> I did not claim they do not improve their products. Apologies that I didn't notice you weren't CommonGuy, who said "improving them in the future is not really their style". Consider my reply aimed at them. The two of…
Nah, you don't get to claim they don't work on improving their products, and then handwave away actual updates to it with "yeah but those aren't the improvements I wanted". That's just life and priorities. Abandoning…
Some of its about sharing the pain. e.g. when Crowdstrike takes down Windows across the worlds or AWS east coast falls over everybody hurts. At that point the story is easy, you point at the broken thing, mumble…
No, this is just a silly take. AWS can make data export free, and no-one's going to shout at them that it's not free because it cost money to store the data there in the first place. Bunny offers a number of services to…
Exactly. I stopped reading part way through. The first thought was ... this seems like quite a lot of words to say not an awful lot of contents. And then the sentences started jumping out. > A verification regime does…
I'm not the commenter, but for me ghostty was good for being a Very Good terminal experience with almost no config required. Just checked and the config file for my daily use terminal setup is 3 lines long. 3! That…
Not the commenter, but yeah, I think I do. Setting out to do something commercial (and succeeding), is different from setting out to do something firmly non-commercial and then commercialising it. The second one will…
Except it's nothing like that, because the numbers are so different.
> Not a workaholic, I don't think, but a 24/7 stress monkey when I think that I could be helping I er... think you might be a workaholic. But I'm glad for you that your current setup is helping :)
You'll note I didn't actually say it was people who are prolific that were the problem. I've worked with great prolific devs. They're often very humble, happy to explain their work, and recognise that simply adding to a…
> Code review doesn't scale to prolific humans I've worked with people who consider themselves 'prolific humans'. Someone always has to tidy upp later, and its never them
This feels like a bad take, IMO. Starting with something that gets you up and running quickly, then transferring to something else when things are more settled is a pretty standard practice.
https://www.theregister.com/software/2019/04/01/nice-people-... Year before the MSFT takeover. No idea about their actual financials but they were definitely shedding headcount pre 2020, including kicking people for…
I said so above. I think originally they were "online spaces that augmented a real world community". Even twitter, you mostly started by following people you knew or had heard of. I get that this isn't at all where we…
if you think social media just means any space online with multiple people in it, then I guess we just disagree on what social media is. Is the linux kernel mailing list social media? was usenet?
see IMO it isn't. HN is an online community. Same as forums, and BBSs were. I don't think they were social media really - they're online spaces that form around a shared interest, where Facebook etc were originally…
> Interviews are useful, but the ability to ship, maintain and improve real projects should probably carry more weight. But how do you assess this? Maybe we should get them to write a document that details what they've…
My advice is: don't write complicated SQL. The best thing I learned about SQL is that it can do an awful lot of clever stuff but that the vast majority of the time you really don't need it. Learn the basics. Shrug the…
yeah but I can't post there because I don't know anyone with an account and frankly CBA traipsing around looking for someone who has an account. does seem like more things will have to go this way though
It's a good point, but I think the counter is that if the only people writing anything available via Gemini would have written nice simple HTML anyway, then not an awful lot is gained.
But as a good manager, you should throw it back: "what do you think?" "what have you tried so far?" etc. Just giving them AI back is pointless. It means _your_ role is pointless.
You could defintiely argue abductions and crime have reduced because there are fewer opportunities (because we keep the kids safe). But that still doesn't mean you can conclude the world is MORE dangerous.
Software development is expensive. Like eye-wateringly expensive. A team of developers, product, designers, testers on a new app costs a big amount of money so its a gamble each time. Without a large audience, spending…
> Part of the reason, may be that I am a much better Swift programmer, than PHP programmer Hard not to think that's a major part of it. IME you make loads more corrections in languages you're more opinionated about (and…
Well yeah. And there's little more frustrating than someone telling you not be frustrated because "that's just how it works". We get how it works. It's just irritating.
