How Billionaire Duolingo CEO Luis von Ahn Ruined His App By Embracing the Worst Parts of Big Tech
medium.com/@hrnews1/how-billionaire-duolingo-ceโฆ
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Meanwhile, revenue is up 38%. Over 10 million paying users. The shareholders are happy. The venture capitalists at General Atlantic and Drive Capital are thrilled.
The users? Deleting the app in protest.
How is revenue up if users are leaving en masse? I would understand if they said profits are up. Are they shoving more ads and raising prices faster than users are leaving? Because Netflix has shown that is unfortunately a viable strategy for a rather long time. Sure, it might eventually kill the product, but they'll get years out of it.
I'm absolutely no expert but if this is in line with other similar services, they make the majority of their money from a very small percentage of users.
There have been multiple companies in the recent past that have gone thru the same or similar path and what they're seeing is an overall drop in users but a rise in subscriptions or subscription revenue.
Long story short, people leave, but the people that stay pay.
I know I used to pay. The free version was excellent and I wanted to support it. I don't know how the pay version is now but the free version is terrible. I don't see why new users would join.
What are some good alternatives?
iโd guessโฆ textbooks. like actually though. some are really well written, nicely ordered and prioritize stuff which is actually useful.
also you get a distraction free environment as a plus which, i think, is more helpful than one might think.
How do I get this distraction free environment with the textbooks? I got a bunch for college and everywhere was still stuffed to the gills with distractions!
I think maybe my own brain is made of distractions...
When's the last time you went to your local library?
At least for me it feels like that when I sit down to read a book I somehow trick my brain to go into "learn" mode like it actually tries then to remember stuff and to be attentive. Its harder to do that being on the phone i think. Maybe environment wasn't the right word.
What language are you interested in? I learned Spanish through Internet resources fairly easily (easy but very time consuming, as all language learning is). If you're wanting Spanish I can give some great suggestions.
I've completed the spanish course on Duolingo a couple years ago, but I feel like I am still lacking. I would be interested in your suggestions !
This is a copy/paste of a comment I made a few months ago:
I highly recommend checking out Dreaming Spanish - itโs a channel/site that teaches Spanish through a method called comprehensible input. Basically, all you do is watch, listen, and read in Spanish totally in Spanish, no translations whatsoever. That sounds intimidating, but the beginner stages they really talk at you like youโre a baby almost. They talk with their hands a lot and use drawings. Thatโs the most important part, because in the beginning you wonโt be able to understand any Spanish or hardly any. But by making it so simple you can basically understand even though you donโt know the words. After a hundred or so hours of this, you can move on to slightly less easy content. And so on and so on until you can understand just regular media in spanish. At that point, your learning will really take off, because you can watch things that youโre actually interested in and that will capture your attention more.
They donโt do any explicit grammar or vocabulary practice. Thatโs on purpose, the arguments of comprehensible input is that language isnโt learned, itโs acquired. You didnโt learn English by rote memorization, you listened a lot. If you can hear a few words and make the connection to the meaning by watching, and then you hear that word dozens or hundreds of times more - you will have a better understanding of that word than a simple translation flashcard could ever give you. Because words donโt have just one meeting theyโre complex and change in different situations. But the best part is through this method you wonโt even realize that youโre learning these words. Same goes with grammar, with this method things just kind of sound right. You can use the correct grammar, but you might not necessarily be able to explain why. Just like native speakers.
Iโve personally listened, or watched over a thousand hours of things in Spanish in a bit over a year. And at this point most media is almost as easy to watch as English for me. I also read the full Harry Potter series in Spanish. (It was rough at first, but after I got used to the writing style a lot of the times Iโd forget it was in Spanish in the more exciting sections) I need to practice speaking more, I can definitely do it and be understood but it lacks pretty significantly behind my understanding but that is really just a question of how much practice I can get. But once youโve banked 1k, 1.5k hours the rate at which your speaking will improve is way faster than the process of learning so far.
Check out this this playlist of videos that really explains things in more depth. It has English subtitles youโll have to turn on. https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlpPf-YgbU7GrtxQ9yde-J2tfxJDvReNf
They have a ton of free content, and if you want more you can pay just $8 a month - but honestly if you do a few hours a day after a couple months youโll be able to just watch some YouTube videos of native speakers and you wonโt really need dreaming Spanish anymore. But the site does have a handy hour tracker that you donโt need to pay for at all that I still use to this day.
Iโve tried to learn French, german, and even Spanish before but until this try when I discovered this method, I didnโt really get anywhere. At this point Iโm almost comfortable saying that Iโm bilingual. And it really doesnโt take that much effort just make it a routine, and once you can get into more advanced and interesting videos just watch things that youโre interested in. When you really get good, you can just watch the TV shows and movies that you already like to watch, but put on the Spanish dub. Itโs that easy. Iโm not doing anything differently now than I was before I knew Spanish but Iโm learning every day because I just do the things I normally did but in spanish!
