Archives February 2023

Amazon: Amazon changes back-to-office policy: Read CEO Andy Jassy's email to employees
Amazon: Amazon changes back-to-office policy: Read CEO Andy Jassy’s email to employees

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It’s time to return to the office for Amazon employees. The employees of the ecommerce giant have been asked to work from the office at least three days per week starting May 1, according to an email sent by CEO Andy Jassy. The email has also been posted on the company’s blog. In October 2021, the company said that it was up to individual team leaders to decide their in-office policies. Amazon joins companies like Apple, Walmart and Disney in announcing back-to-office policy. It is likely that other technology giants too will make return to office mandatory in the coming days.
Here is the full memo from Jassy to Amazon employees:
It’s hard to believe, but it’s been nearly three years since the pandemic began, and we recommended that all our employees who were able to work from home do so. We subsequently updated guidance a few times, with the last guidance (in the second half of 2021) being that Director-level leaders would decide for their teams where they’d work, and we’d experiment for the next chunk of time.
Because the pandemic lasted as long as it did, we were able to observe various models—some teams working exclusively from home, some in the office full-time together, and many flavors of hybrid—over a meaningful period of time. S-team listened to employees, watched how our teams performed, talked to leaders at other companies, and got together on several occasions to discuss if and how we should adjust our approach. The guiding principle in these conversations was to prioritize what would best enable us to make customers’ lives better and easier every day, and relentlessly invent to do so. Our respective views of what we thought was optimal evolved as the pandemic wore on and then eased.

Here are a few things we observed:
– It’s easier to learn, model, practice, and strengthen our culture when we’re in the office together most of the time and surrounded by our colleagues. It’s especially true for new people (and we’ve hired a lot of people in the pandemic); but it’s also true for people of all tenures at Amazon. When you’re in-person, people tend to be more engaged, observant, and attuned to what’s happening in the meetings and the cultural clues being communicated. For those unsure about why something happened or somebody reacted a certain way, it’s easier to ask ad-hoc questions on the way to lunch, in the elevator, or the hallway; whereas when you’re at home, you’re less likely to do so. It’s also easier for leaders to teach when they have more people in a room at one time, can better assess whether the team is digesting the information as intended; and if not, how they need to adjust their communication. Of course, there will be plenty of meetings that will have significant virtual participation, but having more in-person interactions helps people absorb the culture better. Our culture has been one of the most critical parts of our success the first 27 years, and I expect it will be in our next 27+ years as well. Strengthening it further is a top priority for the s-team and me.
– Collaborating and inventing is easier and more effective when we’re in person. The energy and riffing on one another’s ideas happen more freely. In the more productive brainstorm sessions I’ve been a part of over the years, people get excited and blurt out new ideas or improvements to prior proposals, quickly advancing the seed of an idea, and leading to the broader group getting energized and feeling that it’s onto something. This rapid interjecting happens more often in-person because people feel less inhibited about jumping in or even interrupting sometimes. This interjecting happens less frequently in virtual calls because it blocks out all speakers when it transpires. Also, teams working on new ideas often find that a whiteboard enhances the group understanding and iterating. And, a lesser-known fact is that some of the best inventions have had their breakthrough moments from people staying behind in a meeting and working through ideas on a whiteboard, or walking back to an office together on the way back from the meeting, or just popping by a teammate’s office later that day with another thought. Invention is often sloppy. It wanders and meanders and marinates. Serendipitous interactions help it, and there are more of those in-person than virtually
– Learning from one another is easier in-person. Being able to walk a few feet to somebody’s space and ask them how to do something or how they’ve handled a particular situation is much easier than Chiming or Slacking them. Even though people can use the instant message function, people just don’t do it frequently. This apprenticeship and learning model has been the primary reason a lot of companies who’ve returned to the office have done so. We have a lot of functions and roles where learning from peers is very useful and critical. And, our newer employees, especially those who have joined us in the past few years, stand to be most disadvantaged by not having the learning and mentorship opportunities from peers that many of us who joined much earlier had. Making sure employees develop and grow in the company is not only obviously important for them and their careers, but also critical to our ability to deliver for customers and the business.
– Teams tend to be better connected to one another when they see each other in person more frequently. There is something about being face-to-face with somebody, looking them in the eye, and seeing they’re fully immersed in whatever you’re discussing that bonds people together. Teams tend to find ways to work through hard and complex trade-offs faster when they get together and map it out in a room.
These are just a few examples, but they’re important ones with respect to our overriding priority to deliver for customers and the business. And ultimately, they’ve led us to conclude that we should go back to being in the office together the majority of the time (at least three days per week). We made this decision at a s-team meeting earlier this week, and for a number of reasons (including the adjustments I know will be required for some of our employees), I wanted to share with you as early as I could even though we haven’t worked out all the execution details yet. Of course, as there were before the pandemic, there will still be certain roles (e.g. some of our salespeople, customer support, etc.) and exceptions to these expectations, but that will be a small minority. We plan to implement this change effective May 1.
It’s not simple to bring many thousands of employees back to our offices around the world, so we’re going to give the teams that need to do that work some time to develop a plan. We know that it won’t be perfect at first, but the office experience will steadily improve over the coming months (and years) as our real estate and facilities teams smooth out the wrinkles, and ultimately keep evolving how we want our offices to be set up to capture the new ways we want to work. I know people will have questions about how this change will be implemented. We’ll be finalizing those details in the coming weeks, so please check Inside Amazon for those updates.
I’m also optimistic that this shift will provide a boost for the thousands of businesses located around our urban headquarter locations in the Puget Sound, Virginia, Nashville, and the dozens of cities around the world where our employees go to the office. Our communities matter to us, and where we can play a further role in helping them recover from the challenges of the last few years, we’re excited to do so.
I know that for some employees, adjusting again to a new way of working will take some time. But I’m very optimistic about the positive impact this will have in how we serve and invent on behalf of customers, as well as on the growth and success of our employees.
Andy



