It'd be even funnier if the 'message' was a text sent from their iphone.
> most of them fail to hit a hundred views per video. I get your point, but many of them fail to hit some hundreds of views due in large part to all of the large, professional channels that are spending hundreds of man…
> Should I capture the increased output You do capture the increased output by benefiting from a society where the cost to build safe buildings has drastically reduced. Just because you don't get an immediate financial…
Clearly those in floors 1->7 were less important and thus allowed to take the day off and/or work remotely, right?
I'm not fully aware of the tech here, are those posts flagged as 'Intolerant' by bsky or by the protocol itself?
Sometimes places close streets for traffic control. The 'main' roads end up getting backed up and then people naturally start drifting over to a bunch of side-roads to get to the destination. This then causes further…
Interesting. We use Kiro here and looking at the public pricing subscriptions and it's benefit to my workflow, it is clearly a significant productivity increase per dollar spent. And we were told we have a signed a deal…
Yes, lambda's and our dev's use mac's so it enables that. We deploy some apps to some unix based server as well but the company is mostly windows servers anyway.
Sure, some do. But also... I use Kiro. I open a terminal into a folder where my repo is. I run kiro-cli. I don't know if it has access to the credentials file in my .aws directory. I know it prompts me for approval to…
> My mother is in her 60s and uses Gemini every day. If your mother is at all like my mother, she isn't burning through nearly as many tokens as developers who are utilizing AI effectively. Datacenters aren't being…
> you need to micro-manage it. It is significantly easier to micro-manage an AI than a suite of junior developers. The AI doesn't replace a principal engineer, it's replacing junior and weaker senior developers who need…
People think money is enough because they look at their lives and think 'how could I afford kids? Clearly I need money to do that.' and they don't think 'if I had extra money, would I spend it on someone else or on…
> nakedly hypocritical How is it hypocritical? If in the old world, the very important process that used up a lot of time and benefited greatly from no distractions was the actual writing of code then interruptions for…
> Having passwords on post-it notes does make certain types of attacks much easier. It also makes other attacks much harder. Namely I don't need to worry about some zero-day in my password manager.
Not necessary. But also, 'Not necessary' doesn't mean 'not worth subsidizing'. If you think the government finds value in having a connected population with easy access to information then there's value in subsidizing…
> indirect economic impact of travel Like what? Nearly all 'goods' are going to travel more efficiently by rail and truck. And I say nearly all to cover the outliers like maybe an organ flying across country for…
People in power want the information to identify a narrower set of people who may have been pregnant and then did not have a child and so may have had an abortion. And facebook doesn't care about people's rights when…
> the app on the device does not run. That explains an oddity I was experiencing. Work uses Webex. I had work webex installed on my phone. My password changed on my account in the office, if i try to open Webex on my…
> The visual risk of walking out without paying is much greater than the risk that anyone actually investigates AND tries to track him down for it. So scan everything, then put it in the cart and walk off without…
> Wait, so.. how are we supposed to test Intel builds of our macOS apps from now on? Isn't this a general form of 'how do we deal with the transition from a to b?' If your client's can get intel Mac's, then you should…
Why not? That continent is not their target audience. It probably wasn't worth the effort to block foreign countries just from random unnecessary compute cost to serve a site to them, but when those countries start…
Yes, great response. But is the failing here an individual one 'This person is bad at their job and needs more training/be replaced' or a company one 'This company only hires bad people and we shouldn't use them' Every…
What law is it breaking? If a company leaks my sensitive data, I get some nice junkmail offering me some period of time of credit monitoring or whatever so what are browsers doing to prevent this? The issue should never…
> I know people who don't even type search queries or URLs into a browser, they just tell the phone what they want to find and open whatever shows up in a search result. I don't know exactly what you are talking about…
> Does this not have more to do with desirability? Not really. NYC population still hasn't fully recovered to the pre-covid peak: https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/NYPOP NYC is losing it's share of the global finance…
It'd be even funnier if the 'message' was a text sent from their iphone.
