Their post said that load growth had a mitigating effect on prices. Not letting the data centers come online would, presumably, result in higher prices. That seems slightly weird, but that sounds like there's some large…
> I just read what it produces. I don't think that's average right now.
> Let's not pretend Microsoft has a monopoly on idiocy in the software world. Entirely fair, but let's not pretend the situation is symmetrical. Canonical doesn't have monopoly on the linux or broader *nix world the…
The government. You'd have to prove that the CEO knew that it would hurt the company and still did it or that it's so ridiculously negligent that any sane person should have known.
This is BS. A shareholder lawsuit against the CEO/board/executives for investing in the employees in the hope of long term profits would never succeed. The idea of a fiduciary duty doesn't mean that. It means the CEO…
> This is true whether an AI wrote the code or a co-worker I agree. I just don't think code reviews are as load bearing as everyone seems to think. They're important, but not nearly enough.
> My "actual job" isn't to write code, but to solve problems. Yes, and there's often a benefit to having a human have an understanding of the concrete details of the system when you're trying to solve problems. > That…
Oh come on. They're obviously using the word "science" in this context as a shorthand for the institutions and processes we've set up to do research. Mostly because that's too many words for a title and nobody has come…
> This should be the only entity that's approved to have nuclear weapons. This speaks like someone who has never been outside of a heavily bureaucratized regime. People don't get "approval" for things, they just do them.
> Just because I'm a middle aged male I see trucks, and beer, and football advertisements all day long Well, yeah. Those companies will pay to send their ad to all middle aged men. Those companies could slice and dice…
> Go's simplifications often introduce complexities elsewhere It does occasionally, although I'll push back on the "often". Go's simplifications allow most of the codebase to be... well... simple. This does come at the…
> Equal in voting rights. Gerrymandering has been perfected by Republicans. Through that they manage to dilute votes of the opposition. This thread is talking about the Senate. The senate isn't gerrymandered. Both…
> And yet so many of them kinda rule the world by running the biggest corporations in the world. Have you looked at the state of the world recently?
> Imagine not being able to get a shitty fast food job because ... Or just moved to the US and speak too weird and don't have anyone to vouch for you. You've obviously never worked food.
> That’s incredible! The capability of an AI model is approximately junior level in the fields I’ve tested it in (programming, law, philosophy, neuroscience). If you’d don’t see any possible uses for the technology,…
> Then your industry is atypical in the type of applicants that you are getting Based on the quality of candidates that get through at other companies, I'm guessing our problem isn't atypical. Or at least, good devs…
> It’s absolutely fantastic at filtering the lower 95% of applicants because they will _never_ be able to pass. This is the part I disagree with. It hasn't been true for years. Anyone with the free version of ChatGPT…
> Leetcode is bad, but it’s bad in the sense that it errs too heavily on filtering out false negatives But, it doesn't. It filters for something orthogonal to development, which is ability to obsess over clever…
So on one hand, you're kinda right. HN is filled with exaggeration (imo often justified) from people venting because they have to deal with the bad parts of this system all day. That seems natural in a dev filled space.…
> Rust's ? operator - effective and ergonomic It is, but it's also subtle, and if you want branches (especially sad-path branches) to be explicit, that's not a good thing.
> I hear outright wrong arguments for why the USA has not moved to a modern filing system. The argument I always hear from the right about this is that they worry that making taxes more efficient will allow them (and…
Fair, but I'd prefer phone over a poorly done app. And given the state of most apps...
> This is at best specious reasoning, and to me reflects that the blogger completely misses the point of having tests. I mean, yeah. Most devs don't understand the point. It turns into a check-boxing exercise. And most…
Horse archers had been a thing before him, though they were quite powerful. His great accomplishment was marrying that with the ability to besiege walled cities. Nobody expected barbarian horse archers to be able to do…
> But absent that I think it's safe to say that this case doesn't raise the first amendment. I still think it does, but it's Apple and Google's right to propagate the app, not TikTok's right to be on the app store. And…
Their post said that load growth had a mitigating effect on prices. Not letting the data centers come online would, presumably, result in higher prices. That seems slightly weird, but that sounds like there's some large…
> I just read what it produces. I don't think that's average right now.
