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noident

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I Don't Vibe Code

jacobharr.is
6 points·by noident·2 maanden geleden·1 comments

The Analog Charms of New York's Intercoms

nytimes.com
2 points·by noident·2 maanden geleden·0 comments

Building a Transparent Keyserver

words.filippo.io
80 points·by noident·7 maanden geleden·26 comments

comments

noident
·2 maanden geleden·discuss
If I told my coworker that his or her "brain is a gizmo" and to "not reproduce" I would expect to be frog marched out the door a few minutes later.
noident
·2 maanden geleden·discuss
Once you have workloads that can't tolerate a power cut + running fsck for a potentially long time, a battery backup becomes an excellent investment. I bought a UPS on eBay for cheap and my home server hasn't gone down since.
noident
·2 maanden geleden·discuss
No, it's because authentic writing on HN has been drowned out in an ocean of slop, in such quantities that calling it out is becoming an exercise in futility
noident
·3 maanden geleden·discuss
What can stacked PRs do that a series of well-organized commits in a single branch can't?
noident
·3 maanden geleden·discuss
If only there were some way to logically break up large pull requests into smaller pieces... Some way of creating a checkpoint with a diff including your changes, and some kind of message explaining the context behind the change... some way to "commit" a change to the record of the repository...
noident
·3 maanden geleden·discuss
Policies like these are widespread in most companies with >1000 employees
noident
·3 maanden geleden·discuss
Probably 90% of my coworkers in a US tech company are on a work visa. Now that there is pressure on the H1B program, my company is investing in a permanent engineering team in India. Whether this will pay off for them in the long term is a matter of debate, but it seems like the near-term future of the US engineering team is in serious doubt.

You can't just "dismantle H1B" and expect it not to backfire.
noident
·3 maanden geleden·discuss
How many of those people have experience with augmented reality? Probably not that many.

$35k seems pretty low for this job. Hindsight is 20/20 of course.
noident
·3 maanden geleden·discuss
No W. No X. No Y. Just Z.

In fact, the whole article is filled with slopisms, just with the em dashes swapped for regular dashes and some improper spacing around ellipses to make you think a human wrote it.
noident
·3 maanden geleden·discuss
The LLMisms in the "thinkpad" section caused me to close the tab
noident
·4 maanden geleden·discuss
Shift-left was a disaster? A large number of my day to day problems at work could be described as failing to shift-left even in the face of overwhelmingly obvious benefits
noident
·5 maanden geleden·discuss
I clicked the article thinking it was about GitLab. Much of the criticism held true for GitLab anyway, particularly the insanely slow feedback loops these CI/CD systems create.
noident
·5 maanden geleden·discuss
That's a very unusual and narrow exception involving "foregone conclusion doctrine", an important fact missed by Ars Technica but elaborated on by AP: https://apnews.com/general-news-49da3a1e71f74e1c98012611aedc...
noident
·6 maanden geleden·discuss
It's often better to say nothing at all rather than to reply with an LLM generated response.
noident
·6 maanden geleden·discuss
Somewhere along the line the AI bros stopped separating training and testing sets. It's great for impressing the villagers
noident
·7 maanden geleden·discuss
Ted has some interesting ideas but I personally would not accept any life advice from him
noident
·7 maanden geleden·discuss
Filippo Valsorda discusses his server for storing age keys
noident
·7 maanden geleden·discuss
I don't like doing the leetcode grind, but all of the alternatives are strictly worse.

* Take home projects filter out people with busy lives. Wastes 100 people's time to hire 1 person. Can't be sure they didn't cheat. No incentives to stop company from giving you a 10 hour assignment and then not looking at it. The candidate with the most time to waste wins.

* Relying on academic credentials unfairly favors people from privileged backgrounds and doesn't necessarily correlate with skill as an engineer.

* Skipping the tech interview and just talking about the candidate's experience is prone to favoring bullshitters, plus you'll miss smart people who haven't had their lucky break yet.

* Asking "practical" questions tends to eliminate people without familiarity with your problem domain or tech stack.

* We all know how asking riddles and brainteasers worked out.

With leetcode, the curriculum is known up front and I have some assurance that the company has at least has some skin in the game when they schedule an engineer to evaluate me. It also tests your general knowledge and in some part intelligence as opposed to testing that you have some very narrow experience that happens to overlap with the job description.
noident
·7 maanden geleden·discuss
The author is writing like Java was outlawed or something. There are tons of shitty enterprise Java jobs out there for those who want them. Personally, I worked one of those jobs a decade ago, and the article's description of the "golden age" didn't bring back good memories.

It's easy enough to avoid the NPM circus as well. Just don't put JavaScript on your resume and don't get anywhere near frontend development.
noident
·8 maanden geleden·discuss
They can and they will. Filing a subpoena for information is a step in that process.

If the WHOIS records are falsified they'll start looking at payment information.