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blauditore

3,542 カルマ登録 10 年前
/ᴅᴏᴛ/./ /ᴀᴛ/@/ blauditore ᴀᴛ outlook ᴅᴏᴛ com

投稿

The Persistent and Problematic Claims of Long-Forgotten Trauma (2019)

pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
5 ポイント·投稿者 blauditore·8 か月前·0 コメント

コメント

blauditore
·一昨日·議論
Any day now... Just a bit more space in the context window, trust me bro.
blauditore
·5 日前·議論
This has been a recurring theme since the dawn of video games: Everyone talks about graphics (devs and gamers), but ultimately the good and beloved games are the ones with great gameplay.
blauditore
·5 日前·議論
But J-Space is much catchier. This is not a scientific paper, it's a promotional essay.
blauditore
·15 日前·議論
And why not accelerate using swing-bys on moons and planets? Of course this gets harder the faster you're already moving, but IIUC Voyager 1 has roughly 0.01% c, and this was launched 50 years ago.
blauditore
·20 日前·議論
Yes, this is essentially because mathematics is such an old science and goes very deep into branches. That's btw also why getting a certain degree is much harder there than in any other fields I've seen (did a bunch of courses at university in various fields, and the diff between e.g. pure math and psychology is almost comical).
blauditore
·20 日前·議論
Sure, but obviously that sentence implies that wrong abstractions are fairly common.
blauditore
·20 日前·議論
Only tangenially relevant, but the exagerrated differentiation of universities, and levels of education (e.g. PhD vs. not) has always been bothering me. I only have experience in a different field (CS), and yes, those things can be indicators, but I've experienced so many outliers in both directions to know that degrees need to be taken with more than just a grain of salt.
blauditore
·26 日前·議論
> if you are on vacation, you are simply not available. You are dead to the world until you return. Emails do not get read, and devices get left at the office.

It's funny because that's kind of the definition of a vacation in my book. I find it weird that some places in the world handle it differently.

Note that it's also much better for the company in the long run: It's a test of resilience and redundany, the famous bus factor. It simulates what happens if someone is not available, and forces the organization around to have a backup plan. Having those is important for cases where employees leave the company or team (switching jobs/teams, accidents, sickness, parental leave, death, burnout, layoffs etc.). It's mind-boggling how many leads at various levels just don't understand that.
blauditore
·先月·議論
1. What if the browser gets closed/killed? 2. Error messages around syncing issues are notoriously worse than those of a sync request to the backend that failed. So the UX in the end is worse.

More generally: You can't circument the trade-offs of a distributed database, which such products are, conceptually.
blauditore
·先月·議論
TL;DR: Background syncing instead of synchronous updates to the cloud.

This is basically a thick client, and comes with according trade-offs. It's interesting and there are some best practices, but I can't help but feeling that either the author is a huge fan or the post is an ad (or "sponsored").
blauditore
·先月·議論
Shit, that was 10 years ago already? Feels more recent, also in terms of technology.
blauditore
·先月·議論
Huh, people use the mouse with vim? Or am I missing something?
blauditore
·先月·議論
I was wondering if the author is joking, but after reading a bit more about the attribution drama, it seems rather a lack of reality check and reflection. If you plagiarize work, get called out on it, and then call this "harrassment", I don't know...
blauditore
·先月·議論
Do you have a link?
blauditore
·2 か月前·議論
Programming competitions are not the same as real-world engineering, plus these countries have way more people trying to use these competitions as a gateway to good jobs. Also, many good engineers emigrate to higher-income countries given the chance, and almost none will imigrate to low-income regions. The consequence is some sort of brain drain.
blauditore
·3 か月前·議論
Many of the "teams" laws are BS, especially the ones about promotions and management. I've never been a manager or high-level executive, but it's not that all of them are either non-technical or bad managers. It's just that the combination of both skills is rare.
blauditore
·5 か月前·議論
That's... Normal. Technology has always been moving towards higher-level abstractions. In terms of software, many engineers nowadays know how to code in high-level languages like JS or Java, while maybe 30-40 years ago many folks probably knew C, assembly, and all the low-level stuff like e.g. explicit memory management that most modern devs never deal with.
blauditore
·5 か月前·議論
It's the same in Europe. There are many car drivers who would never admit that, but they just don't want to leave their comfort zone and learn how to use public transport. But when asked they will say stuff like "well, we live a bit outside the city", or "now with kids you basically need a car".
blauditore
·5 か月前·議論
Not sure of it's a class thing, but rather the fact that software engineers often make good money, especially at places like Meta. It'st the same for me: If I lost my job tomorrow, I'd have enough savings to take some time before needing another job. Not sure if this would have been true for my parents.
blauditore
·5 か月前·議論
Software folks love over-engineering things. If you look at the web coding craze of a few years ago, people started piling up tooling on top of tooling (frameworks, build pipelines, linting, generators etc.) for something that could also be zero-config, and just a handful of files for simple projects.

I guess this happens when you're too deep in a topic and forget that eventually the overhead of maintaining the tooling outweights the benefits. It's a curse of our profession. We build and automate things, so we naturally want to build and automate tooling for doing the things we do.