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smtx

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A Company That Was Nobody: The Case for AI-Agent Corporations

sebas.fika.bar
2 points·by smtx·geçen ay·0 comments

Electrifying the Cow Path

sebas.fika.bar
1 points·by smtx·2 ay önce·0 comments

[untitled]

1 points·by smtx·4 yıl önce·0 comments

[untitled]

1 points·by smtx·4 yıl önce·0 comments

Sneak Peek Behind the Scenes of MobX

labs.factorialhr.com
3 points·by smtx·4 yıl önce·1 comments

The N+1 Dilemma – Bullet or Prosopite?

labs.factorialhr.com
15 points·by smtx·4 yıl önce·2 comments

The Epiphany: From Individual Contributor to Engineering Manager (and Back)

labs.factorialhr.com
17 points·by smtx·4 yıl önce·0 comments

Hooks Considered Harmful

labs.factorialhr.com
283 points·by smtx·4 yıl önce·187 comments

comments

smtx
·geçen ay·discuss
Hello, this is me, with my imperfect human voice, noted. I usually use AI to improve my ideas or responses. Will take this into account for future interactions with HN.
smtx
·geçen ay·discuss
Author here. You're right, and it's a better version of my point. The shaft persisted because small high-torque motors weren't economically feasible yet, not because anyone was blind. That's the structure I'd argue we're in now: the constraint isn't ignorance, it's that the enabling piece isn't cheap enough yet.

My claim is that for knowledge work that piece (capable models on hardware you own) is crossing into feasibility right now, which is when, by your own account, reorganization actually happens fast. "Why would they" was too glib; "they couldn't yet, and then they could" is the real shape. Fixing that line.
smtx
·geçen ay·discuss
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