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knuckleheads

857 karmajoined 6 jaar geleden
proprietor of threeemojis.com

Submissions

Omnigraph, source control for context graphs in Rust

omnigraph.dev
2 points·by knuckleheads·25 dagen geleden·1 comments

Huub, modern CP+Sat solver written in Rust

huub.solutions
2 points·by knuckleheads·vorige maand·0 comments

I want to write software that helps kill people (2013)

gist.github.com
5 points·by knuckleheads·3 maanden geleden·0 comments

Heerich.js – 3D voxel scenes rendered to SVG

meodai.github.io
4 points·by knuckleheads·3 maanden geleden·0 comments

Stockfish removes classical evaluation functions in favor of NNUE only (2023)

github.com
2 points·by knuckleheads·3 maanden geleden·0 comments

Parseword – new game from the creator of Wordle

parseword.com
2 points·by knuckleheads·4 maanden geleden·2 comments

Show HN: Globs – a daily puzzle about finding the hidden connections

threeemojis.com
1 points·by knuckleheads·4 maanden geleden·0 comments

Globs – a bigger, more forgiving version of Connections

threeemojis.com
2 points·by knuckleheads·5 maanden geleden·0 comments

Peon-ping – Claude Code notifications that uses Warcraft III Peon voice lines

peon-ping.vercel.app
1 points·by knuckleheads·5 maanden geleden·0 comments

Show HN: A 4^5 Piece Hacker News Themed Connections-Like Puzzle

threeemojis.com
1 points·by knuckleheads·6 maanden geleden·0 comments

Pedantle

pedantle.certitudes.org
2 points·by knuckleheads·7 maanden geleden·2 comments

"Blissfully Happy" or "Ready to Fight": Varying Interpretations of Emoji [pdf]

cdn.aaai.org
1 points·by knuckleheads·7 maanden geleden·1 comments

A Puzzle a Day: A Month of Tiled Words

paulmakeswebsites.com
2 points·by knuckleheads·8 maanden geleden·0 comments

Show HN: Three Emojis, a daily word puzzle for language learners

threeemojis.com
33 points·by knuckleheads·8 maanden geleden·28 comments

Peter Talisman: Lord of the Harvest, a game about collecting corn

petertalisman.quest
1 points·by knuckleheads·10 maanden geleden·0 comments

comments

knuckleheads
·eergisteren·discuss
Would you say the same about something like, say, Spacemacs?
knuckleheads
·4 dagen geleden·discuss
Great post! Thanks for the write up, enjoyed reading it and the visuals.
knuckleheads
·14 dagen geleden·discuss
Yeah I was surprised a while back that ChatGPT was pulling them up (I was doing some research on origins of sudoku and it was pulled up very old threads on Usenet). So now I specifically ask for it and it consistently finds me some gold. Might take a few rounds of saying do deeper research but it often works.
knuckleheads
·14 dagen geleden·discuss
Something that I have started doing lately is asking ChatGPT et al to check usenet for reactions from users about events (if it is the right 80's/90's time period). Sure enough, aol.sucks on usenet had some choice words about the outage:

>What does Cisco stand for?? Case's Internet System Crapped Out. That's right, Steve Case and his AOL pig fell victim to some mickey mouse networking equipment. Unfortunatly for AOL, they were the first ISP to feel real pain from using equipment made by Cisco Systems.

https://groups.google.com/g/alt.aol-sucks/c/iqjd7crtPs4 https://groups.google.com/g/alt.aol-sucks/c/K75nltM31Bw https://groups.google.com/g/alt.aol-sucks/c/vVup-HvlPWM

Here's a reporter asking for comments and getting laughed at and trolled: https://groups.google.com/g/alt.aol-sucks/c/mStonlu_H8E

Some more serious reactions over on comp.risks: https://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/18/30#subj2 https://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/18/31#subj3 https://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/18/41#subj3

>Yesterday morning, I got a call because their mail system was backing up heavily. It took a while to discover the cause, but it turned out to be AOL. Because AOL's incoming mail from the Internet runs on relatively slow systems, and because they receive hundreds of thousands of Internet messages a day, they have 30 systems to receive incoming mail, all pointed at from the AOL.COM name. That means that any mail system trying to send mail to AOL would have to individually try all 30 addresses before giving up. Translate that to a 60 second (typical) wait for a connection timeout, and you've got a 30 minute time-in-queue for an AOL message.

nanog on seclists was an interesting read too https://seclists.org/nanog/1996/Aug/51

