Seems like every week by Friday it feels obvious what the biggest news of the week will be, and then just as reliably as the sun sets once a day, there is something equally as interesting, culture changing and newsworthy the very next day.
As a writer, it makes it hard to narrow in on one singular story to tell week after week. As a human, it’s incredibly hard to keep up with the constant whiplash and challenge of focus. It’s too much. What we “older” adults are feeling right now — the discomfort and ongoing feeling of being just a little tired from all the stuff that’s happening around us but in our faces all the time — that’s been there for our kids’ entire lives.
(For clarity, I say “older” because I am a part of the last generation that experienced being a teenager without the internet.)
Here’s the thing — everything we are experiencing right now, it’s all happened before. Maybe it took place in our parents’ or grandparents’ time, maybe a few generations before that. Definitely not with the internet and social media and bots and AI, but the impact to decision making and outcomes — yes.
The campaign-defining “Daisy” commercial from the 1964 Lyndon B. Johnson v. Barry Goldwater presidential election, for example, reached into homes with their newly minted televisions and incited people in an entirely new and triggering way that represented the turning point for that election.
Spoken over an image of a nuclear bomb going off from the inside of a beautiful little blonde girl’s eye, an ominous voice says “these are the stakes to make a world in which all of God’s children can live or go into the dark. We must either love each other or we must die. Vote for President Johnson on November 3rd. The stakes are too high for you to stay home.”
Sound familiar?
So when on Thursday afternoon as my team and I were heading home from a business trip in Denver, we didn’t know it then, but a few massive bugs were just about to be released from both Microsoft and CrowdStrike that would take down airlines, banks and about 1% of Windows machines around the world (and the Starbucks app, apparently).
We experienced delay after delay after delay and finally around 3 a.m., our final team member made it home to Rochester, New York. What we were experiencing was a Microsoft Azure outage that started at 2:56 p.m. pacific time and “had widespread consequences, including the grounding of hundreds of flights from major aviation firms like American Airlines, Delta Airlines and United Airlines” as reported by TechRadar.
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And then, just hours later at around 10 p.m. pacific, CrowdStrike said “hold my beer” and had an IT outage so big that it showed us the promise that Y2K never delivered.
Let’s put on the back burner that Microsoft got a hall pass for its outage because CrowdStrike’s was so incredibly spectacular. As Mike Martin, lead IT site administrator at STERIS, recounted, “I started seeing the pattern and every IT manager, including directors and CIOs, has been up since then.”
A few days later, Microsoft released a USB drive solution that would let IT teams recover machines faster. Yes, a USB drive. But hey, let’s put aside that humans had to (and have to) manually reboot each machine to get it to work after a third-party software with kernel access took down Fortune 100 infrastructure. And let’s put aside that a mere 1% of Windows servers having the “blue screen of death” can take consumer life to such a devastating halt.
Have you ever seen a hand-written boarding pass?
Let’s instead talk about how the CEO of CrowdStrike, George Kurtz, was the chief technology officer at McAfee on April 21, 2010, when they had a similarly spectacular and preventable IT outage. Hospitals, schools, police departments and major corporations also had significant downtime due to an avoidable release bug that forced Windows machines into a continuous reboot cycle.
Sound familiar?
Back to elections. Coincidentally, there has been at least one other time where an incumbent U.S. president has stepped down as the Democratic candidate, and of particular interest here is, again, Lyndon B. Johnson. Johnson stepped down and supported his Vice President Hubert Humphrey’s 1968 campaign for president of the United States due to the Vietnam War’s increasing unpopularity. Humphrey won the Democratic nomination but lost to Richard Nixon in the general election. And we all know what happened next.
Does the story already told tell the story that is yet to come? Only time will tell.
Annie Tsai is chief operating officer at Interact (tryinteract.com), early stage investor and advisor with The House Fund (thehouse.fund), and a member of the San Mateo County Housing and Community Development Committee. Find Annie on Twitter @meannie.
Thanks for your column today, Ms. Tsai. Speaking of sounding familiar, remember when Obama, running on “hope and change” made the American people want hope and change from Obama and complicit Dems’ divisiveness and increased racial divide and outcomes? And we all know what happened next – President Trump Made America Great Again. The hope and change that Obama and Dems couldn’t achieve was achieved by Trump. Now we have treasonous Biden and an end to his disastrous leadership of America Last policies, again supported by complicit Dems.
Does the story already told tell the story that is yet to come? Only time will tell. We all have a choice. We can vote for President Trump to Make America Great Once Again or we can choose to keep America Last with whoever is the Dem candidate. The Dem face may change but their policies won't.
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Thanks for your column today, Ms. Tsai. Speaking of sounding familiar, remember when Obama, running on “hope and change” made the American people want hope and change from Obama and complicit Dems’ divisiveness and increased racial divide and outcomes? And we all know what happened next – President Trump Made America Great Again. The hope and change that Obama and Dems couldn’t achieve was achieved by Trump. Now we have treasonous Biden and an end to his disastrous leadership of America Last policies, again supported by complicit Dems.
Does the story already told tell the story that is yet to come? Only time will tell. We all have a choice. We can vote for President Trump to Make America Great Once Again or we can choose to keep America Last with whoever is the Dem candidate. The Dem face may change but their policies won't.
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Keep the discussion civilized. Absolutely NO personal attacks or insults directed toward writers, nor others who make comments.
Keep it clean. Please avoid obscene, vulgar, lewd, racist or sexually-oriented language.
Don't threaten. Threats of harming another person will not be tolerated.
Be truthful. Don't knowingly lie about anyone or anything.
Be proactive. Use the 'Report' link on each comment to let us know of abusive posts.
PLEASE TURN OFF YOUR CAPS LOCK.
Anyone violating these rules will be issued a warning. After the warning, comment privileges can be revoked.