idkwhattocallme 12 hours ago

I wonder if the callousness is a consequence of generational experiences. Hundreds of years ago, Europe was once like the US. It had hype manias (tulips). But perhaps they had enough of them where they stopped believing. The US is much younger and we're now in just our 3-4 meta hype cycle. Though in the last 10 years they seemingly have accelerated in tech (SaaS, SoLoMo, Crypto, AI). I wonder if over time that hype will wane. I do agree with DHH here that VC is the gas that keeps the engine going.

mustache_kimono 13 hours ago

> Most Europeans are allergic to anything that even smells like a commercial promise of a better tomorrow. "Hype" is universally used as a term to ridicule anyone who dares to be excited about something new, something different. Only a fool would believe that real progress is possible!

I think this article has the right tack: Anti-hype hate is almost as infuriating as the hype. And some amount of hype needs to exist for new things to breathe. Right wingers in the US used to say: let Europe decay gracefully, with its cynical, jaundiced view of everything American, the US has more in common with East Asia, and in some important cultural respects, like this examination of "hype", that is dead right.

  • gjvc 13 hours ago

    "right tack"

    • webstrand 12 hours ago

      Not to be confused with "right track" but having nearly the same meaning. <https://www.dictionary.com/browse/on-the-right-tack>

      • gjvc 12 hours ago

        Certainly not "right tact" but you go ahead and downvote. It's like you didn't even read it.

        Next you'll be telling me what "revert" means.

        • webstrand 7 hours ago

          Ah you're being sarcastic about the topic, not pedantic about spelling. I misunderstood, it's really not clear in text.