> I did not claim they do not improve their products. Apologies that I didn't notice you weren't CommonGuy, who said "improving them in the future is not really their style". Consider my reply aimed at them. The two of…
Nah, you don't get to claim they don't work on improving their products, and then handwave away actual updates to it with "yeah but those aren't the improvements I wanted". That's just life and priorities. Abandoning…
Some of its about sharing the pain. e.g. when Crowdstrike takes down Windows across the worlds or AWS east coast falls over everybody hurts. At that point the story is easy, you point at the broken thing, mumble…
No, this is just a silly take. AWS can make data export free, and no-one's going to shout at them that it's not free because it cost money to store the data there in the first place. Bunny offers a number of services to…
Exactly. I stopped reading part way through. The first thought was ... this seems like quite a lot of words to say not an awful lot of contents. And then the sentences started jumping out. > A verification regime does…
I'm not the commenter, but for me ghostty was good for being a Very Good terminal experience with almost no config required. Just checked and the config file for my daily use terminal setup is 3 lines long. 3! That…
Not the commenter, but yeah, I think I do. Setting out to do something commercial (and succeeding), is different from setting out to do something firmly non-commercial and then commercialising it. The second one will…
Except it's nothing like that, because the numbers are so different.
> Not a workaholic, I don't think, but a 24/7 stress monkey when I think that I could be helping I er... think you might be a workaholic. But I'm glad for you that your current setup is helping :)
You'll note I didn't actually say it was people who are prolific that were the problem. I've worked with great prolific devs. They're often very humble, happy to explain their work, and recognise that simply adding to a…
> Code review doesn't scale to prolific humans I've worked with people who consider themselves 'prolific humans'. Someone always has to tidy upp later, and its never them
This feels like a bad take, IMO. Starting with something that gets you up and running quickly, then transferring to something else when things are more settled is a pretty standard practice.
https://www.theregister.com/software/2019/04/01/nice-people-... Year before the MSFT takeover. No idea about their actual financials but they were definitely shedding headcount pre 2020, including kicking people for…
I said so above. I think originally they were "online spaces that augmented a real world community". Even twitter, you mostly started by following people you knew or had heard of. I get that this isn't at all where we…
if you think social media just means any space online with multiple people in it, then I guess we just disagree on what social media is. Is the linux kernel mailing list social media? was usenet?
see IMO it isn't. HN is an online community. Same as forums, and BBSs were. I don't think they were social media really - they're online spaces that form around a shared interest, where Facebook etc were originally…
> Interviews are useful, but the ability to ship, maintain and improve real projects should probably carry more weight. But how do you assess this? Maybe we should get them to write a document that details what they've…
My advice is: don't write complicated SQL. The best thing I learned about SQL is that it can do an awful lot of clever stuff but that the vast majority of the time you really don't need it. Learn the basics. Shrug the…
yeah but I can't post there because I don't know anyone with an account and frankly CBA traipsing around looking for someone who has an account. does seem like more things will have to go this way though
It's a good point, but I think the counter is that if the only people writing anything available via Gemini would have written nice simple HTML anyway, then not an awful lot is gained.
But as a good manager, you should throw it back: "what do you think?" "what have you tried so far?" etc. Just giving them AI back is pointless. It means _your_ role is pointless.
You could defintiely argue abductions and crime have reduced because there are fewer opportunities (because we keep the kids safe). But that still doesn't mean you can conclude the world is MORE dangerous.
Software development is expensive. Like eye-wateringly expensive. A team of developers, product, designers, testers on a new app costs a big amount of money so its a gamble each time. Without a large audience, spending…
> Part of the reason, may be that I am a much better Swift programmer, than PHP programmer Hard not to think that's a major part of it. IME you make loads more corrections in languages you're more opinionated about (and…
Well yeah. And there's little more frustrating than someone telling you not be frustrated because "that's just how it works". We get how it works. It's just irritating.