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sph

32,458 カルマ登録 15 年前
And then the programmers turned themselves into managers. Funniest thing I’ve ever seen.

  (define email 
    (concat username 
            (unicode->string "COMMERCIAL AT")
            "combo.cc"))

投稿

Ask HN: Do we need a support group for developers alienated by LLMs?

29 ポイント·投稿者 sph·24 時間前·45 コメント

A 3D voxel game engine written in APL

github.com
157 ポイント·投稿者 sph·20 日前·14 コメント

What every coder should know about gamma (2016)

blog.johnnovak.net
127 ポイント·投稿者 sph·27 日前·46 コメント

Openrsync: An implementation of rsync, by the OpenBSD team

github.com
492 ポイント·投稿者 sph·先月·185 コメント

Statecharts: hierarchical state machines

statecharts.dev
314 ポイント·投稿者 sph·3 か月前·86 コメント

A Crossroad at a Branch

vex.net
2 ポイント·投稿者 sph·3 か月前·0 コメント

Amiga Graphics Archive

amiga.lychesis.net
265 ポイント·投稿者 sph·3 か月前·86 コメント

Allbirds shares jump over 400% on plans to pivot to AI from sneakers

reuters.com
6 ポイント·投稿者 sph·3 か月前·2 コメント

A Trip Through the Graphics Pipeline

alaingalvan.gitbook.io
2 ポイント·投稿者 sph·3 か月前·0 コメント

Deskilling

en.wikipedia.org
4 ポイント·投稿者 sph·3 か月前·0 コメント

Garry's List – the Y Combinator CEO's civic engagement project

garryslist.org
2 ポイント·投稿者 sph·3 か月前·1 コメント

Electricity Maps

app.electricitymaps.com
2 ポイント·投稿者 sph·3 か月前·0 コメント

OpenBSD.Amsterdam

openbsd.amsterdam
6 ポイント·投稿者 sph·4 か月前·2 コメント

Subreddit collapses as OpenAI retires GPT-4o and terminates dozens of AI lovers

old.reddit.com
6 ポイント·投稿者 sph·5 か月前·2 コメント

Subreddit collapses as OpenAI retires GPT-4o and the chance to have an AI lover

3 ポイント·投稿者 sph·5 か月前·0 コメント

Warhammer 40K Fanart Gallery

40k.gallery
1 ポイント·投稿者 sph·5 か月前·0 コメント

Ask HN: How would you design an LLM-unfriendly language?

1 ポイント·投稿者 sph·5 か月前·2 コメント

Arthur C. Clarke: The Nine Billion Names of God (1953)

hex.ooo
3 ポイント·投稿者 sph·6 か月前·0 コメント

Building intuition around Rust borrow errors

quinedot.github.io
1 ポイント·投稿者 sph·6 か月前·0 コメント

The simplest thing that could possibly work (2004)

artima.com
2 ポイント·投稿者 sph·7 か月前·0 コメント

コメント

sph
·10 時間前·議論
The artificial centipede
sph
·10 時間前·議論
It is not if all you know are football fields and not American football fields.

I still don’t know how they even compare.
sph
·10 時間前·議論
Mid-sized European or American car?
sph
·10 時間前·議論
No, it’s 3,300 £1 bags of sugar, with undefined weight
sph
·15 時間前·議論
This is an objectively idiotic and uninformed take.

Do you people think we spend our weekends tweaking our configs because that is how we get our fun? Some do, sure, the vast majority have created their config once and find themselves more productive compared to whatever alternative you might be suggesting. Configuring vim or eMacs is an investment, as you are likely to still see it around in 20 years. Being familiar with one’s tools is the key to productivity.

Calling it an ‘obsessive hacker tool’ just shows you don’t know what you’re talking about, but come with preconceived notions about why people prefer other tools.
sph
·15 時間前·議論
Geez, I’m not saying there are none. I’m saying it’s silly to characterise it as an editor for puzzle lovers. You knowing ‘quite a few people’ can’t be generalised to the millions that use vim daily.
sph
·15 時間前·議論
It’s like that joke: I admire Jesus Christ, it’s his fan club I really can’t stand.

