Mark Zuckerberg updates Metaverse graphics after his avatar was likened to 2008 Nintendo game
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Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has changed and updated his new ‘metaverse’ avatar after the original version took heat from the internet over its poor graphics.
The reaction was spurred by the premiere of the new VR app from Meta called Horizon Worlds, which premiered in France and Spain this past week.
He shared his initial avatar in front of an animated Eiffel Tower and was roundly mocked by the internet, with many comparing it to the graphics of now decades-old Nintendo games.
Zuckerberg has since shared an updated version, and admitted the Metaverse graphics shown were rudimentary.
One Twitter user put it succinctly: ‘He has spent billions on creating the old Nintendo Wii level graphics’.
It wasn’t just random people on the internet, as New York Times tech columnist Kevin Roose called the graphics ‘worse than a 2008 Wii game’.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has changed and updated his new ‘metaverse’ avatar after it took heat from the internet
On Friday, Zuckerberg began the pivot, saying: ‘I know the photo I posted earlier this week was pretty basic – it was taken very quickly to celebrate a launch’
Another writer, Emily Gorcenski, wrote: ‘Come work for Meta, where the most brilliant technologists of the day have achieved 1995 level graphics’.
Many pointed out how ‘creepy’ and ‘dead-eyed’ the images were from the virtual reality app.
On Friday, Zuckerberg began the pivot, saying: ‘I know the photo I posted earlier this week was pretty basic – it was taken very quickly to celebrate a launch’.
He added that Horizon Worlds’ graphics ‘are capable of much more’ and ‘improving very quickly’.
The app is the first step of Zuckerberg’s masterplan and allows users in the US and Canada to gather with others, play games and build their own virtual worlds.
The app is the first step of Zuckerberg’s masterplan and allows users in the US and Canada to gather with others, play games and build their own virtual worlds
Horizon World was first announced in 2019 and launched last year in beta, but is now out free to users without the need of an invitation
Users have to be 18 years old and have the proper equipment – a Quest 2 virtual reality (VR) headset.
Horizon World was first announced in 2019 and launched last year in beta, but is now out free to users without the need of an invitation.
Now Meta starts laying off workers: Facebook terminates 60 contractors who were told in video conference that they were chosen ‘at random’ by an algorithm to get fired – just days after Apple got rid of recruitment staff
A group of about 60 contractors who work with Facebook learned they were laid off this week after they were chosen ‘at random’ by an algorithm.
The layoffs are the latest example of Big Tech reining in spending and hiring, as just days ago Apple let go of about 100 recruiters.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has also recently said he will weed out underperforming employees with ‘aggressive performance reviews’ as the company braces for a deep economic turndown.
The contractors are employed via Accenture in their Austin office, a company that has a deal worth nearly half a billion dollars a year to staff up the company with workers in content moderation and business integrity.
The layoffs were announced during a video conference call Tuesday and they were not immediately offered new jobs or transfers by Accenture, according to Business Insider.
A spokesperson for Facebook, when asked about the news by DailyMail.com, said: ‘Thank you for the inquiry, however, we have no comment’.
A group of about 60 contractors who work with Meta’s Facebook through Accenture learned they were laid off after they were chosen ‘at random’ by an algorithm
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has also recently said he will weed out underperforming employees with ‘aggressive performance reviews’ as the company braces for a deep economic turndown
The contractors are employed via Accenture in their Austin office, a company that has a deal worth nearly half a billion dollars a year to staff up the company with workers in content moderation and business integrity
The contractors were told they could ‘reapply’ for any newly available job for the next two weeks but that their current work will be gone by September 2 and will be paid through October 3.
Accenture representatives stunningly told a worker who asked how the layoffs were determined that an algorithm chose people at random and gave no specific reason for why the employees’ jobs were being cut.
It’s not the first time employees have lost their job via algorithm. In August 2021, Xsolla – a company that offers payment processing for the gaming industry – laid off 150 individuals an algorithm determined were ‘unengaged and unproductive’, according to Game Developer.
In June, Zuckerberg said the company would be ‘turning up the heat’ on performance management to weed out staffers unable to meet more aggressive goals.
‘Realistically, there are probably a bunch of people at the company who shouldn’t be here,’ he said.
‘Part of my hope by raising expectations and having more aggressive goals, and just kind of turning up the heat a little bit, is that I think some of you might decide that this place isn’t for you, and that self-selection is OK with me,’ he said.
Last month, Meta said it would pause hiring and cut hiring plans for new engineers by 30 percent
Apple has reportedly laid off many of its contract-based recruiters after warning that it would slow hiring and rein in spending. CEO Tim Cook is seen above
Apple, headquartered in Cupertino, California (above) had about 154,000 full-time equivalent employees as of its last report
Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai told employees that the company will be ‘slowing down the pace of hiring for the rest of the year’
In May, Meta said it would pause hiring and at the Q&A session, Zuckerberg said he would cut hiring plans for new engineers by 30 percent – instead of the initial plan to hire 10,000, Meta would hire between 6,000 and 7,000.
Apple has laid off many of its contract-based recruiters after warning that it would slow hiring and rein in spending, according to a new report.
In the past week, Apple let go about 100 contractors responsible for vetting and hiring new employees, people familiar with the matter told Bloomberg on Monday.
Last month, Apple reportedly warned staff of plans to slow hiring and spending growth next year in some divisions.
In May, Tesla CEO Elon Musk announced plans to lay off 10 percent of salaried staff, saying he had ‘a super bad feeling about the economy.’
Netflix, which has struggled with two consecutive quarters of net subscriber losses, cut headcount by 150 in May and another 300 in June.
Google parent Alphabet also said last month it would slow the pace of hiring for the rest of the year.
Amazon is reportedly thinning the ranks of its hourly employees through attrition, and recently paused the construction of six new office buildings in Bellevue and Nashville.