(no title)
flurie | 1 year ago
The introduction does not clearly state the problem, leaving us to understand that the topic is the "recession and crisis" from the title. But the United States is not experiencing a recession, and "crisis" is never defined.
Then we learn that 50 interviews of many different types of C-levels took place over seven months, but we aren't told which seven months, and we don't have any information from the interviews other than interview fragments. We don't even have broad topics, let alone an interview script, so the script could have been asking questions about the weather for all we know.
In-between information shared alongside pull quotes is a lot of editorializing, with lines like "There is no denying that the technology industry, for at least a decade, was seen as a symbol of stability and continuous development." I do not see Information Technology as synonymous with "the technology industry" more broadly.
hoxel|1 year ago
As for the book - it's hard for me to say, but I'm not convinced that the author is trying to sell us anything. Especially since, as you can see, the website doesn't have it yet. But if you switch to the Polish version (because the author is from that country, I think) you can see that the book is published for free and you can optionally donate money to some organization (I think taking care Bleeding Disorders).
flurie|1 year ago
The other word used was "crisis," and my criticism is that the word is broad and never defined.
My usage of the word "sell" is more similar to "persuade" and is a valid definition[2].
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recession#Definitions
[2] https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/sell
aagha|1 year ago
What collapse!?
By the end of the week, the market was down less than 2%.