> Let's not pretend Microsoft has a monopoly on idiocy in the software world. Entirely fair, but let's not pretend the situation is symmetrical. Canonical doesn't have monopoly on the linux or broader *nix world the…
The government. You'd have to prove that the CEO knew that it would hurt the company and still did it or that it's so ridiculously negligent that any sane person should have known.
This is BS. A shareholder lawsuit against the CEO/board/executives for investing in the employees in the hope of long term profits would never succeed. The idea of a fiduciary duty doesn't mean that. It means the CEO…
> This is true whether an AI wrote the code or a co-worker I agree. I just don't think code reviews are as load bearing as everyone seems to think. They're important, but not nearly enough.
> My "actual job" isn't to write code, but to solve problems. Yes, and there's often a benefit to having a human have an understanding of the concrete details of the system when you're trying to solve problems. > That…
Oh come on. They're obviously using the word "science" in this context as a shorthand for the institutions and processes we've set up to do research. Mostly because that's too many words for a title and nobody has come…
> This should be the only entity that's approved to have nuclear weapons. This speaks like someone who has never been outside of a heavily bureaucratized regime. People don't get "approval" for things, they just do them.
> Just because I'm a middle aged male I see trucks, and beer, and football advertisements all day long Well, yeah. Those companies will pay to send their ad to all middle aged men. Those companies could slice and dice…
> Go's simplifications often introduce complexities elsewhere It does occasionally, although I'll push back on the "often". Go's simplifications allow most of the codebase to be... well... simple. This does come at the…
> Equal in voting rights. Gerrymandering has been perfected by Republicans. Through that they manage to dilute votes of the opposition. This thread is talking about the Senate. The senate isn't gerrymandered. Both…
> And yet so many of them kinda rule the world by running the biggest corporations in the world. Have you looked at the state of the world recently?
> Imagine not being able to get a shitty fast food job because ... Or just moved to the US and speak too weird and don't have anyone to vouch for you. You've obviously never worked food.
> That’s incredible! The capability of an AI model is approximately junior level in the fields I’ve tested it in (programming, law, philosophy, neuroscience). If you’d don’t see any possible uses for the technology,…
> Then your industry is atypical in the type of applicants that you are getting Based on the quality of candidates that get through at other companies, I'm guessing our problem isn't atypical. Or at least, good devs…
> It’s absolutely fantastic at filtering the lower 95% of applicants because they will _never_ be able to pass. This is the part I disagree with. It hasn't been true for years. Anyone with the free version of ChatGPT…
> Leetcode is bad, but it’s bad in the sense that it errs too heavily on filtering out false negatives But, it doesn't. It filters for something orthogonal to development, which is ability to obsess over clever…
So on one hand, you're kinda right. HN is filled with exaggeration (imo often justified) from people venting because they have to deal with the bad parts of this system all day. That seems natural in a dev filled space.…
> Rust's ? operator - effective and ergonomic It is, but it's also subtle, and if you want branches (especially sad-path branches) to be explicit, that's not a good thing.
> I hear outright wrong arguments for why the USA has not moved to a modern filing system. The argument I always hear from the right about this is that they worry that making taxes more efficient will allow them (and…
Fair, but I'd prefer phone over a poorly done app. And given the state of most apps...
> This is at best specious reasoning, and to me reflects that the blogger completely misses the point of having tests. I mean, yeah. Most devs don't understand the point. It turns into a check-boxing exercise. And most…
Horse archers had been a thing before him, though they were quite powerful. His great accomplishment was marrying that with the ability to besiege walled cities. Nobody expected barbarian horse archers to be able to do…
> But absent that I think it's safe to say that this case doesn't raise the first amendment. I still think it does, but it's Apple and Google's right to propagate the app, not TikTok's right to be on the app store. And…