HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

strict9

no profile record

Submissions

Wait Out AI's Super-Spending False Start

bloomberg.com
6 points·by strict9·3 bulan yang lalu·1 comments

I hate customer-service chatbots: Consumer-AI relationship off to rocky start

cnbc.com
2 points·by strict9·3 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Iranian Hacktivists Strike Medical Device Maker Stryker and Wiped Systems

zetter-zeroday.com
54 points·by strict9·4 bulan yang lalu·2 comments

[untitled]

1 points·by strict9·4 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Private Equity Debt Left a Leading VPN Open to Chinese Hackers

financialpost.com
1 points·by strict9·5 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

AWS outages caused by AI coding bot blunder, report claims

tomshardware.com
4 points·by strict9·5 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Target's dev server offline after hackers claim to steal source code

bleepingcomputer.com
15 points·by strict9·6 bulan yang lalu·1 comments

Apple Pushes iPhone Users Still on iOS 18 to Upgrade to iOS 26

macrumors.com
14 points·by strict9·7 bulan yang lalu·4 comments

Public Montessori programs strengthen learning outcomes at lower costs: study

phys.org
374 points·by strict9·9 bulan yang lalu·243 comments

Why Are H-1B Visas Suddenly a Big Deal? One Reason: Tech Jobs Disappeared

nytimes.com
5 points·by strict9·9 bulan yang lalu·3 comments

Layoffs and H-1Bs: Texas Instruments' Billion-Dollar Balancing Act

dallasexpress.com
4 points·by strict9·10 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Optus says fatal triple-zero outage was caused by 'human error'

9news.com.au
2 points·by strict9·10 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Man, 34, has tooth implanted in eye to restore his vision

today.com
2 points·by strict9·10 bulan yang lalu·2 comments

Three farmers on monopolies and mismanagement in U.S. agriculture

agweb.com
174 points·by strict9·10 bulan yang lalu·209 comments

comments

strict9
·2 bulan yang lalu·discuss
My experience in a large US city is surprisingly the opposite. The toy stores I visit are doing great. I suspect this is is because a large portion of their business is for birthday parties.

I assumed many or most were gone because of Amazon. But after having kids and getting gifts for birthday parties, I've learned there are a lot of them and they are doing healthy business. Almost always a line on weekends.

Many or most in line take advantage of free gift wrap because they're on their way to a party.

In many ways it is more convenient than Amazon because you're going out anyway, why not get it at the last second with careful gift wrapping.

But even a recent trip to the suburbs surprised me. The Lego store in the mall had a velvet rope and long line of kids waiting to get in. I had never seen anything like this and apparently it is usually this busy.
strict9
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
https://archive.is/A9Gn0
strict9
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
It is true commercial versions are slightly more expensive. But this is the tradeoff of buying something more durable and meant to be used continuously.

But it's not true that they are difficult to buy.

For my two examples: Commercial washer/dryer sets available through any appliance dealer. Commercial hospitality TVs and other commercial electronics are available via Grainger.
strict9
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
This is an interesting and more apt way to frame smart features.

One way I've found to avoid objects that come alive is to buy the commercial version.

- TVs aimed at commercial hospitality businesses let you avoid a lot of the bloatware and smart features that come bundled with it

- Commercial washer/dryers let you avoid bluetooth and wifi and other junk not needed to wash your clothes. These are available without the coin operated features

Commercial versions of consumer products are usually simpler, more durable, and don't have advertising and smart features.
strict9
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I've been using ack for a very long time, maybe 15 years.

It's like grep but faster and easier to use. I still use it all the time, even in the era of Claude.

https://beyondgrep.com/
strict9
·4 bulan yang lalu·discuss
It appears personal devices were also impacted by this via Microsoft Intune. That app is presented to employees as a way to get their email/slack on their personal device without giving IT systems access to it.

IT systems around the country say that they have no access to your personal data and there they can only block access to Intune apps.

But the linked reddit thread[1] in this article notes personal devices getting wiped and locked out.

[1]: https://www.reddit.com/r/cybersecurity/comments/1rqopq0/stry...
strict9
·6 bulan yang lalu·discuss
As I have heard from mid level managers and C suite types across a few dev jobs. Staff are the largest expense and the technology department is the largest cost center. I disagree because Sales couldn't exist with a product but that's a lost point.

This is why those same mid level managers and C suite people are salivating over AI and mentioning it in every press release.

The reality is that costs are being reduced by replacing US teams with offshore teams. And the layoffs are being spun as a result of AI adoption.