Flamewar over sendmail not handling outage well > Remember the AOL outage? One host built up a backlog of 2000 messages for AOL---but, because it was running qmail, it didn't even slow down. Meanwhile, sendmail users were choking on much smaller queues. https://groups.google.com/g/comp.mail.sendmail/c/TeNdv2laT94
knuckleheads
·18 dagen geleden·discuss
Shouldn't we know a better answer to these questions once Anthropic's IPO materials surface publicly? I understand, and maybe even expect, SpaceX's materials to be all over the place and skate on by any discussion of unit economics, but the nerds over at Anthropic might just be forthright enough to just tell us what their margin is on tokens as part of their IPO.
knuckleheads
·25 dagen geleden·discuss
Not affiliated with them, I just found it after casting around for a while trying to find something more or less exactly like this. Looks very neat, and like they made some good choices!
knuckleheads
·26 dagen geleden·discuss
I will soon! https://threeemojis.substack.com/ just downloaded digithunt (first sudoku generation program I can find evidence of, from 1989) and was playing it some last night. Had Claude decompile it and it was interesting to see how it generates sudokus.
knuckleheads
·26 dagen geleden·discuss
I attended a decade ago and it was great, lots of people working and exploring a lot of cool stuff! I think what I would quibble with is that yes it is “random” what people work on, but there’s certainly themes and some people have pretty clear directions about what they are up to and want to learn. If you want to focus on That One Open Source Project for a couple months, that’s cool and encouraged.
knuckleheads
·26 dagen geleden·discuss
Implementing a solver/optimizer for the Minizinc challenge in Rust! It's very fun, and maybe next year I will even try and put it into the competition properly. As well, I am working on tracking down the history of Sudoku prior to Wayne Gould's popularization of it in the 2000's, and I have found some really interesting postings on Japanese forums from the 90's about the game.
knuckleheads
·vorige maand·discuss
Not just the weird billing, which has been annoying the last month I've been trying it, but they have had a couple incidents lately where I feel like I got ripped off because their performance was so spotty and yet I was getting billed for it. https://status.blacksmith.sh/
knuckleheads
·vorige maand·discuss
Yes, correct, they both have the same capabilities, however it felt like codex was pushing me harder to use my local desktop in an annoying way, while claude code was happy to spin up a bunch of dev containers for me in the cloud.
knuckleheads
·vorige maand·discuss
I feel like Codex made a big push to run everything on your laptop. With Claude, I get 4 cpu's, a fair amount of ram and 30gb for every one of my dumb ideas for free in the cloud containers. Codex used to be similar, but last time I tried it just kept pushing me to run it locally on my laptop, which I really did not want to do with 20 requests going at once. That's the main advantage for me at the moment.
knuckleheads
·vorige maand·discuss
I remember a couple months after ChatGPT came out I was in a 1-1 with a coworker who hadn’t really played around with it much. I was very much toying around with it and was surprised at how good at stuff it was. I wanted to show him it was for real, he was skeptical, so over a half hour we had it make a bee and a flower buzz around in d3, copying and pasting between jsfiddle and ChatGPT. By the end of it, we had a nice animation and were both throughly surprised that the computers could code so well now.
knuckleheads
·vorige maand·discuss
I have had a similar notion, around the same time, with tui's and strace in particular. Lots of experiments, never quite good enough to publish or try to popularize. Something I've found in the last few years though, and especially the last six months, is that the impulse to make a better tui has died for me. Claude et al are going to wield these tools via cli far better than I can via tui. The built in visualization is nice for sure in tui, an embodied perspective on how to investigate something, however Claude can make a custom one for me in the moment within a few minutes. My impulse is to throw Claude at the issue with the bare linux toolbox while I do other things, not hand craft better tools that I don't have much motivation to use right now.
knuckleheads
·vorige maand·discuss
I've been meaning to write down my thoughts about software explicitly not being a craft for many years now and life keeps getting in the way. It's a direct response to the Etsy engineering blog, "Code As Craft". I agree that there are more code craftsmen in general than before, but by percentage there's way more software engineers. Engineering best practices to me are in many ways about robbing coding and software from the mystique of craftsmanship and turning it into a repeatable industrial process that isn't inhumane per se but doesn't depend on any particular person to make it work.
knuckleheads
·vorige maand·discuss
I am not joking when I say that software craftsmen lost the war when tabs vs spaces was obviated as a point of contention by CI enforced formatting and linting around broader community standards.
knuckleheads
·vorige maand·discuss
A craftsman's pride is an industrialist's nightmare! Software has been transitioning from a craft into an industrial process for the last two decades or so, and the software craftsmen of all stripes understandably do not like this!
knuckleheads
·2 maanden geleden·discuss
Matters of taste. I don't mind bigger files where it makes sense, and sometimes for the nature of the domain, it is nice to have more things in one file. As well, they write so many comments that 200 lines doesn't feel right to me.
knuckleheads
·2 maanden geleden·discuss
Very much agreed. Something specific that has helped me a lot (beyond just automatic formatting, linting and testing) was putting a hard fail on any file with more than 1500 lines or so, with an allowlist for specific files with specific reasons for their length. I realized the agents were squirreling away code without wanting to do any sort of refactor. Every time one of these rat's nests has turned up, the codebase has been much improved with a small refactor, to the point it doesn't feel like such a pile of slop anymore.
knuckleheads
·2 maanden geleden·discuss
The idea of AI going anywhere always reminds me of https://www.vice.com/en/article/the-end-of-big-data/ from a decade ago.