You can start their Super Beginner (most basic level) here: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlpPf-YgbU7GbOHc3siOGQ5KmVSngZucl
(Or since you said you've done the whole DuoLingo tree, you could try a higher level. Whichever feels fairly easy to understand)
But Iโd recommend doing it on https://www.dreamingspanish.com/ where it will automatically track your watch time, let you filter by person/accent/level/topic, etc.
The beginning is by far the hardest part. The least interesting videos, the least level of comprehension. It will feel like a chore. Luckily the beginning is where you have the most motivation to push through it.
I used Linq for a while. It makes lessons out of whatever "real" content you want in the target language, so you can watch videos, listen to music, read news articles, whatever. The app/site translates words for you as you need them, and keeps track of what you have and haven't encountered before, so you can find the percentage of new words that works best for you as you look for new articles. I imported a couple of ebooks and read through them, it was pretty good. There's also a way to pair up with native speakers of your target language who are learning English so you can chat and help each other I think, but I never used it.
It does have the same problem as other things like Duolingo and Memrise where it gamifies it and adds a daily streak, so if you're not in the mood you have to force yourself to sit down for 10 minutes and do something. I don't know about other people but personally all that does is ensure I never get enough of a break to get back into the mood, so I do the bare minimum every day and resent it.
Interesting, will check it out ! But yeah the streak thing makes me feel the exact same way...
I want to learn Spanish but I haven't found something that's free (or a low fixed cost) that appeals yet. I don't want a subscription fee. I liked that Duolingo was interactive and had little stories.
I speak English and some French. I wouldn't mind learning more french, too.
Check out my comment: https://thelemmy.club/comment/22430489
And also the same team has started a French version as well, but it's not quite launched yet but could be a resource in a bit!
Check if your local library has any resources. Mine let me claim a free rocket languages premium account, which supports Spanish, German, Japanese, Chinese, French, Italian, Arabic, Hindi, Korean, ASL, Portuguese, and Russian up to (I think, don't remember) CEFR level B2
I have found that Language Transfer is the best language learning system I have used.
French, German, Turkish, Arabic, Swahili, Spanish and Italian all taught by the same guy. Each course is a set of audio files you can listen to on Soundcloud, YouTube, download, or use the minimalist but very functional phone app.
Completely free, supported by donations.
Pimsleur. Scientifically developed method. Lessons are a little longer than we would normally do today but it works.
Using an LLM is actually a great use case. But you'll have to fact check it periodically.
how are you supposed to fact check it if you donโt know the language?
Well, you can look up conjugation tables or a dictionary. But for romance languages, they're pretty damn good.
Cope harder
NLP is one of the few tasks they're actually good for?
Duolingo was a nice game but shitty tool for learning languages.
Non-paywall link: http://archive.today/KYy0Q
I tend to think this is less an issue with the CEO and more to do with going public. Once share holders get involved they start demanding you lower cost and increase profits. When all this AI shit started every group of share holders started demanding you do something with AI for fear of the company being left behind.
If you found a company, don't go public. If you do go public, sell everything and pease the fuck out.
It can never be Dear Leader's fault it must be his untrustworthy advisors, always.
I'm not sure you understand how a board of directors and share holders work.
Lol, ok bro.
Why don't you go look up what positions a co-founder/CEO usually holds on the board and his share of the stock and positions in particular, fuck yourself for a bit, and then come back?
Usually its something like president or chairman of the board, but that does not mean that person has unilateral decision making power. Even as head of the board he could be removed as CEO by the rest of the board, especially if the rest of the board thinks he needs to do more with AI. The point i am making is that by going public you give up control of your company and that the CEO of Duo is not the only one to blame for the enshitification of Duo.
Europe Pub (PieFed)




This instantly made him bad, change my mind.
Spam was terrible before CAPTCHA. Every forum software had a half dozen different anti-spam plugins that only supported that specific release and were incapable of catching anything novel, so you still needed a team of moderators covering every time zone to handle all the crap that made it past those filters. Unmoderated forums turned into bots endlessly replying to each other in a matter of days.
CAPTCHA did a ton to reduce the amount of bots successfully signing up, and it took years for spammers to adapt. Even now, adding a simple captcha to your sign-up page remains the single most effective anti-spam measure you can take.
Captchas turning into a tool to make users create free training data for self-driving AI sucks, but capitalism is gonna capitalism. The captcha variant that was used to help digitize old books was pretty cool.