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hvs

6,431 karmajoined 17 tahun yang lalu

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hvs
·kemarin dulu·discuss
One of my great regrets in life is not knowing anything about how to rebuild an engine (and various other car parts). It's not exactly a cheap hobby, so it's probably for the best, but I have the feeling I would love working on cars (my wife probably not so much).
hvs
·kemarin dulu·discuss
That was discussed in the article.
hvs
·5 hari yang lalu·discuss
And DraftKings/FanDuel
hvs
·10 hari yang lalu·discuss
There was documentary about this in the 80's: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0088933/
hvs
·12 hari yang lalu·discuss
The Patriot Act is perfect example of the adage, "Never let a crisis go to waste."
hvs
·16 hari yang lalu·discuss
"Usury" is still a word in use but now, for legal purposes, it means "interest that a lender charges a borrower at a rate above the lawful ceiling on such charges" rather than just any interest at all.
hvs
·24 hari yang lalu·discuss
My wife, who honestly tries to avoid technology at all costs, was working on her business site and said, "It's almost impossible to find any good stock photos with all the AI slop out there."

AI, among non-tech people means two things: slop and shitty customer service bots.
hvs
·26 hari yang lalu·discuss
As someone with extreme phone anxiety to begin with, long waits on phones are deal breakers for me. If you are a company that answers your phone quickly by a real person you've earned yourself a lifelong customer.
hvs
·26 hari yang lalu·discuss
I used Rokus for years (happily) but they slowly began to degrade the experience with ads on their home screen (that were often not appropriate for children). Due to an unrelated project that required me to purchase an AppleTV I was quickly amazed at how much better their product was. Fast and clean. Never going back.
hvs
·29 hari yang lalu·discuss
I know that as technologists we tend to think of this as "treasure" but most other people think of it as "large metal objects that are expensive to store or landfill." Maintaining, storing, and restoring them on top of that is also very expensive. Usually they'll give them to anyone willing to take them off their hands. We only need to look at the closure of the Living Computers Museum closing [1] to see that most people do not see the value in the history of computing. That's why the CHM is doing such is important work.

[1] https://www.geekwire.com/2024/seattles-living-computers-muse...
hvs
·2 bulan yang lalu·discuss
HN Hug of Death: https://web.archive.org/web/20260522134016/https://robida.ne...
hvs
·2 bulan yang lalu·discuss
A byte is always 8 bits. The word you're looking for is `word-size` which, in this case would be 4 bits.
hvs
·2 bulan yang lalu·discuss
In Minnesota they tend to be (or were) owned by companies in the construction / maintenance industry and plastered with full body advertisements for said services (not actually used by construction workers).
hvs
·2 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Came here to say that a lot of these LLM posts make me feel like I was hit by a hammer and I can't understand the world anymore. Thankfully, the HN comments confirm that this is as insane as I thought it was.
hvs
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
If you want to get depressed about all the problems with trying to colonize Mars, I recommend A City on Mars: https://www.acityonmars.com/

It's by the cartoonist of Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal and his wife (the one with an actual science PhD). https://www.smbc-comics.com/
hvs
·4 bulan yang lalu·discuss
It's not that they made more money from merchandise, it's that they sold more t-shirts than albums. Implying that more people were interested in the "image" of punk rock than the music.
hvs
·4 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Because Worse is Better. /s

It's the incentives and everything is a trade off. Time to market, performance, features: none of these choices are made in a vacuum. Oh, and people like to go home and see their families once in a while.

As a developer of over 35 years, I feel like I hear the same arguments over and over again. "Programmers used to care about performance!" No they didn't, they just had no choice because computers sucked and you had to work on performance or your application would barely run. "Progammers used to care about the quality of their code!" Really. You apparently never worked on legacy systems with years of hacks and spaghetti code that took an afternoon to trace through just to figure out what it was doing.

People haven't changed. Kids aren't lazier these days. The incentives are always just to ship as fast as possible. Performance will be dealt with when and if it is so bad that the customer complains and not a moment sooner.

When I was much younger I fancied myself a "craftsman" of software. But any "craft" I was able to bestow on my software was in spite of the surrounding incentives not because of them. Software is closer to assembly line work than craftsmanship and LLMs are just driving that point home faster and harder than ever.

I still love software development after all these years but it's entirely because I love solving problems and computers still fascinate me the same as they did when I got my first TRS-80 Color Computer at age seven. Nobody that's not a programmer cares as long as the software does what they need it to and does fast enough that they don't start wonder why they have to use this piece of crap software in the first place.
hvs
·5 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Everyone made personal computers in the late 70's and early 80's. It was the latest corporate fad.
hvs
·5 bulan yang lalu·discuss
"Animal Farm" is a satire of the Russian Revolution.
hvs
·5 bulan yang lalu·discuss
* ANY consumer-grade home appliances.