My current company (and other companies from speaking to colleagues) are all requiring employees to do some AI "lunch and learn" or AI "share out" or AI "show and tell".
It's meeting inflation, a weekly meeting where each employee has to add an item to a doc and talk about it. And every employee has to take part, even if they have nothing.
So half the employees just come up with some BS: "Uhhh I tried this Claude Code skill I hadn't tried before...", "Read this article about X...interesting, may be what's coming in the future..."
I work at MSFT and can concur. It’s dystopian that this is industry wide. It’s just stat padding tbh, things that people can bring up during their performance discussions, oh hey I ran this AI initiative, wrote a bunch of markdown files, that had..what impact exactly ? Never mind.
Don’t even get me started on the meaningless meetings that make The Office seem like a serious drama.
This is propaganda that appears to be intended to sway you towards “stretching the truth” about how bad the tool is, to your coworkers, by exploiting your fear of “being left behind” and desire to “be ai forward”
Haha funny that they have this grassroots kit. I would have imagined that they'd need more of a "How to adopt Claude at your company" for execs. I wonder how today's sensibilities would intersect with how we used to spread Firefox use in the pre-web-standards era. Certainly the common then trick of installing Firefox and changing the icon to IE's would probably not fly.
This Scientology-ass blog aligns startlingly well with my hypothesis that certain tech workers (including CEOs like Dario Amodei and Satya Nadella) are excessively enamored with LLMs because of a fundamental spiritual emptiness and ignorance.
Imagine calling yourself a "Champion" and dispensing nuggets of wisdom like this:
>> When a colleague asks how you accomplished something, the most useful response is the prompt you actually used. They will learn more from running that prompt against their own problem than from any description you could write, and it gives them something they can act on immediately.
Colleague: How did you get it to find that race condition?
Champion: I asked, "The test in @tests/scheduler.test.ts is flaky, figure out why," and it traced two unjoined promises in the scheduler. Try the same phrasing on your test.
People quickly became too embarrassed to call themselves "prompt engineers." I don't think anyone is jumping at the bit to be the office Claude Champion.
This reminds me of how brands can get people to buy a t-shirt with a logo on it. The customer is paying or in this case, working, to advertise the brand.
I am that person. I found the 'secret' stickers in Claude Code and bought some so I could have a little holographic glittery Claw'd sticker on my laptop. It still (mostly) makes me smile when I see it.
I have no idea what this Champion Kit is, and it looks grotesquely corporate (and I guess, "enterprise"). I'm stunned that people would ever need to be told "When a colleague asks how you accomplished something, respond with the actual prompt you used". I work for myself, so maybe I just don't encounter people who would need to be told this?
This makes me want to deliberately not mention Claude if I'm helping someone. I want people to gain from the general tool category, whichever LLM they use, and to be able to think for themselves how to apply it and extend it. Not "type in this exact prompt in this exact box to get this non-exact non-deterministic response".
The most effective response is rarely to argue the general case. Instead, acknowledge the concern, offer a brief reframe, and propose one concrete demonstration on the person’s own code. Most concerns are resolved by a single successful experience.
First of all, Google didn't have to write this stuff about Kubernetes, suggesting psychological tricks and magic demonstrations to cajole people into agreeing with you. Kubernetes was happy to discuss the general case - I don't like k8s and don't think they had a bulletproof argument, but they offered a pretty good one. What Anthropic is doing here is very very weird. I said "Scientology" earlier and I was not kidding.
Part of the reason LLMs have led me to tear out so much of my own hair is how many people seem to have made it through four years of STEM college without developing any scientific thinking ability whatsoever. A truly stunning number of people have been wowed by "a single successful experience." Actually that section is full of horrible logic:
Concern
"I am faster without it."
Suggested response
That is likely true for code the person writes routinely. Suggest trying it on the work they tend to avoid: legacy files, unfamiliar services, or test scaffolding, where the leverage is highest.
Evidence to offer
Time one tedious task both ways and compare.
This isn't just unscientific and manipulative: it's really goddamn annoying! If someone times me at 1.5 hours reading about and learning an unfamiliar service, and smugly says Claude learned it in 12 seconds of "thinking," either my laptop or a certain Claude Champion is getting thrown out the window.
Hahaha sell our product for us for no compensation!
I sense these AI companies getting desperate. Could it be that the public seem to hate AI? Could it be that they are making huge losses?
I'm being an anti champion, pushing back on my managers bullshit claims that AI can do everything, and my message is getting through to my coworkers. More and more doubt about the message they are getting from leadership is creeping in.
Don't let idiots in leadership who are just building their resume as an "AI manager" convince you your hard earned skills are useless now. Your skills are worth so much! Don't let them atrophy!
> Hahaha sell our product for us for no compensation!
It’s a pretty good tactic given there’s been an army of loons consistently claiming “AGI next year” since GPT-3 and white knighting these companies so readily available.
> Share what you discover
Hate this
My current company (and other companies from speaking to colleagues) are all requiring employees to do some AI "lunch and learn" or AI "share out" or AI "show and tell".
It's meeting inflation, a weekly meeting where each employee has to add an item to a doc and talk about it. And every employee has to take part, even if they have nothing.
