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bit-101

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bit-101
·last year·discuss
Why is this phrased as a hypothetical question?
bit-101
·3 years ago·discuss
Not sure I agree. I listened to a handful of the books that MS encoded. I would not be able to listen to a full book like that. It's just not quite right - the timing is fixed and while the words are correctly pronounced and each have the right accent, there's a lack of natural emphasis on certain words within each sentence that makes if feel cold and alien. I admit this is miles ahead of any previous text-to-speech I've heard, and would be good for reading, say, a blog post or article, but not a full book. At least not fiction. I read fiction for enjoyment and agree that the narrator makes the difference. I've stopped listening to several audiobooks because the narrator didn't cut it for me.

I'll watch this space and reevaluate, but I wouldn't listen to any of this batch.
bit-101
·3 years ago·discuss
And therefore you are rewarding and validating this behavior, so that content authors continue to pile on more and worse ads.
bit-101
·4 years ago·discuss
I concur with a lot of what other people are saying here. Late 50s, programming professionally for around 25 years. But recently switched to management. Really hard for me to focus on details of the companies code anymore.

But... when I get on some personal project, I'm on fire. I can learn new languages and concepts and systems and build pretty complex things that people are amazed at.

I think it's more job burn out after years of writing code for other people. You write the code and you work towards the deadline like the world is going to end if you don't make it. Then that code is in production for a year or two. Maybe more if you're lucky, and then it's gone, replaced by some new thing. You stop caring quite as much. But you see these new young kids on fire and working all night and you get imposter syndrome and you try to care and you beat yourself up and think you're losing your touch. tmi?
bit-101
·4 years ago·discuss
LIke:

- Decent speed of compiling and execution.

- Expressiveness.

- I like the struct/receiver/interface interplay to create an analog of classes.

- Nice standard library.

- Cross compilation.

Things I wish for:

- Ternary operator.

- Something a bit closer to inheritance. Embedding structs in other structs fools you into thinking there's inheritance, but you quickly learn that it doesn't work the way you think it will.

- At the same time, fully implementing a functional programming paradigm isn't particularly easy either.

But all in all, I'm a big fan.