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philippta

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Number. Everyone gets one. (App)

yournumber.app
2 points·by philippta·2 mesi fa·1 comments

nbio: A non-blocking I/O and event loop abstraction in Odin

pkg.odin-lang.org
2 points·by philippta·3 mesi fa·0 comments

Ask HN: Did you ever consciously create technical debt?

2 points·by philippta·4 mesi fa·3 comments

The Missing Piece of AI Discourse Is Trust

philipptanlak.com
1 points·by philippta·4 mesi fa·0 comments

Ask HN: How to deal with long vibe-coded PRs?

186 points·by philippta·9 mesi fa·349 comments

comments

philippta
·2 mesi fa·discuss
To me this looks like a cool demo product. Yet, the problem it's solving could be equally solved by a well integrated all-in-one business suite.

I don't run a small business myself, but I assume the scope of administrative tasks in such company is well defined and understood.
philippta
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Not my app. Saw it online and found it funny. I'm #27
philippta
·2 mesi fa·discuss
In the recent Dwarkesh Podcast episode Jensen Huang (Nvidia) said that virtually nobody but Anthropic uses TPUs. How does that add up?
philippta
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Wookash Podcast
philippta
·5 mesi fa·discuss
That's completely relatable, and also a major point in my original argument. Using heavily abstracted frameworks will automatically cap you performance wise. The only way out is to not use a framework or one that's known to be lightweight. In backend or tooling like with the JS compiler from OP, one tends to not use heavy frameworks in the first place.
philippta
·5 mesi fa·discuss
Nobody expects you to know that, but I'm curious to hear how do you know it for backend code but not frontend code. Have any examples?
philippta
·5 mesi fa·discuss
It's not too diffcut in the browser either. Consider how often you're making copies of your data and try to reduce it. For example:

- for loops over map/filter

- maps over objects

- .sort() over .toSorted()

- mutable over immutable data

- inline over callbacks

- function over const = () => {}

Pretty much, as if you wrote in ES3 (instead of ES5/6)
philippta
·5 mesi fa·discuss
It always comes as a surprise to me how the same group of people who go out of their way to shave off the last milliseconds or microseconds in their tooling care so little about the performance of the code they ship to browsers.

Not to discredit OP's work of course.
philippta
·6 mesi fa·discuss
> They use Claude to skip the typing, not the thinking. They're 10x faster than two years ago.

I'm not sure a 10x increase in typing speed makes you a 10x developer.
philippta
·6 mesi fa·discuss
I've raised this exact point to many team leads throughout my career.

Yet, they unanimously said, they are interested or need to know the progress.

I can't say if thats what they have to report to their managers, but I assume it's something you won't be able to fix from bottom-up.
philippta
·6 mesi fa·discuss
For the handful of regularly visited websites, I wouldn't mind.
philippta
·7 mesi fa·discuss
When I connect my server over SSH, I don't have to rotate anything, yet my connection is always secure.

I manually approve the authenticity of the server on the first connection.

From then, the only time I'd be prompted again would be, if either the server changed or if there's a risk of MITM.

Why can't we have this for the web?
philippta
·7 mesi fa·discuss
Perhaps our industry should adopt a different approach, that fills in the gap between those.

- You host open-source software on your own hardware.

- You pay a company for setup and maintenance by the hour.
philippta
·7 mesi fa·discuss
> I saw from the SSD was around 800 MB/s (which doesn’t really make sense as that should give execution speeds at 40+ seconds, but computers are magical so who knows what is going on).

If anyone knows what’s actually going on, please do tell.
philippta
·7 mesi fa·discuss
> LLM-generated code should not be reviewed by others if the responsible engineer has not themselves reviewed it.

To extend that: If the LLM is the author and the responsible engineer is the genuine first reviewer, do you need a second engineer at all?

Typically in my experience one review is enough.
philippta
·8 mesi fa·discuss
That would be shared ownership again.
philippta
·8 mesi fa·discuss
The fundamental problem here is shared memory / shared ownership.

If you assign exclusive ownership of all accounting data to a single thread and use CSP to communicate transfers, all of these made up problems go away.
philippta
·8 mesi fa·discuss
Your reasoning seems counter intuitive as back in 2012 Facebook rewrote their HTML5 based app to native iOS code, optimized for performance, and knowingly took the feature parity hit.

https://engineering.fb.com/2014/10/31/ios/making-news-feed-n...
philippta
·8 mesi fa·discuss
Reminds me of Casey Muratori‘s talk on Conway‘s Law: „I always know what I am thinking…“

https://youtu.be/5IUj1EZwpJY?si=b7rG7_vemkiOL8Bp
philippta
·8 mesi fa·discuss
> The @breakpoint built-in

Inserting the literal one byte instruction (on x86) - INT 3 - is the least a compiler should be able to do.