> most of them fail to hit a hundred views per video. I get your point, but many of them fail to hit some hundreds of views due in large part to all of the large, professional channels that are spending hundreds of man…
> Should I capture the increased output You do capture the increased output by benefiting from a society where the cost to build safe buildings has drastically reduced. Just because you don't get an immediate financial…
Clearly those in floors 1->7 were less important and thus allowed to take the day off and/or work remotely, right?
I'm not fully aware of the tech here, are those posts flagged as 'Intolerant' by bsky or by the protocol itself?
Sometimes places close streets for traffic control. The 'main' roads end up getting backed up and then people naturally start drifting over to a bunch of side-roads to get to the destination. This then causes further…
Interesting. We use Kiro here and looking at the public pricing subscriptions and it's benefit to my workflow, it is clearly a significant productivity increase per dollar spent. And we were told we have a signed a deal…
Yes, lambda's and our dev's use mac's so it enables that. We deploy some apps to some unix based server as well but the company is mostly windows servers anyway.
Sure, some do. But also... I use Kiro. I open a terminal into a folder where my repo is. I run kiro-cli. I don't know if it has access to the credentials file in my .aws directory. I know it prompts me for approval to…
> My mother is in her 60s and uses Gemini every day. If your mother is at all like my mother, she isn't burning through nearly as many tokens as developers who are utilizing AI effectively. Datacenters aren't being…
> you need to micro-manage it. It is significantly easier to micro-manage an AI than a suite of junior developers. The AI doesn't replace a principal engineer, it's replacing junior and weaker senior developers who need…
People think money is enough because they look at their lives and think 'how could I afford kids? Clearly I need money to do that.' and they don't think 'if I had extra money, would I spend it on someone else or on…
> nakedly hypocritical How is it hypocritical? If in the old world, the very important process that used up a lot of time and benefited greatly from no distractions was the actual writing of code then interruptions for…
> Having passwords on post-it notes does make certain types of attacks much easier. It also makes other attacks much harder. Namely I don't need to worry about some zero-day in my password manager.
Not necessary. But also, 'Not necessary' doesn't mean 'not worth subsidizing'. If you think the government finds value in having a connected population with easy access to information then there's value in subsidizing…
> indirect economic impact of travel Like what? Nearly all 'goods' are going to travel more efficiently by rail and truck. And I say nearly all to cover the outliers like maybe an organ flying across country for…
People in power want the information to identify a narrower set of people who may have been pregnant and then did not have a child and so may have had an abortion. And facebook doesn't care about people's rights when…
> the app on the device does not run. That explains an oddity I was experiencing. Work uses Webex. I had work webex installed on my phone. My password changed on my account in the office, if i try to open Webex on my…
> The visual risk of walking out without paying is much greater than the risk that anyone actually investigates AND tries to track him down for it. So scan everything, then put it in the cart and walk off without…
> Wait, so.. how are we supposed to test Intel builds of our macOS apps from now on? Isn't this a general form of 'how do we deal with the transition from a to b?' If your client's can get intel Mac's, then you should…
Why not? That continent is not their target audience. It probably wasn't worth the effort to block foreign countries just from random unnecessary compute cost to serve a site to them, but when those countries start…
Yes, great response. But is the failing here an individual one 'This person is bad at their job and needs more training/be replaced' or a company one 'This company only hires bad people and we shouldn't use them' Every…
What law is it breaking? If a company leaks my sensitive data, I get some nice junkmail offering me some period of time of credit monitoring or whatever so what are browsers doing to prevent this? The issue should never…
> I know people who don't even type search queries or URLs into a browser, they just tell the phone what they want to find and open whatever shows up in a search result. I don't know exactly what you are talking about…
> Does this not have more to do with desirability? Not really. NYC population still hasn't fully recovered to the pre-covid peak: https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/NYPOP NYC is losing it's share of the global finance…