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zhengyi13

712 karmajoined 13 tahun yang lalu

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zhengyi13
·4 hari yang lalu·discuss
You've probably got a certain level of trust or delegated authority, but you want input and you're giving your leadership the opportunity to steer the decision if they feel they need to, and you're balancing that against the urgency of action.

By very direct analogy, I think there's a dictum in the US military to the effect that a bad plan executed quickly can be better than a perfect plan that's executed too late.

ETA: ... and you're potentially speeding the decision/action by giving leadership the opportunity to confirm/redirect on receipt of the email.
zhengyi13
·4 hari yang lalu·discuss
They literally gamified it? Amazing.
zhengyi13
·4 hari yang lalu·discuss
> they are the most repairable.

That's a really weird way to spell "incumbency and network effects".

In fairness, you're not wrong, but that seems to be a very specific framing that hides a lot of what this whole discussion is about.
zhengyi13
·6 hari yang lalu·discuss
Yes, perhaps they do allow for greater flexibility, but that's complex and difficult to do well/reliably, and doing it well/reliably requires signal analysis gear and software modeling that's out of the reach of normal consumers.
zhengyi13
·bulan lalu·discuss
I think your point about the loss of case generally stands, but surely the genitive isn't lost?
zhengyi13
·bulan lalu·discuss
As opposed to relying solely on engine braking (or the EV equivalent thereof)?

I'd personally prefer a belt-and-suspenders approach.
zhengyi13
·bulan lalu·discuss
If your server is Indian, they'll likely react positively, and get you what you want.
zhengyi13
·2 bulan yang lalu·discuss
"I'm just asking questions!"

Probably for a number of reasons, starting from our desire as a society to ensure they are as broadly applied as possible, which is in turn driven by our desire as a society (read: "collective") to ensure that they're as effective as possible, which means driving for herd immunity and even things like permanent eradication.

For those who aren't aware of any "blanket liability immunity", I found https://www.hrsa.gov/vaccine-compensation/faq a useful starting point. I hadn't heard of such before.
zhengyi13
·2 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Probably not in the way that you might mean it, but for me (Xoogler, 2010 - 2023) internalizing bazel means:

"Hey, where's your tool's code in $MONOREPO?" "<path/to/stuff>"

Cool:

    g4d my-citc-client # moral equivalent to `cd ~/repos/stuff`
    blaze run path/to/stuff:target
... and you get a running version of whatever $stuff is, immediately built from head, quickly - no matter the set of dependencies, or which language they were built in. I can just try your thing out immediately with a common interface for all the builds, and I don't need to understand the build at all, unless or until I do, and then OK, absolutely every single build is always expressed in exactly the same way, same idioms, same patterns...
zhengyi13
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Wild to see the usenet/uuencoding model reproduced on the web w/ jpegs.
zhengyi13
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
That's a feature, not a bug /s
zhengyi13
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Probably both, to respond to the risk tolerances of any given org.
zhengyi13
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
... and the standard reply to this standard reply is "The market can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent."
zhengyi13
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
It's been interesting to review my portfolio, such as it is, against this situation, and see that I'm down relatively little. Not because I've bet against anything per se, but I made a conscious decision years ago to diversify out of the SP500 ("VTSAX and chill!") into broader and exUS indices.
zhengyi13
·4 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I'm reminded of people inside Google arguing with Vic Gundotra to drop the Real ID requirement for Plus :(
zhengyi13
·5 bulan yang lalu·discuss
> There are outcomes where the US government seizes the company. Not super likely, not impossible.

Are there historical examples in the US specifically where we've nationalized a business?

Because we've certainly invaded countries and assassinated leaders over exactly the same.

ETA: I could have answered my own question with two minutes of research. Yes, we have: https://thenextsystem.org/history-of-nationalization-in-the-...
zhengyi13
·5 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I can't speak to their quality, but every time I see their name, I wonder about how they're received in England: Americans might generally be unaware, but "smeg" as a name doesn't land well there, as I understand it.
zhengyi13
·5 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Some of us have hands (and wrists and arms) that are dealing with RSI. Keyboard use reduction is very important in these cases.

Greg Priest Dorman [0][1] had other physical issues such that he had to regularly switch between sitting, standing, and walking during his workday. His solutions included (in part) some very specialized keypads, but TTS might well have been another solution for someone with similar needs.

Another fellow on my team refuses to write/type anything other than pure code to solve issues at work, but will absolutely talk for hours on end about designs, considerations, issues, what-have-you, so we're actively trying to get him to adopt a TTS-based workflow for knowledge transfer, writing tickets/bugs, etc.

[0]: https://computerhistory.org/profile/greg-priest-dorman/ [1]: https://www.cs.vassar.edu/people/priestdo/wearables/top
zhengyi13
·5 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Various European cities come to mind: Narrow streets are something of a trope in certain movies/genres.
zhengyi13
·5 bulan yang lalu·discuss
They're still out there; people are still posting stories and having conversations about 'em. I don't know that CmdrTaco or any of the other founders are still at all involved, but I'm willing to bet they're still running on Perl :)