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solidasparagus

2,300 karmajoined 7 lat temu

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solidasparagus
·2 godziny temu·discuss
This is a super dishonest characterization. Running software on a bunch of machines, even machines in other peoples' homes has never been a crime. Folding@home isn't a crime (obviously). It's controlling those machines without consent via malware that is criminal. And if it is open and consensual in exchange for something a person wants, it is unreasonable to compare it to botnets.
solidasparagus
·18 dni temu·discuss
Serving the API is profitable. They are unprofitable because of R&D (and maybe subscription costs?). If they can continue to find access to R&D capital, there is space to reduce API costs.
solidasparagus
·23 dni temu·discuss
Feels a bit sensationalized, presumably related to it being a blog for a product that sells security. I can't repro. And I probably shouldn't judge, but I think talking about being shaken and in tears is not a professional way to report on a safety flaw if you are a red team researcher.
solidasparagus
·28 dni temu·discuss
I think the slop part is just what you get when you inject no opinions and put in no effort to apply taste (which you probably have and/or could develop). No care is put in. It looks generic and sloppy because it is generic and sloppy. You might have preferences over which generic and sloppy style is preferred, but at the end of the day a UI built without effort is going to look like what it is.

But if it functions fine and you don't have taste or want to be opinionated, why do you care?
solidasparagus
·29 dni temu·discuss
This hits the cybersecurity/biology filter:

> tell me about chimp violence

It's laughably terrible
solidasparagus
·w zeszłym miesiącu·discuss
Independent of what you believe, I don't think this is the right way to approach thinking about it. It's basically emotion-oriented dismissal used as way to shortcut any substantial or nuanced discussion. It's like the opposite of intellectual curiosity.
solidasparagus
·w zeszłym miesiącu·discuss
I'm gonna need to see some proof on that 5-year-old-draws-pelicans-better claim.
solidasparagus
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
Why are you so certain of this?
solidasparagus
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
Frankly Django got lucky. It is far more common for import controllers to delay until the costs of delay force you to pay.
solidasparagus
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
I don't think that is a real concern.
solidasparagus
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
The NGO delivery channels are privileged because they are charitable. That's why they get to bypass the country's restrictions. You can't open that channel up, the country would object at humanitarian exemptions being used as a backdoor for commercial imports.
solidasparagus
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
It was Django. But he had a very different financial situation. And a potentially fraught one as a refugee and foreigner. I would pay the bribe, but I would try very hard not to put the recipient in a position to have to do so (no criticism to the author).
solidasparagus
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
Specifically I was talking about this part

> "At some point, one man quietly pulled me aside and suggested that if I "gave something," they could help solve the problem more easily.".

You can pay that fee/bribe and things will go smoothly.

But more generally my thought was that the western idea is that bureaucracy rules are something to be followed and, even if painful, are the path to getting the state to provide the services. In Uganda, it's better to model bureaucracy as a system that exists to enable bribes and following the rules to the letter and expecting state services is fighting the system.

If you want to get goods to someone in Uganda, don't talk to the Australian Post about the rules, talk to a Ugandan importer who knows how to actually work the system that exists in practice.

Caveats about broad brushes of course, but that's the realistic approach IMO.
solidasparagus
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
That's a valid way to approach this - bun isn't valuable enough to bother with or at least wait for a while, Windows is.

But I think the comparison is closer than you are making it sound. I sincerely doubt the Windows codebase was all written by humans, let alone reviewed. And my understanding is that the code is being regularly rewritten and replaced because of how flawed it is, it's just a massive undertaking.

Also if you look at their investment in AI-driven code rewriting into Rust, my bet would be that some modern Windows code itself is being vibe-coded.
solidasparagus
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
I think those studies have framing or methodological issue.

I agree the maintenance burden is probably being undervalued by developers in general, but there's just no way the work I do isn't faster. I just categorically couldn't have achieved the outputs I do now in the time windows I have. The software just wouldn't have existed in the world of 3 years ago and I did enough coding back then to say that with certainty.
solidasparagus
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
I don't know if your viewpoint is uncommon or if the vibe-coding hating crowd is just louder.
solidasparagus
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
They support Windows, which is many millions of lines of code not written by the current maintainers.
solidasparagus
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
If you're asking about logistics, try reaching out to your country's embassy in Jordan and see if you can get in touch with an aid/development worker. They know how to make things happen.
solidasparagus
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
This is a very western approach to a very Ugandan problem. A trivial amount of money (for a Westerner) could have saved a lot of time and pain.
solidasparagus
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
I find that documentation creep is wildly better in AI coded environments than human ones. You can deterministic force a documentation sync process on every PR, documentation rot has gotten way better.