HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

eluketronic

no profile record

comments

eluketronic
·letztes Jahr·discuss
Yikes
eluketronic
·letztes Jahr·discuss
I’ve wrestled with this idea since reading My Side of The Mountain when I was quite young. Our society and culture constantly reinforces the perceived need to make enough money to retire one day, assuming that there is a necessary amount of money one needs to continue living and that one should stop working at some point. The fear of exorbitant medical costs in our privatized healthcare system scare me into thinking I need a fortune to feel safe and be able to live a long health life. My rampant consumption and desire to live a “full” life, like those that I see posted on social media, also stoke this financial insecurity mindset—“I must have more so that I can do more so that people will know that I am fulfilled and then I will feel happy and fulfilled.”
eluketronic
·vor 2 Jahren·discuss
“…in mice” would be a helpful addition to the title.
eluketronic
·vor 2 Jahren·discuss
This is pretty interesting but it seems like there’s a massive component of this system that is yet to be proven viable—from the article: “Drilling a hole is challenging enough,” says Tester. “But actually running the reservoir and getting the energy out of the ground safely may be something very, very far off in the future.”

Is there any existing +3km deep geothermal well energy system in use?
eluketronic
·vor 2 Jahren·discuss
In my experience, Dark UX is often a symptom of a myopic, revenue-focused product team. Tricking users with dark UX patterns will almost always have a more profoundly negative effect on the company’s revenue in the long term than whatever the incremental, short term gain may be. I work for a DTC company as a FE engineer and I’m frequently having to try convince product people that implementing & maintaining dark UX patterns erodes our users’ trust in us and puts more of a burden on our customer experience team.

Dissecting the event handling of Feedly’s UI isn’t revealing the crux of the issue here. Engineers (in my experience) want to build things that provide a respectful user experience, things that they themselves would not be frustrated using. I absolutely despise seeing these types of dark patterns in the wild. I would be surprised if an engineer suggested this Feedly feature. But maybe I’m more sensitive to Dark UX than most and as a result have a more aggressive hatred for it in my work ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
eluketronic
·vor 3 Jahren·discuss
The first suggestion that appeared for me was “Trying CBD”. Is that really a “unique activity idea for the holiday break”?