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erelong

140 karmajoined 2 anni fa

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Stevie: Vim Predecessor ("ST editor for vi enthusiasts")

en.wikipedia.org
1 points·by erelong·9 giorni fa·0 comments

Ask HN: How to Deal with "File Naming Problem"?

1 points·by erelong·2 mesi fa·5 comments

Dirtsurfing: Two Wheel Mountainboard

2 points·by erelong·4 mesi fa·0 comments

comments

erelong
·l’altro ieri·discuss
Interesting article, I guess it may come off as a reflection of being of a different mindset than an older style of open source software and culture?

I thought the idea was, software is created with an open source and open license to it - so people know what the software is, and are able to make copies of it freely, and so that becomes hard to monetize.

If you are trying to sell software and make it proprietary with closed source, it's not software you can trust (could contain literally any insecure code) so you avoid it and it would lack people using it (not saying this happens in practice, but I thought was the open source argument).

Hence you're saying, just create / pay for insecure proprietary closed source software that can't be shared and isn't intended to be shared.

The subscription model lends itself towards abuses: namely, you can use something temporarily, then lose access. The open source vision was about creating software that can be freely re-used indefinitely without a required subscription and shared without as much of restrictions.

So I think basically people object to this increased limitation of "indefinite reuses" which you can get with open source software that you "own", and maybe the proprietary closed source tendencies of these locked down subscriptions.

Now granted, some of the newer "spaces" we operate in may look a little differently, with lots of things needing or desiring constant updates and we recognize we only have so much time so a question comes up if we even want or need "indefinite reuse" or to even have open source software or to understand how the software works.

But, there might not even be disagreement here... if you just "donate" to an open source nonprofit project, that could still be framed as a "subscription". I think it's maybe not conventionally how we're referring to subscriptions, but I think I could see your case for reframing the subscription towards being something "good" or "ok".

There are open source monetization strategies, but if code tends towards being less able to be monetized, how can software projects be funded? I think in this "post-intellectual property" open source scenario I'm suggesting at, the funding might shift in other directions (maybe like from selling hardware or tangible physical goods).

But anyway, I guess we would just probably distinguish between "unwanted" and "desired" subscription practices: limited locked down subs versus unlimited maybe subscription-less or limited open source subs.

At least these were some thoughts this essay was generating in me.
erelong
·l’altro ieri·discuss
> Version Control Will Evolve for the Agent Boom

Isn't this the idea behind Yegg's "Beads"?
erelong
·l’altro ieri·discuss
not justifying it but I imagine even pre-Flock there were false positives, I guess a question would be if the false positives are multiplying or if they would be better than the previous system of false positives
erelong
·3 giorni fa·discuss
free sauna

free hot tub

free publicity and good will gathered

("free")
erelong
·3 giorni fa·discuss
just another ruse to destroy competing smaller social media under the guise of "protecting the children" since these big corps can pay these fines, making legal barriers for competition more costly, while "Big Tech" will continue doing "objectionable" things like this
erelong
·3 giorni fa·discuss
I feel this, and simultaneously something strange with it

This is something incredible that has developed and I feel like I am creating less software with it than before AI, not sure why, and although I know these tools are available 24/7 (besides rate limits) I still find myself going to them less than I would think as relates to their usefulness

I think that may be because of personal reasons but also because the bottleneck here might be motivation or something: what should I even create? I can complete a backlog of things I haven't gotten to, but still... what next?

There's also something of a lack of people using AI according to some old chart (probably more people using it now, but how intelligently?) - it's still maybe a tool a lot of us don't know how to use. It's maybe like a superpower dropped at our feet but without a manual on what to do with the superpower (even though you can ask the superpower what to do with the superpower and for tools to learn to use the superpower).

Anyway, it's been strangely not what we expected at all so far
erelong
·4 giorni fa·discuss
I guess junior devs will use AI to become senior devs to get hired...

...
erelong
·4 giorni fa·discuss
disappointing as it's just an attack on privacy while pretending to be for the "safety of the children"
erelong
·4 giorni fa·discuss
"Yes, legalize all drugs for adults"

Simple
erelong
·5 giorni fa·discuss
well, it's a sign of societal failure to provide more + better wages / housing, etc.
erelong
·5 giorni fa·discuss
or, of getting rid of "intellectual property" legally so information is just shared more freely and widely
erelong
·10 giorni fa·discuss
this is why open source [is important] [(or truly "free" software?)]
erelong
·10 giorni fa·discuss
sounds like some software projects to work on, being able to reboot back to like exactly where you left off (I've been trying to figure this out more for my own computer)
erelong
·12 giorni fa·discuss
tl;dr you probably should get a few minutes of sunlight daily on your unexposed skin without sunscreen for the "health gains"

(you can also wear clothes to block sun instead of sunscreen so you don't necessarily need sunscreen at all)
erelong
·12 giorni fa·discuss
Happy Tau day, OP and HN
erelong
·14 giorni fa·discuss
...hopefully as other comments said, that LLMs make us abandon the confusing idea of "intellectual property" so we don't have to ask questions like this or get in to torturous questions if this or that thing is "infringing" or not
erelong
·15 giorni fa·discuss
Willing to discuss it but I am definitely one who thinks it's a "scam", "mainstream" example articles on ineffectiveness:

"Flu vaccines didn't work that well in the US, officials find (2026)"

https://abc7chicago.com/post/flu-vaccines-didnt-work-us-offi...

https://apnews.com/article/flu-season-cdc-subclade-k-vaccina...

"Flu Vaccine Was Not Very Effective This Season, the C.D.C. Says (2022)"

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/search/research-news/15706/

"Flu shot fail: Why doesn't the vaccine always work? (2014)"

https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/flu-shot-fail-why...
erelong
·15 giorni fa·discuss
[flagged]
erelong
·16 giorni fa·discuss
We probably need to plant more trees or be diligent about ones we remove, but this seems to proceed from an erroneous worldview
erelong
·20 giorni fa·discuss
there's things like "tool libraries" and it might be good to see more lending beyond books;

some of the libraries I've seen have morphed more into like makerspaces and/or meeting spaces rather than just places to get books