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yesimahuman

6,177 karmajoined 18 lat temu
Past life: Co-founded and sold the startup behind Ionic Framework. Creator of Capacitor.js

https://bsky.app/profile/maxlynch.com

Submissions

Robinhood mass phishing incident – April 2026

reddit.com
7 points·by yesimahuman·3 miesiące temu·1 comments

comments

yesimahuman
·4 dni temu·discuss
I love his videos. He makes you feel like we can actually fight back and win. If he changed his style I think something great would be lost
yesimahuman
·w zeszłym miesiącu·discuss
I reject the core assertion that there was a "lost decade" at all. I was deep in the frontend industry during that time, and many "use the platform" purists completely missed the reality of what people were building with better abstractions: much more complicated and ambitious frontend apps. These apps heavily used new browser APIs and features, they just did a lot of it in frameworks like React, which these purists despised. I think the era we're in right now is fundamentally different.
yesimahuman
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
Does this mean uncle worm won’t run on it out of the box? A tragedy
yesimahuman
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
Same, and corrupts backup saves
yesimahuman
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
You're getting downvoted but just yesterday it got in a weird state, crashed, and corrupted recent backup saves and I had to do a bunch of work all over again. I still enjoy using it but this scenario on a pretty basic project would be unacceptable in a professional setting.
yesimahuman
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
Kdenlive is amazing. As someone that learned basic video editing through cracked versions of Premiere growing up, I love that a completely free tool can do everything I need for editing without the nonsense of basic editors or tools like Clipchamp that lock ffmpeg flags like 4k rendering behind paid gates. My only issue with the tool right now is crashing and corrupted backups which happened a few times on the video I edited a few weeks ago.
yesimahuman
·5 miesięcy temu·discuss
I don’t know why you’re getting so aggressively downvoted. You aren’t wrong at all. This is a term that has not seen such aggressive and widespread use until this administration.
yesimahuman
·5 miesięcy temu·discuss
It is so clearly being used to a much greater and more deliberate degree during this administration. Pretending otherwise is foolish
yesimahuman
·5 miesięcy temu·discuss
The only surprise is how quickly it all happened!
yesimahuman
·5 miesięcy temu·discuss
This sums up a lot of what I've been feeling lately. I've had a hard time getting excited about the AI long game, unlike a lot of my peers. I think being out of the industry for a few years (sold my startup a while back), and spending less time in that privileged tech bubble has made me far more aware of and concerned about average people and the future of non-tech hubs around the country/world. While I get value out of AI tools today, I see a lot more downsides in the immediate future for everyone that isn't directly working on this technology with skin in the game. Especially when our society doesn't seem even remotely ready for the big changes coming.
yesimahuman
·5 miesięcy temu·discuss
Yep, and watching many of my peers in tech get red pilled and vote for this administration, or even be active participants in it, has been very hard to stomach. Financial penalties might be the only thing that gets them to realize the error of their ways
yesimahuman
·6 miesięcy temu·discuss
I think it's also a uniquely American thing. We are so defined by our work and our careers here. It's kind of sad, in my opinion, but that's the reality.
yesimahuman
·6 miesięcy temu·discuss
Yea I've noticed this is the singular difference between those that enjoy early retirement and are successful doing it and those that aren't. Many ambitious people end up wrapping their entire identity up with work and feel completely lost with that gone. It's why so many successful founders throw themselves into new startups right after an exit, despite having way more than enough to retire. Personally, I've taken some time off since selling my startup and I've been so busy learning new things and building new hobbies that I can't imagine going back! Maybe I will one day, but it will likely involve something I've learned from during this time
yesimahuman
·7 miesięcy temu·discuss
And all these data centers they want to build around the country. When consumers can’t get devices they want maybe they’ll fight even harder against these data centers being built in their back yard. He’s not making any fans with this move that’s for sure
yesimahuman
·8 miesięcy temu·discuss
Yep, heard so many no’s while building my startup. They mean nothing to me now because I got a few yes’s when it mattered.
yesimahuman
·8 miesięcy temu·discuss
They absolutely do not. It took getting out of tech a few years to realize how hilariously out of touch we can be in this industry
yesimahuman
·8 miesięcy temu·discuss
Why are you getting downvoted? You’re absolutely right. My mind instantly went to “I would have bought this instead of the F135+ in a heartbeat”
yesimahuman
·8 miesięcy temu·discuss
> Epson stopped making their flatbeds that do film, reportedly because they can’t get the CCDs anymore. That may be a rumor.

Wow, you weren’t kidding, I completely missed this. I bought one, sold it, then bought and currently own another. I better baby it, there’s really nothing like it out there.
yesimahuman
·8 miesięcy temu·discuss
This is cool. I spent ~$1k on a Pakon F135+ a number of years ago, and the workflow was indeed extremely frustrating and the results not that great. If I were still shooting a lot of film I’d definitely pick this up. But we need to see sample images!
yesimahuman
·8 miesięcy temu·discuss
I really feel horrible for people who bet on CS and are hitting this job market right now. It's interesting, back when I was in elementary school in the 90's, parents of friends knew I had an interest in computers and would tell me becoming a programmer or IT person was a terrible job and I should avoid it. That was maybe true until it wasn't, and it ended up being highly lucrative. I can't tell if this is the same thing all over again or something completely different. What I think will be fascinating to watch is how the market for talented engineers changes as the bottom drops out and the pipeline of new grads dries up, or maybe it will balance out again? Or will these companies reap what they sow as they stop hiring and then cannot hire again because no one is entering the field anymore?