HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

vrnvu

no profile record

Submissions

What happened to nerds?

mrmarket.lol
755 points·by vrnvu·26 hari yang lalu·512 comments

The Third Hard Problem

mmapped.blog
2 points·by vrnvu·4 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

How Dada enables internal references

smallcultfollowing.com
24 points·by vrnvu·4 bulan yang lalu·5 comments

Does Syntax Matter?

gingerbill.org
3 points·by vrnvu·5 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Software Acceleration and Desynchronization

ferd.ca
5 points·by vrnvu·6 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Programming vs. Coding vs. Software Engineering (2019)

rakhim.exotext.com
2 points·by vrnvu·7 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Social Architecture – The Toolbox

hintjens.gitbooks.io
2 points·by vrnvu·7 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Why PyTorch is an amazing place to work and Why I'm Joining Thinking Machines

thonking.ai
1 points·by vrnvu·7 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Ghostty is now non-profit

mitchellh.com
1,343 points·by vrnvu·7 bulan yang lalu·289 comments

Artificial Computation

cultureandcommunication.org
11 points·by vrnvu·7 bulan yang lalu·2 comments

George Hotz: Outwit, Outplay, Outlast [video]

youtube.com
5 points·by vrnvu·8 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Game design is simple

raphkoster.com
560 points·by vrnvu·8 bulan yang lalu·173 comments

JVM exceptions are weird: a decompiler perspective

purplesyringa.moe
166 points·by vrnvu·8 bulan yang lalu·69 comments

Programming Modern Systems Like It Was 1984 (2014)

prog21.dadgum.com
6 points·by vrnvu·9 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

J.P. Morgan's OpenAI loan is strange

marketunpack.com
260 points·by vrnvu·9 bulan yang lalu·156 comments

comments

vrnvu
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Jujutsu is immutable for public changes by default.

You can force changes with a ‘—ignore-inmutable’ flag.
vrnvu
·5 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Brings memories of when I did some chapters of HTDP2 to learn Lisp.

https://htdp.org/2024-11-6/Book/index.html

More accesible than SICP, highly recommended
vrnvu
·5 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Related https://www.romaglushko.com/blog/whats-aouth2/
vrnvu
·5 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Ditched git for jj a year ago. Never going back.

If anybody is hesitant give it a try!
vrnvu
·5 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I really liked the example in OP. I will give Deno and Dax a shot.
vrnvu
·5 bulan yang lalu·discuss
It's a cycle, design patterns, TDD, the latest framework or language. We keep chasing the next silver bullet, but there isn't one. There's no easy road.
vrnvu
·5 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Made me think. Every time I see a “Postman collection” or similar artifacts, my heart skips a bit. Use curl. Run it interactively in the terminal. When it works, move it into a shell script where you can simply check the status code. Voilà, magic! you’ve got yourself a simple but valuable integration test.

Instead of juggling dashboards and collections of requests, or relying on your shell history as Matklad mentions, you have it in a file that you can commit and plug into CI. Win-win.

At some point, that testing shell script can be integrated into your codebase using your working language and build tooling.
vrnvu
·6 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Love this version. I quoted the chapter about Leadership plenty of times at work.

`True leaders are hardly known to their followers.`
vrnvu
·6 bulan yang lalu·discuss
First. Love that more tools like Honeycomb (amazing) are popping up in the space. I agree with the post.

But. IMO, statistics and probability can’t be replaced with tooling. As software engineering can’t be replaced with no-code services to build applications…

If you need to profile some bug or troubleshoot complex systems (distributed, dbs). You must do your math homework consistently as part of the job.

If you don’t comprehend the distribution of your data, the seasonality, noise vs signal; how can you measure anything valuable? How can you ask the right questions?
vrnvu
·6 bulan yang lalu·discuss
> On the one hand, at lower-levels you want to exhaustively enumerate errors...

> On the other hand, at higher-levels, you want to string together widely different functionality from many separate subsystems without worrying about specific errors...

I feel like the Rust ecosystem of crates has naturally grown to handle these two ideas pretty well. `anyhow` for applications, `thiserror` for libraries.
vrnvu
·7 bulan yang lalu·discuss
> Metrics are simple, extremely cheap

You clearly haven’t seen our Datadog invoice :)

Jokes aside, I liked the idea of listing things by level of detail.

One related issue I run into all the time is how context gets lost when moving between layers. You start with host metrics, then Kubernetes wraps the host and overrides the tags, and suddenly you can’t filter host metrics by node anymore. Watch out.
vrnvu
·7 bulan yang lalu·discuss
My first thought: Controlling allocations and minding constraints... honestly, that's engineering stuff all services should care about. Not only "high-volume" services.
vrnvu
·7 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Sort of related. Jepsen and Antithesis recently released a glossary of common terms which is a fantastic reference.

https://jepsen.io/blog/2025-10-20-distsys-glossary
vrnvu
·7 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Everyone can talk and give opinions. The real question is if you can actually make a difference. I tell people there's a gap between knowing how to do something and actually doing it. And that gap is a big part of our engineering skills.

If I'm not going to change something, I'd rather not talk or give opinions.

Related: https://strangestloop.io/essays/things-that-arent-doing-the-...
vrnvu
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
>> Why is it not more popular?

Property, fuzzy, snapshot testing. Great tools that make software more correct and reliable.

The challenge for most developers is that they need to change how they design code and think about testing.

I’ve always said the hardest part of programming isn’t learning, it’s unlearning what you already know…
vrnvu
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
> Any time you are making decisions based on information that you know at compile time, you could apply this technique

I’d go further. Most business requirements are known at compile time.

Take the simplest example, dispatching a function based on a condition. If A then do_X, if B then do_Y.

People often reach for elaborate design patterns, dependency injection, or polymorphism here. But why? If the decision logic is static, don’t turn it into a runtime problem.

Inline the code. Move the ifs up. Write clear, specific functions that match your domain knowledge instead of abstracting too early…

Don’t make compile time problems runtime ones.
vrnvu
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
> when you can't tell what's blocking and what isn't.

Isn't that exactly why they're making IO explicit in functions? So you can trace it up the call chain.
vrnvu
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Shocking to hear this news. I used to watch Danya's videos a lot... RIP
vrnvu
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I’ve been using a "no syntax highlight" theme for years. I recommend it. After a while, your brain basically turns into an AST parser and code becomes easier to read.
vrnvu
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I've been applying a lot of principles and suggestions from TigerBeetle style lately, mainly in Rust and Go and I can’t recommend it enough.

- single entry point, near-zero deps

- ci locally and tested, one command to runs tests, coverage, lint etc

- property/snapshot/swarm testing, I love writing simulations now and letting the assertions crash

- fast/slow split + everything is deterministic with a seed

- explicit upper bounds + pool of resources. I still dynamically allocate but it makes code simpler to reason about

Thanks to the TB team for the videos and docs they been putting out lately.