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Two characters in Arrested Development look shocked in season 5 of the Netflix show
Arrested Development is leaving Netflix for one of its big streaming rivals

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Update: Don’t fret, UK-based fans of Arrested Development, for the acclaimed sitcom has found a new streaming home.

Revealed in a Disney Plus press release, the fan-favorite series will be available to stream on Disney Plus UK from Wednesday, March 22. However, users will only have access to Arrested Development‘s first three seasons. Clearly, Netflix doesn’t want to sell the rights to the show’s final two seasons, which it developed in-house. The first three seasons on Arrested Development are already available on Hulu for US audiences to enjoy. 

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Dell XPS 13 laptop on pink background with
Dell Presidents’ Day sale: save up to $500 on XPS, Alienware, and Inspiron laptops

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The Dell Presidents’ Day sale has officially landed for 2023, with a range of awesome laptop deals at the official Dell store. We’ve been busy rounding up our favorites here at TechRadar, and we’ve got some fantastic recommendations to share.

As you’d imagine, there are Presidents’ Day laptop sales that cover all budgets today (Dell has a huge selection, after all), and we think that these are collectively some of the best deals we’ve seen at the site since Black Friday. Here are our top picks:

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Tim Cook unveils Mac Pro in 2019
Mac Pro 2023: It’s now or never, Apple, your customers are waiting

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On March 8, 2022, the Mac Studio, then Apple’s most powerful computer ever, was introduced, leaving many Mac Pro users slightly befuddled and confused. Even more so when Apple’s senior vice president of Hardware Engineering, John Ternus, teased a new processor for the ‌Mac Pro‌ on stage at that event, saying “just one more product to go: ‌Mac Pro‌, that’s for another day.” (via MacRumors (opens in new tab)).

Could a Mac Pro launch happen within the next few weeks? We’re not so sure, despite the publication of four recent patents (via Appleinsider (opens in new tab)) that tackle the issue of third party GPU support while skirting around the other ones (system memory expansion, third party accelerators etc). Appleinsider is quick to note though that “Apple does apply for patents constantly, and there is no guarantee that even granted patents will lead directly to products. Plus patents might be applied for years before Apple can use them.”

