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MonkeyClub

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US threatens Anthropic with deadline in dispute on AI safeguards

bbc.com
5 points·by MonkeyClub·5 maanden geleden·2 comments

Doin' It with a 555: One Chip to Rule Them All

aashvik.com
145 points·by MonkeyClub·5 maanden geleden·89 comments

Painless Software Schedules (2000)

joelonsoftware.com
67 points·by MonkeyClub·6 maanden geleden·36 comments

A Gallery of Computers as Furniture (2011)

technologyreview.com
3 points·by MonkeyClub·6 maanden geleden·0 comments

Microsoft Invests $17.5B in India for AI

news.microsoft.com
1 points·by MonkeyClub·7 maanden geleden·0 comments

The Chaos Hypertextbook

hypertextbook.com
2 points·by MonkeyClub·8 maanden geleden·0 comments

The Tao of HashiCorp

hashicorp.com
13 points·by MonkeyClub·10 maanden geleden·2 comments

China bans tech companies from buying Nvidia's AI chips

ft.com
17 points·by MonkeyClub·10 maanden geleden·5 comments

comments

MonkeyClub
·4 maanden geleden·discuss
I got the same sense, but nowadays I can't be sure whether a text is AI or the writer's style has absorbed LLM tropes.
MonkeyClub
·4 maanden geleden·discuss
> Physical businesses have liability if they provide age restricted items to children.

Ok, suppose the strip club is the website, and the club's door is the OS.

Would you fine the door's manufacturer for teens getting into the strip club?
MonkeyClub
·4 maanden geleden·discuss
> but something only the full terminal can do what you need it to do

There's always `M-x term` for a full terminal.
MonkeyClub
·4 maanden geleden·discuss
> 4. Is it just me?

It's not just you.

I've been on HN since about 2008, and the change is steep.

Since the site acquired social clout, status seekers have swarmed in vying for status, and an opinion orthodoxy has formed that's becoming increasingly intolerant.

Pity, but it's a natural progression.
MonkeyClub
·4 maanden geleden·discuss
Whoever needs more slop faster can easily find it elsewhere, if PostmarketOS doesn't want to follow the trend, that's well and good.
MonkeyClub
·4 maanden geleden·discuss
> Alternatively they might build specialized branded hardware which people could only use for what corps allow them to do for nice monthly fee.

That's why I'm still holding on to a bulky Core 2 Duo Management Engine-free Fujitsu workstation, for when personal computing finally goes underground again.
MonkeyClub
·5 maanden geleden·discuss
Cf. "Anthropic Drops Flagship Safety Pledge" (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47145963)
MonkeyClub
·5 maanden geleden·discuss
> and who knows how long GitHub will be free?

Apparently for as long as it will enable Microsoft to profit by training its LLMs on people's code.

For people uncomfortable with working on free/libre stuff with git directly I always suggest Codeberg as an alternative, but hands on git is also an excellent option.
MonkeyClub
·5 maanden geleden·discuss
He's not out of touch: the FB situation is optional, Merz wants to make this mandatory.
MonkeyClub
·5 maanden geleden·discuss
Strong reminiscences of "I am not a number, I'm a free man!"
MonkeyClub
·5 maanden geleden·discuss
I am reminded of "turn on, tune in, drop out".
MonkeyClub
·5 maanden geleden·discuss
> Why would any species take effort to [...]

Because Market Forces said so :(
MonkeyClub
·5 maanden geleden·discuss
That would diminish archival accuracy, an outlet could amend the text without third party proof.
MonkeyClub
·5 maanden geleden·discuss
I expect this will be challenged and overturned as unconstitutional as the similar effort was in 2021, however it's insane as it stands, especially coming from a caretaker government.
MonkeyClub
·5 maanden geleden·discuss
Within software engineering circles, the idea of the engineering notebook was reintroduced in Hunt and Thomas' The Pragmatic Programming, where (Topic 22) they call it an "engineering daybook".

Personally, I've been using one form or another of journals and notebooks for over three decades. I did go through the "plain text is king" .txt phase, but, while search is useful, I always revert to a handwritten notebook.

I find that I have a sort of visual memory of the location of a note or scribble, and can sort of easily find my way back to it "in the lower-right side of the page near the end of the notebook".

Another meta-metric that's interesting to access and is lost when typing is the changing quality of my handwriting, and how it exhibits the underlying mental state.

The notebooks/journals started from standard local composition books (B5) to narrower 14x21-ish cheap hardcovers. There's also dates (manual), titles or topic tags (manual), page numbers (manual), cross-references with arrows (which do stand out amongst the handwriting, e.g. -> p. 20, or -> C/20 to xref back to notebook C when you're on notebook E), indexes (also manual), earmarked pages, and a physical bookmark string. I've also reverted back to pencil, which I find more "quiet" a medium - I've been using Faber Castell's sleek TK4600 since elementary school, and it was quite interesting to return to it a couple of decades later.

Plain text is still king nowadays, but it's also diagrammatic, and hyperlinked, the only difference being it is manual, and seems to assist immensely with the memory and personal internal coherence. I can write down a note to myself, working something out, and then return to it a couple of months later, cross-reference it and expand it, gradually reaching new understanding.

No need for slip card boxes when you have a running log of your thoughts and works that can be referenced and cross-referenced, nor is there a need to limit the length of your text because of the medium - write a bullet list if you want, checkbox it, or a 200-word vignette, or just let loose over a few pages, it's all good: a plastic medium for a plastic mind.

In all, for me journaling/notebooking is highly recommended. And for the younger folk who are keyboard-first, perhaps the deliberate slowness and scratchiness of this quaint medium will reveal a meditative quality.
MonkeyClub
·5 maanden geleden·discuss
> the purity of "working with what's installed".

Oh, a kindred spirit!

I too absolutely love the notion of the base install, and what can be done just by means of its already available toolset.

(Fun tidbit: Did you know Windows comes with a bare bones C# 5 toolchain, with csc.exe, and even vbc.exe and jsc.exe?)
MonkeyClub
·5 maanden geleden·discuss
I'm sure eventually it will, it's law:

Every text editor, if it survives long enough, will end up implementing a partial, bug-ridden version of Emacs.
MonkeyClub
·5 maanden geleden·discuss
Similar anecdote here.

I still use daily the Timberland backpack I got in 2009. Again, some wear and tear (actually just wear, thankfully no tears) but works great at the 17 year mark, even though it has gone through anything from daily use to travel to trekking.

Other backpacks have come and gone when I thought it'd need replacing, but kept trudging on. Now I don't want to have to let go of it, even though it looks "a bit" old.

I know it's not good for business to have long-lasting products. But some items like this backpack, a 2008 Fujitsu workstation, or a 2013 MacBook Air (not to mention the Faber Castell TK 4600) that simply keep on working become something akin to lifelong companion tools.

It goes to show the benefits of deep forethought and good design. And, I guess, the stubbornness of some users :)
MonkeyClub
·5 maanden geleden·discuss
Anyone can convince themselves of anything, the only thing that varies is the complexity of the rationalization.
MonkeyClub
·5 maanden geleden·discuss
Same thing is said about peddling drugs. Profit doesn't push ethical problems aside, though, or at least shouldn't.

At least nobody peddling drugs tried to convince anyone they're doing it to "save the planet".