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A kind of ancillary note, but it's amazing to me how fragmented this presentation and documentation is:

* the parent link is to storage.googleapis.com

* There's documentation on ai.google.dev

* The announcement blogpost is https://blog.google/technology/developers/gemma-3/

* you try it on https://aistudio.google.com/

It's helpful to have a top-level post like this, but can some PM please consolidate this into, IDK, ai.google.com/gemini?



Apparently ai.google.com currently redirects to ai.google, which is different from ai.google.dev where the Gemini stuff actually is.



I don't see how this actually matters - who cares if it it's different top level domains?


Two reasons it matters:

1) Discoverability

2) "System structure mirrors organization". I.E., it's an indicator of a fragmented and disorganized structure that's not likely to produce cohesive product results.


> System structure mirrors organization

You listed:

- one static pdf file stored on a CDN

- one company blog static website

- one developer documentation static website

- one interactive product URL

As much as I like to dunk on how messy things can be at Google I don't think this is a really good example. Apart from small startups I would be scared if you served all of them from the same base host.


The many domains is a problem because it suggests a many-teams approach to product development, and the more cooks in the kitchen, the more likely a repeat of Gemini 1’s rollout, which was a mess [0]. Basically I’m looking to see that Google cares about the meta-level user experience of finding, understanding, and using its products, and scattering key usage details around the internet is not a good sign. It suggests deeper process problems if a simple issue like this either didn’t get noticed or can’t get fixed.

[0] https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2024/mar/08/we-defini...


> "System structure mirrors organization"

Conway's Law is the general term for this concept https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conway%27s_law




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