So half the employees just come up with some BS: "Uhhh I tried this Claude Code skill I hadn't tried before...", "Read this article about X...interesting, may be what's coming in the future..."
I work at MSFT and can concur. It’s dystopian that this is industry wide. It’s just stat padding tbh, things that people can bring up during their performance discussions, oh hey I ran this AI initiative, wrote a bunch of markdown files, that had..what impact exactly ? Never mind.
Don’t even get me started on the meaningless meetings that make The Office seem like a serious drama.
You too can become an unpaid salesperson for the AI products we claim will replace you.
How many pieces of flair is the minimum?
This is propaganda that appears to be intended to sway you towards “stretching the truth” about how bad the tool is, to your coworkers, by exploiting your fear of “being left behind” and desire to “be ai forward”
Haha funny that they have this grassroots kit. I would have imagined that they'd need more of a "How to adopt Claude at your company" for execs. I wonder how today's sensibilities would intersect with how we used to spread Firefox use in the pre-web-standards era. Certainly the common then trick of installing Firefox and changing the icon to IE's would probably not fly.
So the actual grassroots stopped happening because engineers would feel embarrassed proposing CC now, so they we adopt astroturd as the real grass?
Not even landscaping companies do that :D
Holy cow this is weird
It's a little funny how they feel the need to do this now. Anthropic's rise in popularity felt like it was more organic than this.
This Scientology-ass blog aligns startlingly well with my hypothesis that certain tech workers (including CEOs like Dario Amodei and Satya Nadella) are excessively enamored with LLMs because of a fundamental spiritual emptiness and ignorance.
Imagine calling yourself a "Champion" and dispensing nuggets of wisdom like this:
>> When a colleague asks how you accomplished something, the most useful response is the prompt you actually used. They will learn more from running that prompt against their own problem than from any description you could write, and it gives them something they can act on immediately.
People quickly became too embarrassed to call themselves "prompt engineers." I don't think anyone is jumping at the bit to be the office Claude Champion.This reminds me of how brands can get people to buy a t-shirt with a logo on it. The customer is paying or in this case, working, to advertise the brand.
I am that person. I found the 'secret' stickers in Claude Code and bought some so I could have a little holographic glittery Claw'd sticker on my laptop. It still (mostly) makes me smile when I see it.
I have no idea what this Champion Kit is, and it looks grotesquely corporate (and I guess, "enterprise"). I'm stunned that people would ever need to be told "When a colleague asks how you accomplished something, respond with the actual prompt you used". I work for myself, so maybe I just don't encounter people who would need to be told this?
This makes me want to deliberately not mention Claude if I'm helping someone. I want people to gain from the general tool category, whichever LLM they use, and to be able to think for themselves how to apply it and extend it. Not "type in this exact prompt in this exact box to get this non-exact non-deterministic response".
Providing the talking points for useful idiots who want to make themselves and others unemployed [1] is quite something.
Anthropic has always been astroturfing everywhere and now they make it explicit. In the way of marketing it is probably more evil than xAI and OpenAI.
[1] Or at least replace a reasonable profession with a dystopian and wasteful way of plagiarizing software.
Getting back to this....
First of all, Google didn't have to write this stuff about Kubernetes, suggesting psychological tricks and magic demonstrations to cajole people into agreeing with you. Kubernetes was happy to discuss the general case - I don't like k8s and don't think they had a bulletproof argument, but they offered a pretty good one. What Anthropic is doing here is very very weird. I said "Scientology" earlier and I was not kidding.Part of the reason LLMs have led me to tear out so much of my own hair is how many people seem to have made it through four years of STEM college without developing any scientific thinking ability whatsoever. A truly stunning number of people have been wowed by "a single successful experience." Actually that section is full of horrible logic:
This isn't just unscientific and manipulative: it's really goddamn annoying! If someone times me at 1.5 hours reading about and learning an unfamiliar service, and smugly says Claude learned it in 12 seconds of "thinking," either my laptop or a certain Claude Champion is getting thrown out the window.Hahaha sell our product for us for no compensation!
I sense these AI companies getting desperate. Could it be that the public seem to hate AI? Could it be that they are making huge losses?
I'm being an anti champion, pushing back on my managers bullshit claims that AI can do everything, and my message is getting through to my coworkers. More and more doubt about the message they are getting from leadership is creeping in.
Don't let idiots in leadership who are just building their resume as an "AI manager" convince you your hard earned skills are useless now. Your skills are worth so much! Don't let them atrophy!
> Hahaha sell our product for us for no compensation!
It’s a pretty good tactic given there’s been an army of loons consistently claiming “AGI next year” since GPT-3 and white knighting these companies so readily available.
I can do it, but where are the details of affiliate program?
Presumably they will somehow compensate me for shilling them like this?
Do the work for us...
claude code with MCP https://kubeez.com -- seedance 2
[dead]
the emperor's new clothes are so beautiful, can't you see?
Tupperware party, when?
Reminds of this for some reason (Simple Sabotage Field Manual): https://www.bbc.co.uk/worklife/article/20171211-the-world-wa...
Yeah, not a cult at all.
Is it just me or does this give the "ick"?
Propaganada
lol what's in it for me?