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dan-bailey

48 karmajoined 2 lata temu

Submissions

Mitochondria Are Alive (2024)

asimov.press
7 points·by dan-bailey·24 dni temu·1 comments

Scripps Novel HIV Vaccine 97% Effective in Phase 1 Human Trials

scripps.edu
3 points·by dan-bailey·w zeszłym miesiącu·0 comments

Ronny Chieng's 'Fuck AI' Speech Met with Cheers from Harvard Graduates

complex.com
4 points·by dan-bailey·w zeszłym miesiącu·0 comments

Warp drive with positive invariant energy density, global Hawking-Ellis Type I

arxiv.org
1 points·by dan-bailey·2 miesiące temu·0 comments

Trump wants $1B to protect White House ballroom from drones and other threats

arstechnica.com
13 points·by dan-bailey·2 miesiące temu·5 comments

The Voynich Manuscript

beinecke.library.yale.edu
2 points·by dan-bailey·2 miesiące temu·0 comments

Muon Experiment Eliminates Fifth Force, Confirms Standard Model

arstechnica.com
6 points·by dan-bailey·3 miesiące temu·1 comments

Magic: The Gathering Is Turing Complete

arxiv.org
1 points·by dan-bailey·3 miesiące temu·0 comments

Distinct AI Models Seem to Converge on How They Encode Reality

quantamagazine.org
4 points·by dan-bailey·4 miesiące temu·0 comments

Erfurt Latrine Disaster

en.wikipedia.org
4 points·by dan-bailey·4 miesiące temu·1 comments

comments

dan-bailey
·wczoraj·discuss
I think that the biggest hurdle for older developers right now is getting past the filtering systems that review résumés. I realize this is anecdata, but during the mid-2024 to early-2025 timeframe, this fifty-something developer had a hard time getting to the interview phase, but once I did, getting in was a pretty straightforward deal.

I don't know that it's just the issues surrounding junior-vs.-senior experience. I feel like a lot of what I'm experiencing with talking to kids that are in high school and college, is a lot of what I can best describe as "intellectual ennui" -- a lack of curiosity, an inability to analyze, and a lack of any sort of intellectual pursuits. Again, I'm in my fifties, and I understand that my contact pool with that age group is somewhat limited, so I'm not sure if I'm capable of painting the whole picture.
dan-bailey
·9 dni temu·discuss
In this comments section: a deep pool of talented people that make my imposter syndrome go "foom!"...
dan-bailey
·11 dni temu·discuss
This is definitely true, and we definitely need something similar again. I've been using a game ("The Farmer Was Replaced") as a jumping-off point for teaching the kids Python, but the more I think about it, the more I think that they need some sort of hardware package similar to an old Apple //e that gives them just enough rope to hang themselves. It was easy, back in the day, to learn a ton (even assembler) on a system like that, and I feel like there's some value in rewinding the clock back to that point, forking the experience from there, and seeing what a new generation of kids will cook up.
dan-bailey
·w zeszłym miesiącu·discuss
Dude, you can still recover some of those friendships. I went through a phase during college where I alienated a TON of my friends, and that was on me. For a variety of reasons we don't need to expound upon here. I eventually reached out to them, made my apologies, and would occasionally check in and see how they were doing. A few of those friendships are repaired and growing again. I think that there's a tendency toward second chance for people who've recognized their shortcomings, worked on them, and then taken responsibility for their actions.
dan-bailey
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
This is beginning to look less and less like a ballroom.
dan-bailey
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
I used to design fonts back in the 90's — I always designed the S first, because if I couldn't get the S to work, there was no fuckin' point.
dan-bailey
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
One of the things that I loved about Paris when I was there a couple of years ago was that everyone on the subway had books out (whether Kindles or paper) -- very few phones in sight.
dan-bailey
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
General Incompetence is at it again. If you've served, you've seen what happens when something contagious like pinkeye or the flu or whatever sweeps through the barracks. It happens fast and it brings whole units grinding to a halt. This is terrible for readiness and shows that Pete Hague-seth is so far out of his depth that it'd be hilarious if it weren't so concerning.
dan-bailey
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
For me, it was accepting that I will never be the smartest guy in the room and never know the most about a topic. I decided to play to the strengths that come from ADHD, and have cultivated broad knowledge, with only a few points of depth. I work with AI/ML, and I transitioned into it from web dev. I make a point to learn what I need when I need it, rather than trying to stuff my head full of stuff that may or may not be relevant. Changed my focus to "be good in the current situation" rather than "be good at everything." Over time, that fosters learning that sticks.
dan-bailey
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
Projects become more stable with time? Since when?
dan-bailey
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
Now those old-timey photo places in every mall in the U.S.? Definitely a money-laundering front.
dan-bailey
·5 miesięcy temu·discuss
Oh thank god. I was planning on a 200km, 300km, and 400km this year, all as mental preparation, and then having to blitz next year by traveling to warmer locales. I I'm doing my 200km at the end of April, and my 300km in early July, followed by a 400km gravel in early August. Going to be a grind.

