HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

cyndunlop

565 karmajoined 4 years ago
https://github.com/scynthiadunlop

Submissions

Building the AI Retrieval Infrastructure Behind 20B+ Vectors at HubSpot

product.hubspot.com
3 points·by cyndunlop·3 days ago·0 comments

Write That Blog

writethat.blog
1 points·by cyndunlop·5 days ago·0 comments

In Defense of AI Mandates

charitydotwtf.substack.com
4 points·by cyndunlop·10 days ago·0 comments

Make AI Boring Again

charitydotwtf.substack.com
6 points·by cyndunlop·18 days ago·2 comments

Why developers use LLMs to write blog posts

writethatblog.substack.com
3 points·by cyndunlop·19 days ago·2 comments

At the Ambitious New A.I Museum, You Feel the Art, and It Feels You Right Back

nytimes.com
1 points·by cyndunlop·19 days ago·0 comments

Discord Automates ScyllaDB Clusters at Scale

discord.com
3 points·by cyndunlop·2 months ago·0 comments

You've Got (Too Much) Mail: Behind the Scenes of the 3/25/26 Voice Outage

discord.com
1 points·by cyndunlop·2 months ago·0 comments

Ask HN: How do you respond to blog posts that seem AI assisted?

1 points·by cyndunlop·3 months ago·3 comments

Ask HN: Why/how do you use LLMs to draft tech blogs?

2 points·by cyndunlop·3 months ago·1 comments

How Accurate Are Google's A.I. Overviews?

nytimes.com
7 points·by cyndunlop·3 months ago·1 comments

High memory usage in Postgres is good

planetscale.com
3 points·by cyndunlop·3 months ago·1 comments

Gergely Orosz on Technical Blogging

writethatblog.substack.com
3 points·by cyndunlop·4 months ago·0 comments

Future Casting the Modern Data Stack

motherduck.com
3 points·by cyndunlop·4 months ago·0 comments

What Happens with Open Source in the Age of AI?

turso.tech
1 points·by cyndunlop·4 months ago·0 comments

Integrated Gauges: Lessons Learned Monitoring Seastar's IO Stack

scylladb.com
1 points·by cyndunlop·4 months ago·0 comments

Writing for Developers

manning.com
1 points·by cyndunlop·4 months ago·1 comments

800th blog post: Write that Blog

muratbuffalo.blogspot.com
4 points·by cyndunlop·4 months ago·0 comments

Tracing Discord's Elixir Systems (Without Melting Everything)

discord.com
15 points·by cyndunlop·4 months ago·0 comments

We Wrote a Book: Writing for Developers (Manning Publications)

github.com
3 points·by cyndunlop·4 months ago·1 comments

comments

cyndunlop
·19 days ago·discuss
A survey to see why/how people were having LLMs write their articles. Some findings: - 40% of “always-LLM” writers never wrote before, 20% rarely wrote before - 72% of those who generated LLM drafts performed substantial editing, 23% totally rewrote the drafts - Only 13% felt LLMs captured their voice, only 11% felt LLMs captured their ideas - 73% did not disclose that they used LLMs to write
cyndunlop
·26 days ago·discuss
I knew people didn't like AI-scented articles, mainly wanted to see what specific actions people took when they encountered them.
cyndunlop
·2 months ago·discuss
I actually started a survey on how people react to AI assisted blogging ~a week ago. It's at https://forms.gle/oskwkY12epMpXHAZ6 if you want to share there as well
cyndunlop
·3 months ago·discuss
Related: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47573519
cyndunlop
·4 months ago·discuss
My colleague and I published a book to help developers write more compelling blog posts. Bryan Cantrill wrote the foreword, Scott Hanselman wrote the afterword. Eric Lippert was the technical editor. There are more details at https://github.com/scynthiadunlop/WritingForDevelopersBook

You can read some chapters for free on the Manning site. Chapter 8 is available at https://writethatblog.substack.com/p/the-bug-hunt-blog-post-.... And if you want some other chapter(s) as a preview, find the authors and ask nicely.

