It's a little hyperbolic to compare Goldman Sachs culture to Google culture. Little has changed as far as I can tell about Google culture internally. People still care about the same things, management for the most part, still cares about the same things, and all of these public assertions that G+ is an all consuming diversion to the detriment of everything else is a gross hyperbole.
Googlers are not sitting around making fun of their users, joking about them, giving them funny nicknames.
With these types of rants, it is hard to derive truth from fiction. Once a narrative is set up, everyone starts to keep feeding into it. It's easy to believe the worst about Goldman, so everything said "fits" and makes it believable. My own biases make it more likely to believe in stories of greedy people selling snake oil.
Still, one should be skeptical and avoid piling on.
Googlers are not sitting around making fun of their users, joking about them, giving them funny nicknames.
With these types of rants, it is hard to derive truth from fiction. Once a narrative is set up, everyone starts to keep feeding into it. It's easy to believe the worst about Goldman, so everything said "fits" and makes it believable. My own biases make it more likely to believe in stories of greedy people selling snake oil.
Still, one should be skeptical and avoid piling on.