Also worth considering is that it is part of a broader ideology of Anthroposophy which sometimes aproaches semi cult status in how people identify with it. A lot of the principles of Steiner schools are actually pretty…
If you are not even here in good faith I can imagine some people do consider that a good thing yeah. No argument from me there.
You reply is what we in the game call "moving the goal post".
Is that what I said in your mind? I honestly had to chuckle at the extreme hyperboles you decided to use. Surely having a less favorable view of hyper capitalist economics is on the same level as torture and genocide.…
Lol, okay bud. Lets go all in on the extreme hyperboles.
Economic growth doesn't mean much if the benefits are concentrated in a small percentage of the population. And while I can't disagree it has benefited tech wages historically that is just one industry. Then there are…
> Unlike the US, Europe has no California-level VCs. Some would consider that a good thing. There is a lot to be said for VC in recent years not being beneficial for the economy, certainly on an individual level, other…
That might be because of translations from Arabic. The article was also posted on a different website where the author responded > the Kashida section was contributed to this post from a talk in Arabic of Nawal Hadeed,…
While purists will disagree, a little bit of javascript is fine. Having said that, you are talking about a personal website. Most companies will have a backend of some sort anyway. Also, here is a little secret. If you…
I feel like there is some context missing in your story here. There is a lot of middleground between heavy SPA frameworks and creating everything from scratch. More importantly, I am left wondering what sort of…
Sure, but they aren't exactly widespread or even close to mainstream.
> I wonder why there isn't a mobile OS that simply lets you build apps with JavaScript, HTML, and CSS and gives you reliable storage without all this effort. There is! You just have to time travel all the way back to…
> compared to the results in the actual Gemini. Even those results have a lot to be desired, it is just buried deeper in the insanely verbose research report and impressive looking amount of sources you see move past. I…
> And to be fair 2: The other package repos also suck. If you mean other languages, then yeah a lot of similar issues and weirdness there as well. Maven dependencies in any complex project are a "fun" challenge as well.…
In this case they seem to be firmly closing the path though > There will not be a separate process for submitting patches by other means. We do not want to create a shadow contribution system through issues, comments,…
> There is no support for accessibility for the visually (or otherwise) disabled in KDE Plasma's wayland extensions (and none in core wayland at all Can you clarify what you mean by this? In the process of KDE…
> So what ends up happening is seniors become more heads down, getting things done, and juniors struggle to get time with more experienced coworkers. I just replied further down (…
From a different perspective your sample size is just one, your team/company. I started in a whole new team (as a senior) remotely during Covid which also contained juniors. They did incredibly well and were able to…
> it's not just about cost reduction, it's about solving some long-term structural deficiencies of industry. You know, I hate that this is a world where I have to ask myself if this is LLM written because it is one of…
Except that a lot of software likely is already broken in fun ways we currently don't know about. That is what makes it such a "fun" challenge. Supply chain attacks are one thing, but CVEs in already released software…
With Noctua I highly doubt that is the case given their track record for quality overall and all other information available around their design and engineering process. As far as I know based on all the information I…
> If you’re using agents to program, what are you doing while they work? If I am using agents I try to do something that is closely related to the task they are on. Otherwise I am just context switching once they are…
> The advantage of computers was that they didn't make human errors; Sure they do, computers repeatedly, quickly, and predictably do what they are programmed to do. Which includes any human errors in that programming.
> This might have to die in the era of AI, Sadly that is probably true. At the very least I'd add release cadence to it and the quality of releases. Mature, good software will have hotfixes and patch releases every now…
> * last commit date. Newer is better To be honest, these days I have more faith in an application or library with a moderate development pace where maybe the last commit wasn't 2 seconds ago co-authored by claude (in…
Also worth considering is that it is part of a broader ideology of Anthroposophy which sometimes aproaches semi cult status in how people identify with it. A lot of the principles of Steiner schools are actually pretty…
If you are not even here in good faith I can imagine some people do consider that a good thing yeah. No argument from me there.
You reply is what we in the game call "moving the goal post".
Is that what I said in your mind? I honestly had to chuckle at the extreme hyperboles you decided to use. Surely having a less favorable view of hyper capitalist economics is on the same level as torture and genocide.…
Lol, okay bud. Lets go all in on the extreme hyperboles.
Economic growth doesn't mean much if the benefits are concentrated in a small percentage of the population. And while I can't disagree it has benefited tech wages historically that is just one industry. Then there are…
> Unlike the US, Europe has no California-level VCs. Some would consider that a good thing. There is a lot to be said for VC in recent years not being beneficial for the economy, certainly on an individual level, other…
That might be because of translations from Arabic. The article was also posted on a different website where the author responded > the Kashida section was contributed to this post from a talk in Arabic of Nawal Hadeed,…
While purists will disagree, a little bit of javascript is fine. Having said that, you are talking about a personal website. Most companies will have a backend of some sort anyway. Also, here is a little secret. If you…
I feel like there is some context missing in your story here. There is a lot of middleground between heavy SPA frameworks and creating everything from scratch. More importantly, I am left wondering what sort of…
Sure, but they aren't exactly widespread or even close to mainstream.
> I wonder why there isn't a mobile OS that simply lets you build apps with JavaScript, HTML, and CSS and gives you reliable storage without all this effort. There is! You just have to time travel all the way back to…
> compared to the results in the actual Gemini. Even those results have a lot to be desired, it is just buried deeper in the insanely verbose research report and impressive looking amount of sources you see move past. I…
> And to be fair 2: The other package repos also suck. If you mean other languages, then yeah a lot of similar issues and weirdness there as well. Maven dependencies in any complex project are a "fun" challenge as well.…
In this case they seem to be firmly closing the path though > There will not be a separate process for submitting patches by other means. We do not want to create a shadow contribution system through issues, comments,…
> There is no support for accessibility for the visually (or otherwise) disabled in KDE Plasma's wayland extensions (and none in core wayland at all Can you clarify what you mean by this? In the process of KDE…
> So what ends up happening is seniors become more heads down, getting things done, and juniors struggle to get time with more experienced coworkers. I just replied further down (…
From a different perspective your sample size is just one, your team/company. I started in a whole new team (as a senior) remotely during Covid which also contained juniors. They did incredibly well and were able to…
> it's not just about cost reduction, it's about solving some long-term structural deficiencies of industry. You know, I hate that this is a world where I have to ask myself if this is LLM written because it is one of…
Except that a lot of software likely is already broken in fun ways we currently don't know about. That is what makes it such a "fun" challenge. Supply chain attacks are one thing, but CVEs in already released software…
With Noctua I highly doubt that is the case given their track record for quality overall and all other information available around their design and engineering process. As far as I know based on all the information I…
> If you’re using agents to program, what are you doing while they work? If I am using agents I try to do something that is closely related to the task they are on. Otherwise I am just context switching once they are…
> The advantage of computers was that they didn't make human errors; Sure they do, computers repeatedly, quickly, and predictably do what they are programmed to do. Which includes any human errors in that programming.
> This might have to die in the era of AI, Sadly that is probably true. At the very least I'd add release cadence to it and the quality of releases. Mature, good software will have hotfixes and patch releases every now…
> * last commit date. Newer is better To be honest, these days I have more faith in an application or library with a moderate development pace where maybe the last commit wasn't 2 seconds ago co-authored by claude (in…