The man behind the Big Tech comics – with Manu Cornet
The man behind the Big Tech comics – with Manu CornetThe cartoonist-software engineer behind the viral Big Tech org chart comic shows off other comics about Google and Twitter, and we discuss less obvious meanings behind each of them
Stream the Latest EpisodeAvailable now on YouTube, Apple and Spotify. See the episode transcript at the top of this page, and a summary at the bottom. Brought to You By• WorkOS — The modern identity platform for B2B SaaS. • Graphite — The AI developer productivity platform. • Formation — Level up your career and compensation with Formation. — In This EpisodeHave you seen this comic before about the org structure of Big Tech companies? Longtime readers will recall that the author of this comic is Manu Cornet — who previously shared details on how this comic came about (and he almost did not publish it, thinking it would not be funny). For today’s episode, I sat down with him, to go through more comics, why he created them, and the deeper meaning behind several of these. Manu spent over a decade at Google, doing both backend and frontend development. He also spent a year and a half at Twitter before Elon Musk purchased it and rebranded it to X. But what Manu is most known for are his hilarious internet comics about the tech world, including his famous org chart comic from 2011 about Facebook, Apple, Amazon, and Microsoft. In today’s conversation, we explore many of his comics, discuss the meaning behind them, and talk about the following topics:
This is an unusually visual episode, offering the story behind several comics about Big Tech, Google and Twitter that you might have seen. With Manu, we discuss the deeper meaning behind several of these — ones that are pretty obvious to those who worked inside these companies, but might be less intuitive if you’re only seeing them for the first time. The Pragmatic Engineer deepdives relevant for this episode• Is Big Tech becoming more cutthroat? Timestamps(00:00) Intro (02:01) Manu’s org structure comic (07:10) Manu’s “Who Sues Who” comic (09:15) Google vs. Amazon comic (14:10) Confusing names at Google (20:00) Different approaches to sharing information within companies (22:20) The two ways of doing things at Google (25:15) Manu’s code reviews comic (27:45) The comic that was printed on every single door of Google (30:55) An explanation of 20% at Google (36:00) Gmail Labs and Google Stadia (41:36) Manu’s time at Twitter and the threat of Elon Musk buying (47:07) How Manu helped Gergely with a bug on Twitter (49:05) Musk’s acquirement of Twitter and the resulting layoffs (59:00) Manu’s comic about his disillusionment with Twitter and Google (1:02:37) Rapid fire round A summary of the conversationThe org chart comic
The culture inside Google
Google vs Amazon
Google’s engineering culture
Move to Twitter and Musk’s takeover
As a fun fact, Manu doesn't have a favorite programming language. He chooses the best tool for the job, and has been coding with Java, JavaScript, Python, C++, Objective-C, Swift, Rust, and C. He also built a site with all his book, movie and music recommendations. Where to find Manu Cornet: • Mastodon: https://twit.social/@manu • LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/manucornet/ • Website: https://ma.nu/ Mentions during the episode: • Code Review on Printed Paper: an Excerpt from the Twitoons Comic Book: https://newsletter.pragmaticengineer.com/p/code-review-on-printed-paper-an-excerpt • A much clearer insight into who sues who: https://bonkersworld.net/who-sues-who • CEO's "Burning Platform" Memo Highlights Nokia's Woes: https://www.forbes.com/sites/ericsavitz/2011/02/09/ceos-burning-platform-memo-highlights-nokias-woes/ • Guns and Roses: https://bonkersworld.net/guns-and-roses • The Full Circle on Developer Productivity with Steve Yegge: https://newsletter.pragmaticengineer.com/p/steve-yegge • Grab: https://www.grab.careers/en/ • Comic about the confusing Google names: https://goomics.net/207 • Naming dashboard: https://goomics.net/239 • Access: https://goomics.net/370 • Welcome to Google: https://goomics.net/50 • Eric Schmidt on X: https://x.com/ericschmidt • Jonathan Rosenberg on X: https://x.com/jjrosenberg • Code Reviews: https://bonkersworld.net/code-reviews • Beware the Tailgator: https://goomics.net/56 • 20% time: https://goomics.net/343 • Where did Gmail labs go?: https://zapier.com/blog/gmail-labs-missing/ • Google Stadia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Stadia • Google engineer who criticized the company in viral comics on why he finally quit: https://mashable.com/article/google-engineer-manu-cornet-comics-critique • Network effect: https://goomics.net/324 • The Twitter Worker Who Captured Elon Musk’s Takeover in All Its Cartoonish Glory: https://slate.com/technology/2022/11/elon-musk-twitter-cartoons-manu-cortnet.html • Howl’s Moving Castle: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0347149/ • Tesla: https://www.tesla.com/ • Twittoons: One employee's cartoon chronicle of Twitter's accelerated descent: https://www.amazon.com/Twittoons-employees-chronicle-Twitters-accelerated/dp/1952629020 • Javascript: https://www.javascript.com/ • C++: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C%2B%2B • Python: https://www.python.org/ • Swift: https://www.swift.org/ • Rust: https://www.rust-lang.org/ • CSS: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CSS • Manu’s favorites: https://ma.nu/faves/ • Mind the Goof (Gomer Goof #1): https://www.amazon.com/Mind-Goof-Gomer-Franquin/dp/1849183589 • Building Software: https://bonkersworld.net/building-software — Production and marketing by Pen Name. For inquiries about sponsoring the podcast, email podcast@pragmaticengineer.com. You’re on the free list for The Pragmatic Engineer. For the full experience, become a paying subscriber. Many readers expense this newsletter within their company’s training/learning/development budget. This post is public, so feel free to share and forward it. If you enjoyed this post, you might enjoy my book, The Software Engineer's Guidebook. Here is what Tanya Reilly, senior principal engineer and author of The Staff Engineer's Path said about it:
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