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jonstewart

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Obscure feature + obscure feature + obscure feature = compiler bug

antithesis.com
33 points·by jonstewart·10 miesięcy temu·10 comments

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jonstewart
·13 dni temu·discuss
Then there’s not just the issue of whether the engine supports a particular syntactical feature but the issue of matching semantics. Perl/PCRE’s semantics are far different from POSIX’s and some implementations different semantics altogether (and quite reasonably).
jonstewart
·14 dni temu·discuss
I’ve got a 15 year old workstation that I’m breathing new life into, but fortunately starting from a higher baseline. 24GB of RAM is going to 96GB, and it turns out it should be able to use an NVMe drive, so have a card and an M2 drive on the way. The annoying thing is that the GTX 460 is no longer supported by the Nvidia driver so I’m back to nouveau. That might get replaced with something more modern. I had an old Mint installed and decided to blow it away with stock Debian, and Claude’s setting up nix VMs for itself to run in. It has been crazy how $4k in 2011 for an SR-2 system has yielded a long productive life for this box.
jonstewart
·24 dni temu·discuss
Citation? I’m sure he’s fine but $100M?
jonstewart
·27 dni temu·discuss
There should be a "hickory" option where the axe just bounces back at you or gets stuck in the round.
jonstewart
·w zeszłym miesiącu·discuss
Am I missing something? Is TFA only 2-3 paragraphs of a generic metaphor, with no actual data/research from aviation (or other fields) to back up the core thesis?
jonstewart
·w zeszłym miesiącu·discuss
It’s from the Melian Dialogue (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Melos) and it’s perhaps the most succinct embodiment of the realist school of international relations/politics.

I quote it here because the best way to get a day off is not to continue being weak, but to find strength, just as miners and railroad workers found strength in the 1870s.
jonstewart
·w zeszłym miesiącu·discuss
"The strong do what they can, the weak suffer what they must." — Thucydides
jonstewart
·w zeszłym miesiącu·discuss
Jacques Pepin's knuckles don't compress.
jonstewart
·w zeszłym miesiącu·discuss
Statutory antitrust regulation would be fantastic. Instead of litigation, the regulators, corporations, and shareholders know when a business must split or divest. The firm files a plan, it gets approved, everyone wins except monopolists.
jonstewart
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
Point of order: Anthropic is the most important AI company now.
jonstewart
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
Publishers (and authors) have long had a beef with Amazon. It was Barnes and Noble that put the bookstores out of business, and then Amazon put them out of business and no one really cared.

Most of the early internet unleashed pent-up demand for greater connectivity. The main industry that was negatively impacted was journalism. Most small towns had their own newspapers, there were many great newspapers across the country, and their business model was advertising, especially classifieds. That was all vaporized, more or less. I don’t think search ads were an improvement, though Craigslist is.
jonstewart
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
I don't have an opinion on Instructure (except as a parent generally hating the overall app-ization of education; fortunately our district switched away from Canvas a couple years ago), their cybersecurity posture, or this particular event. My only point is that even if backups exist, working through a ransomware attack often takes time.

Also, ransomware gangs often exfil the data and threaten to release it if the ransom is not paid--blackmail, of a sort. It depends on the company and the data set whether this is effective as a tactic. But when it is, backups don't help.
jonstewart
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
Backups are definitely helpful in ransomwares, but before systems can be restored and brought back online, victim organizations still need to assess the scope of the breach, find the initial access vector, identify compromised accounts, and evict the threat actor. That can take time.
jonstewart
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
I hate using languages that only have signed integers. Using integers that can’t be negative fits many problems nicely and avoids the edge case of having to check for negative.
jonstewart
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
'"That's not my department," says Wernher von Braun.'
jonstewart
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
The vast majority of government employees would not have access to MNPI.
jonstewart
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
I would argue that nondeterministic finite automata are both more significant and more practical.
jonstewart
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
Dave Cutler and Raymond Chen might like a word.
jonstewart
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
This might be the major dilemma in the tech industry today, where the natural tendencies of literalism and optimism among technologists has turned into a form of defensive credulity. The real world rigor of The New Yorker’s editorial standards and concerns about defamation necessitate this circumscribed style that rewards close reading and skepticism, but those aren’t in favor in the tech industry currently.
jonstewart
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
The absolute best thing about coding agents is not having to waste time on build systems. I had Claude code port my autotools scripts to meson (which uses ninja) and it’s been a huge quality of life improvement.