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Samsung Galaxy Watch 5 Pro and projector
The Samsung Galaxy Watch 6 might include a secret built-in projector

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Samsung has filed a strange new patent for a Samsung Galaxy Watch. After coming out with the Samsung I8530 Galaxy Beam, a phone with a built-in projector attached, Samsung is working on a Samsung Galaxy Watch with a smaller built-in multimedia projector.

It might not be top of your wishlist when selecting the best smartwatch (or best cheap smartwatch), but it looks like a cool feature nonetheless. Spotted by GSMArena (opens in new tab), the projector is said to be able to “beam information from the outer side of its housing onto the back side of the user’s hand”. This could include the time, like a bedroom projector clock, or even “broadcasts and multimedia content”.

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Orlando Bloom and Cara Delevigne in Carnival Row season 2
7 new movies and TV shows on Netflix, Prime Video, Apple TV Plus and more this weekend (February 17)

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For all the talk of Netflix, Disney Plus and HBO Max being the ‘big three’ of the streaming world, this week’s crop of TV recommendations is dominated by shows from Prime Video, Apple TV Plus and Paramount Plus.  

Original Apple drama series Hello Tomorrow! arrives alongside new seasons of Star Trek: Picard and Carnival Row on Paramount Plus and Prime Video, respectively, while Apple TV Plus also gets a star-studded new movie in the form of Sharper. Surprisingly – and for the first time since we’ve been running these weekly lists – there are no new headline-grabbing titles worth highlighting on Disney Plus or HBO Max.

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Handsome boy wearing formal shirt is watching far away. Digital interface with hologram with circle diagram with binary code on white background. Concept of modern technology and metaverse
ChatGPT is only 2 months old, but has a brain of a 9-year old

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ChatGPT, which is now built into Microsoft’s Bing search engine, has gained significant interest in the last few weeks, and we can’t see that waning any time soon. As more people flock to clog up servers on ChatGPT, and Microsoft works through the millions-long waiting list for Bing AI, we’re learning more about what the artificial intelligence-powered chatbot is capable of. 

Michal Kosinski, a professor at Stanford University, has decided to put ChatGPT to the test, by putting different versions of the chatbot through ‘theory of mind’ tasks designed to test a child’s ability to look at another person in specific situations and understand what’s going on in that person’s head. Basically, these tests help evaluate a child’s ability to understand another person’s mental state and use that to explain or predict behavior. 

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Magnifying glass enlarging the word
New “Swiss Army Malware” can develop more threats than ever before

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The days of specialized malware are slowly coming to an end, as modern variants are being designed to be able to do many things and carry as many features as possible, new research has claimed.

A report from Picus Security analyzing more than 550,000 real-world samples found that “Swiss Army knife malware” – multi-purpose strains capable of performing all kinds of actions, is on the rise. 

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best crossplay games: Minecraft character stand on top of a cave that creepers spill out of
Microsoft’s AI ambitions are coming for your Minecraft obsession

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It seems that Microsoft is dipping its toes into other fields with its AI technology, specifically the gaming kind if a new report is to be believed.

According to an unnamed source from Semafor (opens in new tab) and reported on by Neowin (opens in new tab), Microsoft may be planning on developing a new AI model with the task of allowing gamers to control their characters and tasks using natural language. This feature was reportedly showcased during an internal Microsoft meeting.



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Bill Gates stands on stage with the Windows XP logo shown behind him
Microsoft’s unused logos for Windows XP are delightfully weird

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Though the logo for the much beloved Windows XP is now considered iconic, it could have ended up looking a lot differently.

Windows XP introduced the 3D spin on the classic OS logo back in 2001, but according to Creative agency Frog Design and reported on by CreativeBloq, that spin could have easily been a complete revitalization of the logo. Creative director Casey Potter stated that Microsoft came to them wanting an outside perspective for its next OS’s logo.

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