The book covers strategies for optimizing all phases of the technical blogging process (topic selection, planning, drafting, revising…). Then, we have fun exploring popular engineering blog post patterns such as “The Bug Hunt,” “How We Built It,” “Lessons Learned,” “We Rewrote It in X,” “Thoughts on Trends,” etc. Each "pattern" chapter includes an analysis of real-world examples as well as specific dos/don’ts for that particular pattern. There's a section on moving from blogging into opportunities such as article writing, conference speaking, and book writing. Finally, we wrap with a look at generative AI blogging uses and abuses.

It’s NOT some thinly veiled effort to sell editing/training services (we don’t have any and don't plan to). And it’s not intended to help you get rich from blogging or to divulge some magic formula for hitting the top of HN.

Here’s the table of contents…

Part 1: Fundamentals>>> 1 Why write 2 What to write 3 Captivating readers

Part 2: Nailing the writing process>>> 4 Creating your working draft 5 Optimizing your draft 6 Getting feedback 7 Ship it

Part 3: Applying blog post patterns>>> 8 The “Bug Hunt” pattern 9 The “Rewrote It in X” pattern 10 The “How We Built It” pattern 11 The “Lessons Learned” pattern 12 The “Thoughts on Trends” pattern 13 The “Non-markety Product Perspectives” pattern 14 The “Benchmarks and Test Results” pattern

Part 4: Promotion, adaptation, and expansion>>> 15 Getting attention 16 From blog post to conference talk 17 So you want to write a book

Appendices>>> A. Publishing and writing resources B. AI uses and abuses
cyndunlop
·4 months ago·discuss
My colleague and I published a book (w Manning) to help developers write more compelling blog posts. Bryan Cantrill wrote the foreword, Scott Hanselman wrote the afterword. Eric Lippert was the technical editor.

The book covers strategies for optimizing all phases of the technical blogging process (topic selection, planning, drafting, revising…). Then, we have fun exploring popular engineering blog post patterns such as “The Bug Hunt,” “How We Built It,” “Lessons Learned,” “We Rewrote It in X,” “Thoughts on Trends,” etc. Each "pattern" chapter includes an analysis of real-world examples as well as specific dos/don’ts for that particular pattern. There's a section on moving from blogging into opportunities such as article writing, conference speaking, and book writing. Finally, we wrap with a look at generative AI blogging uses and abuses.

It’s NOT some thinly veiled effort to sell editing/training services (we don’t have any and don't plan to). And it’s not intended to help you get rich from blogging or to divulge some magic formula for hitting the top of HN.

You can read some chapters for free on the Manning site (mng.bz/Y7oK). Chapter 8 is available at https://writethatblog.substack.com/p/the-bug-hunt-blog-post-.... And if you want some other chapter(s) as a preview, find the authors and ask nicely.

Here’s the table of contents…

Part 1: Fundamentals 1 Why write 2 What to write 3 Captivating readers

Part 2: Nailing the writing process 4 Creating your working draft 5 Optimizing your draft 6 Getting feedback 7 Ship it

Part 3: Applying blog post patterns 8 The “Bug Hunt” pattern 9 The “Rewrote It in X” pattern 10 The “How We Built It” pattern 11 The “Lessons Learned” pattern 12 The “Thoughts on Trends” pattern 13 The “Non-markety Product Perspectives” pattern 14 The “Benchmarks and Test Results” pattern

Part 4: Promotion, adaptation, and expansion 15 Getting attention 16 From blog post to conference talk 17 So you want to write a book

Appendices A. Publishing and writing resources B. AI uses and abuses
cyndunlop
·5 months ago·discuss
I'm biased (as a co-author), but I recommend Writing for Developers, published by Manning. ;-) https://github.com/scynthiadunlop/WritingForDevelopersBook

Feel free to find and DM me if you want a preview. Also, there are lots of tips from other tech bloggers here https://writethatblog.substack.com/t/tech-blogger-insights
cyndunlop
·6 months ago·discuss
I've found that reading it out loud (even a whisper) is the best way to catch issues as well as maintain focus.
cyndunlop
·6 months ago·discuss
Not affiliated with the book of the same name
cyndunlop
·7 months ago·discuss
There are a number of perspectives on why others write here: https://writethatblog.substack.com/p/why-write-engineering-b...