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st1x7

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Ask HN: Does anyone else feel like staying off HN for a bit?

49 points·by st1x7·6 năm trước·41 comments

Ask HN: Is working for FAANG as big of a deal in Europe as it is in the US??

32 points·by st1x7·6 năm trước·39 comments

Ask HN: Data Scientist without a PhD?

9 points·by st1x7·6 năm trước·10 comments

Statistics and Saving Lives – With Jennifer Rogers

numberphile.com
2 points·by st1x7·6 năm trước·0 comments

Ask HN: What are the best advanced computer science courses online?

345 points·by st1x7·6 năm trước·89 comments

Does Advertising Work? (Part 2: Digital) (Ep. 441)

freakonomics.com
1 points·by st1x7·6 năm trước·0 comments

Ask HN: Is Facebook a good company to work for?

2 points·by st1x7·6 năm trước·2 comments

IBM to cut 8000 jobs in Europe, including up to 2000 in the UK and Ireland

channelpartnerinsight.com
3 points·by st1x7·6 năm trước·0 comments

Ask HN: Which big tech company do you feel good about?

3 points·by st1x7·6 năm trước·2 comments

Ask HN: Do you think that Hacker News has gotten much worse lately?

6 points·by st1x7·6 năm trước·12 comments

comments

st1x7
·6 năm trước·discuss
Just don't tell them how far they are from reality and they'll keep writing the papers. Intelligence contained.
st1x7
·6 năm trước·discuss
This is just science fiction. To mention "recent developments" in the introduction is somewhat misleading considering how far the current state of technology is from their hypothetical superintelligence.

We don't have superintelligence, we don't have the remote idea of how to get started on creating it, in all likelihood we don't even have the correct hardware for it or any idea what the correct hardware would look like. We also don't know whether it's achievable at all.
st1x7
·6 năm trước·discuss
> plenty of firms are using Scala in their data engineering stacks

Isn't that just a result of everyone being into Spark a few years ago?
st1x7
·6 năm trước·discuss
> Optimizing for worker fungibility, in a vacuum, seems like a -EV "playing not to lose" strategy.

That's why you don't optimise for it in a vacuum. You weigh the potential benefits of switching to Haskell versus the additional cost of maintaining/growing a Haskell team.
st1x7
·6 năm trước·discuss
> I hear far more complaints about how difficult it is to find good people from companies hiring for mainstream languages than from those using more niche stuff

Of course, there is just more of them in the first place. The other effects that you describe might also be true but keep in mind what the base rates are.
st1x7
·6 năm trước·discuss
> on the other hand you have an easier time to attract the few you need

How is it easier to find a Haskell developer vs finding a Java/Python/PHP developer?
st1x7
·6 năm trước·discuss
I don't think that it's wise to sabotage your own future and productivity as a company just so you can pave the way for some language to become more popular.
st1x7
·6 năm trước·discuss
I feel like this isn't discussed enough. I can't comment on the technical merits of Haskell but growing an organization and replacing engineers is so much more difficult when you're using tools that aren't mainstream.
st1x7
·6 năm trước·discuss
It's possible depending on how much inconvenience you can accept in your life but that's also kind of irrelevant. If you don't like something online, don't take part in it. You don't have an obligation to consume and do everything online, just pick out the parts of it that work for you.
st1x7
·6 năm trước·discuss
It's really a strength, not a quirk. Negative indexing and array slicing in general are great in Python. Really easy to pick up and way more convenient than any other language that I've come across.
st1x7
·6 năm trước·discuss
I need to switch between zero- and one-indexed languages often. It really doesn't make a difference.
st1x7
·6 năm trước·discuss
Bidding on your name might be an even bigger waste of money than bidding on a competitor's name, especially for established brands. eBay's experience with this came up on a recent episode of Freakonomics - https://freakonomics.com/podcast/advertising-part-2/
st1x7
·6 năm trước·discuss
This is kind of embarassing. Do you guys think that the people at Facebook who make these decisions realise how pathetic it looks from the outside? Or are they somehow justifying it in their own heads?
st1x7
·6 năm trước·discuss
Please seek professional advice if you haven't already. Advice from strangers on the internet can sound comforting but it won't do much for serious problems that are also very personal.
st1x7
·6 năm trước·discuss
> It was probably a good idea to rebrand from Riot to Element after this week's deadly violence at the US Capitol.

They rebranded in July 2020 - https://element.io/blog/welcome-to-element/
st1x7
·6 năm trước·discuss
> and those insights are transferable to your daily work

Some people say this, others say that it makes your daily work worse because going back to a language that isn't on the cult-approved list is so difficult.
st1x7
·6 năm trước·discuss
> is it safe to live there?

This varies a lot depending on where you live, your skin color and your socioeconomic status.
st1x7
·6 năm trước·discuss
I was referring to the threats of hanging in this case. I phrased it more generally because there are many other examples from the similar threads that we've had over the past couple of days. It's astounding that I even need to clarify this.
st1x7
·6 năm trước·discuss
It's kind of sad to see how these threads quickly turn into a a messy sequence of poorly reasoned arguments or how some people are trying to justify really extreme positions.
st1x7
·6 năm trước·discuss
> problems in finance, energy, medicine, etc., that are more correctness-sensitive than performance-sensitive

What does correctness-sensitivity mean in this context and how is it missing from a language like Python for example?