The German press called the song a Weltschmerz-ballad.
I think, the joke about Germany and Italy should team up is a reference to the new CEO of Deutsche Bahn, Evelyn Palla, who is from Italy. The "to make the trains run on time" gives a hint here, because this is her…
The article is measuring full project build performance. That includes type-checking and compilation. Maybe the `tsc` type-checker was already fast (so we only get some speed improvements in `tsgo`), or the `tsc`…
I worked on a product that used BPMN where users could define processes. The company I worked for used Java for decades already. Clients of the product were banks. The people I worked with were not specifically HN…
It's degraded availability of Git operations. The enterprise cloud in EU, US, and Australia has no issues. If you look at the incident history disruptions happen often in the public cloud for years already. Before AI…
>maybe Schadeleichtig Maybe "Erleichterung" (relief)? But as a German "Schadenserleichterung" (also: notice the "s" between both compound word parts) rather sounds like a reduction of damage (since "Erleichterung" also…
I looks more this is about managing fears and worries. This is also close to helicopter parenting, i.e. parents who are "overattentive and overly fearful for their child, particularly outside the home". I don't know, in…
>graph-viz is MASSIVE and a binary. mermaid requires the browser's svg rendering system to work. I succeeded to use resvg-js [1] with dagre/graphlib [2] to render graphs. resvg-js uses a 4 MB node library to render…
It's also similar to https://www.restate.dev/.
there is a transcript, people can skim for interesting parts and read for 30 minutes and then comment. edit: typo fix.
>The only explanation I have for this phenomenon is that this was in the news media a lot in the 90s With the 90s you mean the case of Christoph Meili? Maybe it's because it's a spectacular case and that makes it…
This remembers me of Chris Granger's post "Coding is not the new literacy" [1]. Instead he argues "Modeling is the new literacy" and "In order to represent a system, we have to understand what it is exactly, but our…
"They are talked at as if they were friendly co-workers and, and this is the really important point, the talking is not programming." The technical manual of TNG [1] states, "Most panels are also configured to accept…
Kobayashi Maru training is from Star Trek II (1982).
It's interesting to see the differences in news broadcasts or debate shows in other countries. There is "Ben Shapiro: US commentator clashes with BBC's Andrew Neil - BBC News" from 6 years ago, maybe to see how…
With "german 8 pm news" they mean the main edition of the television news on the first channel which exists since 1952. there can be 20 editions per day. the main edition is so influencial, the evening programm (prime…
It changed a lot in the last 25 years. But it can depend from place to place. One of my friends has a Master of Engineering and he was a bit surprised when somebody in Austria addressed him with "Oh, Herr Ingenieur!"
>I find it super irritating when people address me by my last name. Me too. There are still German companies where coworkers address others with Herr or Frau followed by their last name. I find it also interesting how…
Yes, and it actually works. I use something like htmx or fixi [1] for my frontends of side-projects. Alternatively, I could also use laravel livewire, I even argue you could use them for large-scale projects like ERP…
Yeah, it's very useful to validate schemas at compile-time and runtime. It prevents several different problems to occur. Lately, I used code agents a lot, and having typescripts types infered from Zod schemas allows me…
If a JSON shape is maintained by another team, e.g. how can you know they did not change the shape without speaking with them? You could instead validate the schema and log the errors and get notified by the errors and…
I worked on two large projects that use Zod and Protobuf to ensure schema evolution goes well with 5+ teams. Even if you have a lightweight frontend, it makes sense to use something that validates the schemas in the…
>It will be good enough to produce 90% of the solution with very little input, and 90% is more than enough to go to market, so it will. What backs up this claim? And when will it reach it? We could be very well reached…
>If you are doing something remotely non-trivial, you will need the customization that only ProseMirror provides, and you will learn that the hard way. As far as I know Meta's Lexical [1] (used by Facebook, Whatsapp,…
The paper for "Space-Reclaiming Icicle Plot (2020)" looks like it's going into the right direction. A space-reclaiming tree layout would be even better.
