Holly and Ewan Are Working On It Podcast
Some technologies fail not because they don't work, but because the world never quite wants them, or because the bill simply never makes sense. In this episode Holly Joint and Ewan MacLeod use a striking month of tech news as a jumping-off point to ask what it really takes for a technology to survive, and why even brilliant, well-funded ideas end up in the graveyard. The numbers do a lot of the talking. Holly walks through the staggering economics of OpenAI's Sora video tool, burning enormous sums daily in operating and inference costs while its lifetime revenue came in at a tiny fraction of that. People made memes; almost nobody paid. Set against Meta's reported $70-80 billion poured into the metaverse over five years, the contrast is instructive: Sora was shut down fast, while the metaverse limped on for years under the weight of sunk-cost thinking before anyone was brave enough to call time. That bravery becomes a quiet theme. Knowing when to stop, both hosts agree, is one of the hardest things a company can do, and there's something admirable in the decision to write off a beloved bet. The conversation broadens into a tour of the technology graveyard, Google Glass, which demanded a behaviour change people never accepted, and Concorde, technically magnificent and much loved but never viable. Ewan's affection for Concorde is genuine; he argues we are poorer as a society without it, even as he shrugs at Sora's passing. Not every dead technology is mourned equally. Underneath the news sits a sharper observation: the ability to build something is not the same as people wanting it. Holly returns to a smart fridge she saw prototyped back in 1997, a technology that exists today yet still has barely any adoption, because people don't actually want their fridge ordering the milk. The metaverse, she argues, has the same problem. The technology was never the obstacle; societal and user adoption was. Tellingly, the one place the hosts see real uptake is gaming, with Ewan describing his own children's enthusiasm for VR headsets and games like Job Simulator, a long way from Zuckerberg's vision of a virtual social future. The episode also touches on the wider competitive picture, the perception of Claude as the serious, enterprise-grade choice while OpenAI burns cash chasing consumer attention, and the difficulty of finding hard data to back any of it up. But the closing note is generous rather than cynical. We need the dreamers, the hosts conclude, and the willingness to make big, bold bets that will sometimes fail, because that aspiration is part of what makes us human. Key Topics * The brutal economics behind Sora's rapid shutdown * Sunk-cost thinking and Meta's multi-billion metaverse bet * The courage required to write off a major project * A tour of the tech graveyard: Google Glass and Concorde * Why building a technology doesn't guarantee adoption * The smart fridge problem: capability versus genuine demand * VR finding a home in gaming rather than work * Claude's enterprise perception versus OpenAI's consumer focus
21 episodes
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