I was reading your comment and was thinking who would praise dang's overly capitalist ideological Silicon Valley moderation. And then clicked on your nickname. Of course you would, people like you is people dang likes…
> When people say “exactly once” is impossible they really mean in the face of failure at the queue level. And what exactly is impossible with that? Just wait it out, i.e. like all the CP systems do (as per CAP).
> I'm putting this one on my new hire required reading list. So, "I can hire people and this is how they must dance for me, regardless of how wrong I am."?
> Given all the things that can go wrong, it's impossible for any messaging system to guarantee exactly-once delivery. It's possible to guarantee exactly-once delivery, just not in bounded time, but eventually. That's…
Morality doesn't exist outside of "socially prescribed conclusions", it's actually a pure social thing, it has no other function, but to help individuals make socially acceptable choices.
Children can reason morally and do, they just didn't learn a lot of morals to reason with yet. Morals, i.e. what is good and what is bad, is something people never stop learning. Obviously learning moral values from…
It's not, it's an Elbrus architecture with VLIW-style instruction set, own compilers, etc.
> I do not know much about subject but I confidently claimed 100% effect, therefore confirming what I said :) Well, that's not a Dunning-Kruger Effect either, but maybe a confirmation bias mixed with survivorship bias.
Search HN for the effect, you'll see criticism of people citing it from years back, so it's not this year's thing at all.
You can try to explain that the effect doesn't actually apply to any pointing out of the effect in someone's comment, maybe even cite the study.
> SW engineers work in OSs, drivers, firmware, and applied areas likes comms and robotics That would be system programming, part of computer engineering actually [1], not software engineering. Also software engineering…
From one perspective types (and I mean proofs encoded in types) is a compile time measure against bugs, while supervisors is a runtime measure. It's much easier and more productive to not do proofs and rely on runtime…
Right, but the point is those materials are not for starting a sustainable business, but a startup, a whole different thing as you understand. For sustainable business you probably don't want to listen to anyone…
It's also not random. I've talked a couple of times in my life to strangers in public transport, well, they actually talked to me, both times somehow accidentally people who I talked to were IT professionals, one was a…
You should read some Nassim Taleb or something, because what you are saying is too nonsensical, like there is no awareness of chances in your arguments whatsoever, as if this dystopian concept of merit is somehow…
It's not ironic, such dystopia is particularly liked and promoted by capitalist scumbags, because it lets them justify exploitation, inequality, overwork, etc. But of course for any thinking person it's obvious that…
It's "strong" in that you can see some effect in blood of people tutoring vs people waiting. But that's about it, you can't draw other conclusions from it. It says absolutely nothing about volunteering, health, being…
Sure, but it has nothing to do with volunteering or health.
Exactly, it's not possible to control for that, just propaganda to promote volunteering as a good thing.
How on earth can they control for that in short term studies? Is it even possible to get any statistical significance on that? Smells like bullshit, there is no way there is causation on health from volunteering. Think…
Is it really important though, as the only solution is still just HEPA filter. Expensive air filters usually have dust sensors/particle counters in them, so there is some indication when the air is dirty and, you know,…
> Our current culture over-values individuals and loves the myth of the one wo/man show. Teams are boring. Give us someone to follow. People repeat it often, but it's not true, it can't explain Blankpink, BTS, Twice,…
But it's not the reality though, ultimately software doesn't want to commoditize hardware, it wants to have choices, sure, but only for itself, so it can lock people in to a specific choice to sell it to people too and…
I'm not sure why you say it's interesting, signed binaries was always known to be a useless measure against APT level threats, getting signing keys is probably the easiest thing at that level. I remember Microsoft even…
> as well as the fact that the inventor of TLA+, Leslie Lamport, is very well-known for his work in distributed systems, led to TLA+ But didn't lead him to come up with decent distributed algorithms. PAXOS is a negative…
I was reading your comment and was thinking who would praise dang's overly capitalist ideological Silicon Valley moderation. And then clicked on your nickname. Of course you would, people like you is people dang likes…
> When people say “exactly once” is impossible they really mean in the face of failure at the queue level. And what exactly is impossible with that? Just wait it out, i.e. like all the CP systems do (as per CAP).
> I'm putting this one on my new hire required reading list. So, "I can hire people and this is how they must dance for me, regardless of how wrong I am."?
> Given all the things that can go wrong, it's impossible for any messaging system to guarantee exactly-once delivery. It's possible to guarantee exactly-once delivery, just not in bounded time, but eventually. That's…
Morality doesn't exist outside of "socially prescribed conclusions", it's actually a pure social thing, it has no other function, but to help individuals make socially acceptable choices.
Children can reason morally and do, they just didn't learn a lot of morals to reason with yet. Morals, i.e. what is good and what is bad, is something people never stop learning. Obviously learning moral values from…
It's not, it's an Elbrus architecture with VLIW-style instruction set, own compilers, etc.
> I do not know much about subject but I confidently claimed 100% effect, therefore confirming what I said :) Well, that's not a Dunning-Kruger Effect either, but maybe a confirmation bias mixed with survivorship bias.
Search HN for the effect, you'll see criticism of people citing it from years back, so it's not this year's thing at all.
You can try to explain that the effect doesn't actually apply to any pointing out of the effect in someone's comment, maybe even cite the study.
> SW engineers work in OSs, drivers, firmware, and applied areas likes comms and robotics That would be system programming, part of computer engineering actually [1], not software engineering. Also software engineering…
From one perspective types (and I mean proofs encoded in types) is a compile time measure against bugs, while supervisors is a runtime measure. It's much easier and more productive to not do proofs and rely on runtime…
Right, but the point is those materials are not for starting a sustainable business, but a startup, a whole different thing as you understand. For sustainable business you probably don't want to listen to anyone…
It's also not random. I've talked a couple of times in my life to strangers in public transport, well, they actually talked to me, both times somehow accidentally people who I talked to were IT professionals, one was a…
You should read some Nassim Taleb or something, because what you are saying is too nonsensical, like there is no awareness of chances in your arguments whatsoever, as if this dystopian concept of merit is somehow…
It's not ironic, such dystopia is particularly liked and promoted by capitalist scumbags, because it lets them justify exploitation, inequality, overwork, etc. But of course for any thinking person it's obvious that…
It's "strong" in that you can see some effect in blood of people tutoring vs people waiting. But that's about it, you can't draw other conclusions from it. It says absolutely nothing about volunteering, health, being…
Sure, but it has nothing to do with volunteering or health.
Exactly, it's not possible to control for that, just propaganda to promote volunteering as a good thing.
How on earth can they control for that in short term studies? Is it even possible to get any statistical significance on that? Smells like bullshit, there is no way there is causation on health from volunteering. Think…
Is it really important though, as the only solution is still just HEPA filter. Expensive air filters usually have dust sensors/particle counters in them, so there is some indication when the air is dirty and, you know,…
> Our current culture over-values individuals and loves the myth of the one wo/man show. Teams are boring. Give us someone to follow. People repeat it often, but it's not true, it can't explain Blankpink, BTS, Twice,…
But it's not the reality though, ultimately software doesn't want to commoditize hardware, it wants to have choices, sure, but only for itself, so it can lock people in to a specific choice to sell it to people too and…
I'm not sure why you say it's interesting, signed binaries was always known to be a useless measure against APT level threats, getting signing keys is probably the easiest thing at that level. I remember Microsoft even…
> as well as the fact that the inventor of TLA+, Leslie Lamport, is very well-known for his work in distributed systems, led to TLA+ But didn't lead him to come up with decent distributed algorithms. PAXOS is a negative…