Good luck tomorrow!
dan-bailey
·6 miesięcy temu·discuss
When your only tool is a hammer, every problem begins to resemble a nail.
dan-bailey
·6 miesięcy temu·discuss
https://danbailey.net -- personal blog https://danbailey.dev -- projects site (just started this, so it's pretty sparse)
dan-bailey
·6 miesięcy temu·discuss
Yeah, similar experience when I was in Berlin on vacation in 2023. Had a rail transfer to Amsterdam set for 16:30. Canceled without explanation or warning, and the replacement was: Berlin -> Duisberg, with a 13-minute layover Duisberg -> Viersen, with a 6-minute layover Viersen -> Venlo, with a 7-minute layover Venlo -> Eindhoven, with a 38-minute layover Eindhoven -> Amsterdam

As you can probably guess, this is not at all what happened. Shit started to disintegrate around Viersen, we did some shuffling and waiting for later trains, and wound up in Aachen around midnight. The hotel across from the train station was closed for the night, we weren't going to stay in the nearby hostel after seeing one too many horror movies, and so we walked over a mile to a nearby hotel. Staff was lovely. We got in to a room by 01:00, showered, plugged in all our devices, and passed out around 02:00. Up at 05:00 and back to the train station to catch a ride to Rotterdam (very full train), and then on to Amsterdam. We hit our hotel about 12 hours behind schedule, changed clothes and got on with it.

Germany and France had the worst trains. Italy was insanely efficient/on-time.
dan-bailey
·7 miesięcy temu·discuss
Anecdata != data.

That MicroCenter continues to exist tells me that there's at least enough people shopping for parts in meatspace that there's net revenue to be had.
dan-bailey
·7 miesięcy temu·discuss
Bicycles are an odd duck where this is concerned -- you go to a department store (no, actually don't) or a bike shop and buy a whole bike as a single assembly. But because there are standards, as others have pointed out re: computers, it's very feasible to just buy all the parts individually and piece together the bike that you want (which is what I do). Honestly, working in a hot (or cold, it is Minnesota, after all) garage, sometimes I question my sanity when I'm assembling these things...but the ability to fine-tune what you want and not be beholden to the standards of some marketing department or the cost-cutting assholes that run private equity funds is quite nice.

Ultimately, I'd love it if there were enough standards out there where I could spec out a car, and have it built up from parts...or just buy a stock one, if that's what I wanted. I feel that way about a lot of products that I interact with -- appliances usually have shitty UX, car software is usually garbage, and I'd love it if I didn't have to rely on DJI for a drone (good luck getting them in the U.S. anymore, anyway).

I think that with any product there's a subset of people who are like, "Eh, good enough," and willing to buy whatever the big manufacturers are pushing, but there's a smaller subset that wants to really dial-in something that fits their needs.
dan-bailey
·7 miesięcy temu·discuss
The "reading out loud" method is something I do, too -- learned it while getting my B.A. in Creative Writing -- it's great for helping you understand when a sentence is awkward or too wordy, or when the rhythm of a longer piece of writing is off. Writing is just speech with the benefit of an extra filter. Use the filter.
dan-bailey
·8 miesięcy temu·discuss
Thirty-two years ago, I got them tattooed onto my leg, the day after I arrived at Ft. Bragg, NC. It's faded and blurred out from the waxing and waning of muscle tone in my calf, and sunlight, and the occasional scrape from crashing the bike. But it's been part of me for so long, the only real option left is to get it lasered-down and redone.
dan-bailey
·8 miesięcy temu·discuss
Great show despite the suburban light pollution (20 miles south of Minneapolis). And we’re still not at the peak of the solar cycle until 2026.

This was what finally spurred me to learn the night mode settings on my iPhone camera. (Hint: use 10-second exposures.) Even got some half-decent results:

https://www.instagram.com/p/DQ8Mg0sER9t/?igsh=ODhsbGxlMjIweG...