You can substitute that with Rust and it sums up my feelings. The language is great, the obsession with static typing and memory safety from its fans, as if it’s the panacea to all problems in computing, is obnoxious and smells of inexperience. It’s not a coincidence that Rust these days is baby’s first low level language, so you get a lot of strong, uninformed opinions on software design.
sph
·17 時間前·議論
People don't use vim because they enjoy puzzle solving. I don't even know how you got this conception. People use vim because they are effective at editing with vim, period, just like you are effective with Sublime Text.

People don't use Linux because they enjoy tweaking config files and everybody else has too busy a life to do that. That's a silly misconception and veiled attempt at feeling superior at those time-wasters.

> rather treating the flaws as if they are things to have a puzzle game to work around

Case in point.

Good tools are indeed invisible, but the arguments the article is built on are very shaky and honestly just sound from someone that didn't spend much time with other tools, but still has strong opinions about them.
sph
·18 時間前·議論
> Millions of programmers out there, and you're saying there's not even a 1% chance that a single one of them is moving 10x faster

Would that mean that every other claim to be moving 10x faster is an exaggeration? It evidently is, as these claims of massively increased productivity are purely anecdotal.

If the claims were ‘5% productive across the board’, it would be huge, but 1000%? That is a ludicrous tall story that requires extraordinary proof.
sph
·18 時間前·議論
I am afraid the author confuses familiarity with proof that his tools are better. The reality is that every tool has a trade off, and if a user prefers tool X compared to tool Y, it’s not because they are dumb, but likely they make better use of the affordances of that tool that only a power user would get.

Give a developer 10 years each with vim, emacs and Sublime Text, they wouldn’t be so sure which is better. [1] They might have a personal favourite, sure, but would also be able to tell why other people prefer other tools.

I am afraid this is one of those arguments borne of ignorance whereby one is has never given a proper chance to software they are unfamiliar with.

1: to me the mark of a greybeard that has been around a while is a vague dislike of every software and any promise of improving such software. In the long run, every piece of software tends towards mediocrity.
sph
·19 時間前·議論
https://archive.is/XrUQr
sph
·20 時間前·議論
Fuck this and whoever is driving this type of research. We’re increasingly living in a world designed by sociopaths. What do these people think this research will be used for?

I wish we had the Hippocratic oath for STEM, or at least that they would take ethics seriously rather than an afterthought against the god of Progress at all costs.
sph
·20 時間前·議論
> interest in learning anything new related to software

I reckon the last large piece of technology I have learned is Kubernetes, and I doubt I’ll ever go any further.

On the other hand, I’ve sought some comfort in digital art, and learned a lot about Blender, level design, architecture, but it’s hard to feel like an impostor, after seeing myself as a programmer since I was in my teens. I wish I could find the strength and recklessness to just jump into the unknown and embrace a totally new career. I would have done it in a heartbeat in my 20s, now that I’m reaching 40 years old it is existentially terrifying.
sph
·23 時間前·議論
I really dislike how politicized it feels, or rather, how multipartisan the HN community is. It's like Hacker News, but the audience is from BlueSky. Thanks, but no thanks.
sph
·24 時間前·議論
Imagine Rupert Murdoch (95, worth $21.7 billion) arguing the pros and cons of job displacement and widening economic inequality caused by generative AI.
sph
·昨日·議論
Light and dark is propaganda depending on which side you're on.

I'm with you, on the dark side I've seen people slowly turn into crabs, screeching about memory safety and static types. Can you imagine that? Now stick those wings on me, I'm going to fly close to the sun.
sph
·昨日·議論
> Erlang, which if you squint is another Lisp dialect

Prolog disagrees. IIRC the first versions of Erlang were written in Prolog, and you can still see its influence in the syntax.
sph
·一昨日·議論
Yeah but apart from SBCL, Viaweb, Hacker News, Emacs, Clojure, Scheme, Racket, garbage collection, macros, homoiconicity, the REPL, S-expressions, symbolic computation, what has Lisp ever done for us?
sph
·一昨日·議論
There is no win condition. Despite the usefulness claims of generative AI, it is a net negative on society and on education. Humanity will somehow make do and get used to it; but I doubt the upheaval we will have to go through the next X decades will have any silver lining other than “we made billionaires richer and exponentially increased wealth disparity”

I honestly pity watching my fellow software engineers rush to adapt to this new dystopia, just to stay afloat a little while longer before they are truly obsolete. It is quite tragic.
sph
·一昨日·議論
That applies everywhere. You’re commenting on a forum for startups that compete against established players. David will always, in the long run, win against Goliath.