AI tools for software development are here to stay and accelerate in the coming months and years and there will be advances. But cost reductions are largely realized via onshore/offshore replacement.

The remaining onshore teams must absorb much more slack and fixes and in a way end up being more productive.
strict9
·7 bulan yang lalu·discuss
>Primarily because web search these days is so shitty but that’s besides the point.

Obviously there are a lot of reasons for this. But I think one of the most important reasons is that there is so few organic interesting content destinations anymore.

Sure there are some neat shopify stores, news sites, and a few dedicated souls keeping up blogs. But so much of the casual browsing that the web once was has been obliterated by the move to social media.

And what hasn't moved is now a mess of AI generated fluff or link farms.

I used to think Google made search worse to increase ad revenue. And maybe it's tangentially related. But the stuff I used to search for and find and get inspiration from has moved to walled gardens. Reddit is one of the few remaining open web destinations left.

AI can't solve that problem.
strict9
·7 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Almost all tech CEOs think we want an AI button on every window, every app, every dialog. Always there no matter what to make workers more productive or need fewer workers or whatever.

The reality is that even the most ardent supporters of AI want it only in a single web page or in their IDE and that's about it.
strict9
·7 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Stack Overflow should have been a strong connection for developers who started building software prior to 2022.

A niche place to find the solution for something getting in your way.

Instead, my own experience and every anecdote I've ever heard from those who tried participating mirrors this one.

Genuine questions and thought out responses closed in the harshest way possible.

If the policy on duplicates weren't so rigidly and coldly enforced it would be a place I've visit frequently to learn.

Instead I avoid it and do not feel bad that it's been superseded by LLMs. Which sucks because good human responses are far more preferable.
strict9
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
And all of these outages happening not long after most of them dismissed a large amount of experienced staff while moving jobs offshore to save in labor costs.
strict9
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Most or all of these lost significant institutional knowledge through layoff after layoff and jobs moved to lower cost countries.

Maybe a coincidence or maybe not.
strict9
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
>It basically needs to replace its present Balmer with a Satya.

You had me all the wya until this line.
strict9
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Interesting insight. High interest rates keep new startups low. Well, not counting AI startups I guess.

And the lack of new (non-AI) startups allows bloated incumbents to get by without innovating or offering new products. Quality destroying measures like offshoring and outsourcing are easier to pull off. As is allowing services and standards to slide.

Maybe we'll only know once interest rates come back down. Or once the AI-replacing-workers veil has been lifted.

I think this dynamic is an under appreciated source of the chart that shows the decoupling of the job market with the stock market [1]

[1] https://www.businessinsider.com/how-scary-is-the-scariest-ch...
strict9
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
In the past large developments would win over local government support with promises of jobs and investment in the local economy.

Now the only promises are a strained grid, higher energy bills and loud noise. It doesn't help that AI has been falsely attributed as the reason to lay people off in the past few years by CEOs who are actually just cutting costs or moving jobs offshore.

This situation probably gets worse before it gets better for the companies deploying new data centers.
strict9
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I agree with this message and happy to see it.

But I think the more important point is the increasing number of layoffs linked in the article [1]. These layoffs are mostly ignored here and everywhere else.

Jobs are getting offshored and outsourced in large quantities and the tech community is on the whole ambivalent about it. Unless you were directly impacted.

The path for software developers looks bleak. While people are wringing their hands over AI while something else entirely is destroying job prospects for young grads.

[1] https://www.cbsnews.com/news/layoffs-2025-highest-level-sinc...
strict9
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Every time one of Zitron's posts come up I think of bitcoin or algorithmic social media feeds. Like those things, I understand people have strong opinions on whether or not it's good or bad for society.

But what's the endgame? Is it to persuade people not to use these things? Make them illegal? Create some other technology that makes them obsolete or non-functional?
strict9
·10 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Tech employers are saying it's efficiencies gained in AI that led to layoffs for the past few years. Yet they have increased headcount in engineering offices in other countries at the same time.

This is also happening at small and midsize companies that ship software. It's easy to find this information, particularly for the largest companies like Amazon, Microsoft, and Google.

Like the article states, there are a number of confounding factors. But it's not AI, no matter how much founders and CEOs want it to be true.

It's the pursuit of lower cost employees.
strict9
·10 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Necessary step before making a move into hardware. An object you have to remember to use quickly gets forgotten in favor of your phone.

But a device that reaches out to you reminds you to hook back in.
strict9
·10 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Am I reading this correctly in that Chicago is the only section with dashes indicating a blend of regions?

Seems accurate but interesting this is the only area with crossover.