewer a little too much, who would sometimes benefit from breathing to find the time to construct their own thoughts. The writing follows the recipes of videos published on social networks whose objective is to capture attention.”

And I want to add, without, I hope, coming across as the grumpy one, that the series is sometimes lazy due to its inaccuracies, even if of little importance:
– why say that the Stanford campus (7km2) is a third of the area of ​​Paris (which is 100km2)?
– why say that the diplomas of this university are awarded on the Quad when they are rather awarded in the stadium where Steve Jobs made his famous speech (1st article of this blog)?
– why say that the tuition fees amount to $80,000 when they are $65,000 already (forgetting to add that at the Master’s level, I think that a majority of students have a scholarship or a sponsor…)?
– why say that the Computer History Museum is in Menlo Park when it is in Mountain View?

If we forget these details and this frantic pace, then, yes, there are some very interesting things. You will discover Luc Julia and Adam Cheyer at the origin of Siri from SRI (check CALO), a startup sold to Apple for “$200M according to the rumor” and which did not leave me with very good memories because EPFL should have gotten a bigger piece of the pie during that sale. Julia is right, it was crap. The F… word is appropriate!

You will also discover Curious Marc. It may also remind you of what the “Mother of All Demos” was (with a strange acronym). And more seriously, the recent evolution with GAFAs. Here are two illustrations: the number of acquisitions of each actor and the amount of fines paid in Europe and the USA.


It’s also about Venture Capital and mythical San Hill Road

And despite all the nonsense, to say the least, of the founder of Tesla, the series confirms what I had discovered a few years ago about the demographics of parking lots: The University-based Startup Porsche Principle. Or is it the Tesla Principle?

But the most touching episode remains the 6th on the wealth gap, “for one tech developer, there are six poor people who clean, serve in cafeterias, provide security, drive Google buses” and have the choice between driving 6 hours a day or sleeping in a tent or a camper van on the side of the road. The title is then telling, Silicon Fucking Valley.

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