The German press called the song a Weltschmerz-ballad.
I think, the joke about Germany and Italy should team up is a reference to the new CEO of Deutsche Bahn, Evelyn Palla, who is from Italy. The "to make the trains run on time" gives a hint here, because this is her…
The article is measuring full project build performance. That includes type-checking and compilation. Maybe the `tsc` type-checker was already fast (so we only get some speed improvements in `tsgo`), or the `tsc`…
I worked on a product that used BPMN where users could define processes. The company I worked for used Java for decades already. Clients of the product were banks. The people I worked with were not specifically HN…
It's degraded availability of Git operations. The enterprise cloud in EU, US, and Australia has no issues. If you look at the incident history disruptions happen often in the public cloud for years already. Before AI…
>maybe Schadeleichtig Maybe "Erleichterung" (relief)? But as a German "Schadenserleichterung" (also: notice the "s" between both compound word parts) rather sounds like a reduction of damage (since "Erleichterung" also…
I looks more this is about managing fears and worries. This is also close to helicopter parenting, i.e. parents who are "overattentive and overly fearful for their child, particularly outside the home". I don't know, in…
>graph-viz is MASSIVE and a binary. mermaid requires the browser's svg rendering system to work. I succeeded to use resvg-js [1] with dagre/graphlib [2] to render graphs. resvg-js uses a 4 MB node library to render…
It's also similar to https://www.restate.dev/.
there is a transcript, people can skim for interesting parts and read for 30 minutes and then comment. edit: typo fix.
>The only explanation I have for this phenomenon is that this was in the news media a lot in the 90s With the 90s you mean the case of Christoph Meili? Maybe it's because it's a spectacular case and that makes it…
This remembers me of Chris Granger's post "Coding is not the new literacy" [1]. Instead he argues "Modeling is the new literacy" and "In order to represent a system, we have to understand what it is exactly, but our…
"They are talked at as if they were friendly co-workers and, and this is the really important point, the talking is not programming." The technical manual of TNG [1] states, "Most panels are also configured to accept…
Kobayashi Maru training is from Star Trek II (1982).
It's interesting to see the differences in news broadcasts or debate shows in other countries. There is "Ben Shapiro: US commentator clashes with BBC's Andrew Neil - BBC News" from 6 years ago, maybe to see how…
With "german 8 pm news" they mean the main edition of the television news on the first channel which exists since 1952. there can be 20 editions per day. the main edition is so influencial, the evening programm (prime…
It changed a lot in the last 25 years. But it can depend from place to place. One of my friends has a Master of Engineering and he was a bit surprised when somebody in Austria addressed him with "Oh, Herr Ingenieur!"
>I find it super irritating when people address me by my last name. Me too. There are still German companies where coworkers address others with Herr or Frau followed by their last name. I find it also interesting how…
Yes, and it actually works. I use something like htmx or fixi [1] for my frontends of side-projects. Alternatively, I could also use laravel livewire, I even argue you could use them for large-scale projects like ERP…
Yeah, it's very useful to validate schemas at compile-time and runtime. It prevents several different problems to occur. Lately, I used code agents a lot, and having typescripts types infered from Zod schemas allows me…
If a JSON shape is maintained by another team, e.g. how can you know they did not change the shape without speaking with them? You could instead validate the schema and log the errors and get notified by the errors and…
I worked on two large projects that use Zod and Protobuf to ensure schema evolution goes well with 5+ teams. Even if you have a lightweight frontend, it makes sense to use something that validates the schemas in the…
>It will be good enough to produce 90% of the solution with very little input, and 90% is more than enough to go to market, so it will. What backs up this claim? And when will it reach it? We could be very well reached…
>If you are doing something remotely non-trivial, you will need the customization that only ProseMirror provides, and you will learn that the hard way. As far as I know Meta's Lexical [1] (used by Facebook, Whatsapp,…
The paper for "Space-Reclaiming Icicle Plot (2020)" looks like it's going into the right direction. A space-reclaiming tree layout would be even better.