helpdesk
It has been a gradual change. > already maximally happened since decades ago We just laid off ~4000 employees and are replacing them with hiring in India. Your notion that it already happened decades ago is wrong.
> That's a fact Great evidence. Add "full stop." to really drive the point home
There is more to it than that. 1. Decide if optimization is even necessary. 2. Then optimize the slowest path
another commonly misinterpreted one is the `shouting fire in a crowded theatre` quote. In it's original context it means the opposite of how people use it today.
If AI can do anything, why can't I just prompt "Here is sudo access to my laptop, please do all my work for me, respond to emails, manage my household budget, and manage my meetings". I've tried everything. I have four…
High karma in an internet community is not something I respect automatically. Pewdiepie and every other little online personality have tons of followers and likes. tptacek has always come across arrogant, juvenile,…
As I said in another post. The article is pure rhetoric. It provides no actual numbers, measurements, or examples. It's just "AI did stuff really good for me" as the proof that AI works
and builder.ai just filed for bankruptcy after a billion dollar valuation. Timely.
Agreed. The article provides zero measurement, zero examples, zero numbers. It's pure conjecture with no data or experiment to back it up. Unfortunately conjecture rises to the top on hackernews. A well built study on…
The article provides no solid evidence that "AI is working" for the author. At the end of the day this article is nothing but another piece of conjecture on hackernews. Actually assessing the usefulness of AI would…
The reason I remain in the "skeptical" camp is because I am experiencing the same thing you are - I keep oscillating between being impressed, then disappointed. Ultimately the thing that impresses me is that LLMs have…
They sort of exist and do have women in them - but there are tons of tons of men you can meet with. Sports clubs are full of friends you can make. I'm close with alot of guys that I train with. Try tennis, or lifting,…
> Large companies sometimes love to preach "intrapreneurial" spirit, encourage the individual will & ownership, all while refusing to acknowledge the constraints & impositions of corporate hierarchy, the lack of…
I've read some literature on this decompiling and reverse engineering work. It always blows my mind that there is a community of experts in it, toiling in science. Yet the academic and learning communities do not know…
That's actually his personality based on my knowledge of interactions with him. He is sort of a workaholic robot.
> old dorm room with paint chips on the walls > Mark Zuckerberg This guy doesn't know much about Mark Zuckerberg
"A single line of code caused <BUG>" Yes, a single line of code is in the stack trace every time a bug happens. Why does every headline have to push this clickbait? All errors occur at a single line in the program - and…
> Also this push to measure everything means that anything that can’t be measured isn’t valued. Never thought I'd see an intelligent point made on hackernews, but there it is. You are absolutely correct. This really hit…
can't wait for the javascript error when I try to switch gears on the touchscreen of my future car!
People on hackernews think tech is the whole economy.
It's never going back to the level of the pandemic again. It might improve... but those days are over forever. They were hiring people as SWEs who could hardly read and write.
This is definitely not true universally. The highest earners I know are self-employed or own small businesses and were 'alone' for most of their career. This includes a craftsman who owns small machine shops for boat…
Technical hobbyists also have a genuine interest in technical work. Contrast this with the flood of new college graduates who have minimal interest in engineering, yet want the high salaries that tech was famous for…
Top reps at Caterpillar, Komatsu, and John Deere actually do make that much. I used to work in that industry. Most people here are in tech and have no idea how heavily incentivized industrial sales is. Selling a fleet…
helpdesk
It has been a gradual change. > already maximally happened since decades ago We just laid off ~4000 employees and are replacing them with hiring in India. Your notion that it already happened decades ago is wrong.
> That's a fact Great evidence. Add "full stop." to really drive the point home
There is more to it than that. 1. Decide if optimization is even necessary. 2. Then optimize the slowest path
another commonly misinterpreted one is the `shouting fire in a crowded theatre` quote. In it's original context it means the opposite of how people use it today.
If AI can do anything, why can't I just prompt "Here is sudo access to my laptop, please do all my work for me, respond to emails, manage my household budget, and manage my meetings". I've tried everything. I have four…
High karma in an internet community is not something I respect automatically. Pewdiepie and every other little online personality have tons of followers and likes. tptacek has always come across arrogant, juvenile,…
As I said in another post. The article is pure rhetoric. It provides no actual numbers, measurements, or examples. It's just "AI did stuff really good for me" as the proof that AI works
and builder.ai just filed for bankruptcy after a billion dollar valuation. Timely.
Agreed. The article provides zero measurement, zero examples, zero numbers. It's pure conjecture with no data or experiment to back it up. Unfortunately conjecture rises to the top on hackernews. A well built study on…
The article provides no solid evidence that "AI is working" for the author. At the end of the day this article is nothing but another piece of conjecture on hackernews. Actually assessing the usefulness of AI would…
The reason I remain in the "skeptical" camp is because I am experiencing the same thing you are - I keep oscillating between being impressed, then disappointed. Ultimately the thing that impresses me is that LLMs have…
They sort of exist and do have women in them - but there are tons of tons of men you can meet with. Sports clubs are full of friends you can make. I'm close with alot of guys that I train with. Try tennis, or lifting,…
> Large companies sometimes love to preach "intrapreneurial" spirit, encourage the individual will & ownership, all while refusing to acknowledge the constraints & impositions of corporate hierarchy, the lack of…
I've read some literature on this decompiling and reverse engineering work. It always blows my mind that there is a community of experts in it, toiling in science. Yet the academic and learning communities do not know…
That's actually his personality based on my knowledge of interactions with him. He is sort of a workaholic robot.
> old dorm room with paint chips on the walls > Mark Zuckerberg This guy doesn't know much about Mark Zuckerberg
"A single line of code caused <BUG>" Yes, a single line of code is in the stack trace every time a bug happens. Why does every headline have to push this clickbait? All errors occur at a single line in the program - and…
> Also this push to measure everything means that anything that can’t be measured isn’t valued. Never thought I'd see an intelligent point made on hackernews, but there it is. You are absolutely correct. This really hit…
can't wait for the javascript error when I try to switch gears on the touchscreen of my future car!
People on hackernews think tech is the whole economy.
It's never going back to the level of the pandemic again. It might improve... but those days are over forever. They were hiring people as SWEs who could hardly read and write.
This is definitely not true universally. The highest earners I know are self-employed or own small businesses and were 'alone' for most of their career. This includes a craftsman who owns small machine shops for boat…
Technical hobbyists also have a genuine interest in technical work. Contrast this with the flood of new college graduates who have minimal interest in engineering, yet want the high salaries that tech was famous for…
Top reps at Caterpillar, Komatsu, and John Deere actually do make that much. I used to work in that industry. Most people here are in tech and have no idea how heavily incentivized industrial sales is. Selling a fleet…