top | item 35601714

(no title)

dub | 2 years ago

When I worked at Google back in the day, we used to make dollar bets all the time. You'd tape the signed dollars you won to your monitor.

A willingness to take pride in your work and to not take it too seriously when smart, well-intentioned people make mistakes (e.g. blameless postmortems) is part of the culture difference that led to Google's engineering becoming so exceptional and innovative vs the more corporate, don't-rock-the-boat, fear-driven culture that the traditional businesses had at the time.

discuss

order

aflag|2 years ago

The second paragraph seems at odds with the first. I'd describe a culture where people are making bets on whether or not you can find a bug in someone else's work is the opposite of blameless. I'd consider it quite hostile, to be honest. Specially if it's something that management is actually ok with.

I'm assuming you were at google in late 90s/early 2000s?