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mbmjertan

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mbmjertan
·9 เดือนที่ผ่านมา·discuss
Acrobat Reader is one of the more poorly engineered programs I’ve used. And it recently asked me to sign in an account and give Adobe money to open a PDF??

Unfortunately I need to sign PDFs often (using an image of my physical signature or a digital certificate), and I haven’t used that didn’t suck more than Adobe in this. I haven’t tried Okular for this and Evince seemingly didn’t support this - but Preview (although an extremely great document reader in most regards) didn’t let me select an image of my signature, but asked me to either sign on the trackpad with my finger (how do you make that not look like you had nerve damage?) or show a picture of my signature to the webcam of my Mac so it would do extraction on it (which didn’t work at all after 20 minutes of attempting, but also why can’t I just select a photo??). Finally I figured out pdfjs in Firefox recently shipped image-based signing (still waiting on certs)

Of course, I could have edited the PDF in a better editor (GIMP even!), but.. why is such seemingly simple and common PDF work a horror show?
mbmjertan
·ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
I can’t find the measurement methodology for Brightedge’s whitepaper, which concerns me because the margin for error seems huge, but Cloudflare’s numbers do make sense.

Both are however in line with my personal experience and observations regarding how people around me are using the web now.

I find myself using web crawling in LLMs a lot more, and search a lot less. My reasoning follows, and I think most people would agree.

- When I’m looking for some relatively obscure information which I’m not sure where to find or which would require hours of research for me to find, I use ChatGPT (usually o3 with deep research) and refer to citations for more information regarding a topic. This saves me hours of investigating, which I usually don’t have for something that’s just a curiosity. A friend also used deep research to find papers highly relevant to a topic he was working on for his med PhD in minutes, claiming that just searching through PubMed to find such papers would take him days - and probably less successfully.

- When I’m looking for something specific in regards to a topic I’m relatively familiar with, I use search (usually Kagi, unless at work where it is banned!) to quickly find reference material.

- LLMs (and engines like Kagi) let you skip through the SEO spam you’d usually skip through when using Google, as well as letting you search more easily (due to better natural language understanding than classical query engines). The quality of search results had been diminishing for years (geeks4geeks ranks higher than SO on Google), so it’s not surprising people turn to tools which produce better results. It’s like being shocked that people are driding cars instead of riding donkeys.

A particular example is that I looked up a DTC that my car was throwing. I googled it first, and got a results page consisting of forums that said nothing, paywalled generated sites that also didn’t provide any info, scammy Scribd clones hosting diagnostic manuals for the wrong car model and ad-ridden garbage sites that just claimed “oh it could be anything, just take it to a mechanic”. ChatGPT gave me an exact (and correct) answer in seconds.

This is an expected result of what we have done to the web, and it should surprise nobody. I’m only sad that genuine, small online communities are dying in favour of walled gardens, but that’s an entirely separate discussion.
mbmjertan
·ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
Still, it’s highly location-dependent, and mileage varies drastically between countries.

I’m an SWE with a background in maths and CS in Croatia, and my annual comp is less than what you claim here. Not drastically, but comparing my comp to the rest of the EU it’s disappointing, although I am very well paid compared to my fellow citizens. My SRE/devops friends are in a similar situation.

I am always surprised to see such a lack of understanding of economic differences between countries. Looking through Indeed, a McDonald’s manager in the US makes noticeably more than anyone in software in southeast Europe.
mbmjertan
·3 ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
It's difficult to reply to this without implying I'm defending Kaczynski or advocating for violence. I'm not - and I wouldn't like to be misconstrued here, as I'm replying about violence in general.

I would say that violence should never be the preferred solution, but that at times it's the only solution that has any chance of success. This is not to say that it's a "good" approach, or something you should enjoy doing. However, if you (or your people) don't have any other way to facilitate changes that are non-negotiable for you (such as your fundamental right to live being threatened), should you turn the other cheek? Is resorting to civil violence unacceptable in such situations?

We've had examples of civil violence bringing drastic changes when people's lives are being threatened by governments, hunger or societal structures. Notably, the French Revolution. Is it unacceptable for people to kill their king if they don't have anything to eat, and the queen tells them to eat cake if they can't eat bread? Depends on your moral stance. Would the issues that the revolution focused on change if people weren't violent? Highly doubt it.

Of course, I am not equating the French Revolution to the Unabomber: it's drastically different to kill innocent civilians with mailed bombs because of "principles" than it is to behead your king because you don't have anything to eat. Violence is the only reasonable choice in some (albeit rare) situations. The acceptability of it very much depends at what's at stake.