Miami – January 7, 2025
Welcome to the dawn of a new era in tech commentary, where bullshit meets its match and mediocrity gets shown the door. I’m Ray Di Marzio, and I’m here to perform CPR on what was becoming the beige sweater vest of this tech-blogs.
Let’s cut through the corporate jargon and get real for a moment. This blog was drifting dangerously close to becoming yet another echo chamber of press releases and polite nods to whatever shiny new gadget the tech giants decided to birth into our already overcrowded digital lives.
Not anymore.
Starting 2025, we’re implementing some changes that might make your browser do a double-take: First, we’re going full English. Not the Queen’s English, not Silicon Valley English, but raw, unfiltered, tell-it-like-it-is English. Why? Because when you’re calling out tech industry nonsense, you need a language that can reach every corner of this interconnected circus we call the internet.
The Italian archives? They’re staying exactly as they are. Consider them like that classic vinyl collection in your basement – pure, untouched, and authentically vintage. We’re not here to rewrite history; we’re here to shape its future.
What you can expect: All new content will be exclusively in English, including our signature analysis pieces, industry takedowns, and those moments when a company’s marketing department clearly had one too many espressos before writing their press release.
Think of this as your front-row seat to the tech industry’s theater of the absurd, now broadcast in English to ensure no ridiculousness gets lost in translation.
For those wondering why me, why now? Simple. The tech world needs someone who isn’t afraid to point out that the emperor’s new neural network is actually naked. That’s where I come in.
This isn’t just another tech blog – it’s your backstage pass to the real conversations we should be having about technology, innovation, and the occasional corporate fever dream being sold as the next big thing.
Welcome to the revolution. Leave your marketing buzzwords at the door.
P.S. To our Italian readers – don’t worry, the attitude translates perfectly.