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deepfriedrice

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deepfriedrice
·4个月前·讨论
The automatic transmission gives us more dexterity for... what exactly? Fiddling with the dash, reaching for something in the back seat, texting? The best case human has much more control but the average case seems worse off.
deepfriedrice
·4个月前·讨论
In poker some people are gambling. Some may be self-ware, but many aren't and misunderstand why they win or lose. Poker inconsistently and unreliably rewards gambling, much like vibe-coding.
deepfriedrice
·4个月前·讨论
It's the perfect metaphor? Playing correctly/optimally is +EV. But nobody starts there, and many people don't ever get there.

The main difference is that you're exploiting your own weaknesses, rather than others'. Limitations in typing speed, information gathering, pattern recognition.
deepfriedrice
·5个月前·讨论
same. hopefully it doesn't change frequently
deepfriedrice
·5个月前·讨论
I did the same with Select. No picture and the API doesn't make sense. The options are specified twice.

https://www.chainlift.io/components/select
deepfriedrice
·5个月前·讨论
Was not expecting it to be a single index.html. Pretty cool:

https://github.com/R74nCom/sandboxels/blob/main/index.html
deepfriedrice
·5个月前·讨论
The code is brutal https://github.com/amilich/isometric-city/blob/main/src/comp...
deepfriedrice
·6个月前·讨论
Yeah this entire thread has a weird vibe. OP is clearly a competent engineer to have wrangled LLMs into building this (whether a 5 day old vibe code lib can survive this initial virality will be interesting to see), but seeing so much engagement with prototypical vacant LLM output is eerie
deepfriedrice
·6个月前·讨论
I can't help but think that Steam Machine/SteamOS/Linux gaming in general is severely bottlenecked by anti-cheat. Nearly all serious multiplayer games require Windows specific anti-cheat.

Maybe there's a critical mass of Linux users that will force AC support. Maybe new cheating paradigms (DMA) will obsolete local AC. I suppose one of those could happen in the next 10 years.
deepfriedrice
·9个月前·讨论
I razz CEOs in jest, but my point is: This is an example of a good phishing attempt? ChatGPT could surely find and fix most of the red flags I called out. Perhaps the red flags ensure they don't phish more people than they can productively exploit.
deepfriedrice
·9个月前·讨论
I don't know the gullibility of the average tech CEO but this doesn't strike me as a very convincing phishing attempt.

* "We've received reports about the latest content" - weird copy

* "which doesn't meet X Terms of Service" - bad grammar lol

* "Important:Simply ..." - no spacing lol

* "Simply removing the content from your page doesn't help your case" - weird tone

* "We've opened a support portal for you " - weird copy

There should so many red flags here if you're a native english speaker.

There are some UX red flags as well, but I admit those are much less noticeable.

* Weird and inconsistent font size/weight

* Massive border radius on the twitter card image (lol)

* Gap sizes are weird/small

* Weird CTA
deepfriedrice
·10个月前·讨论
> We've been on the hunt for this AI host since opting into the test several hours ago, but the robot has yet to appear.

An entire article about a beta feature they haven’t even seen? I normally wouldn’t read Ars but I’m on flight with nothing else to do and still feel swindled
deepfriedrice
·10个月前·讨论
I went straight to HN for commentary because I know exactly what is happening on Reddit and for the first time can't bear to look.
deepfriedrice
·3年前·讨论
Agreed. It's hard to believe that marketing pages, after decades of evolution and testing, haven't landed on what users actually want, rather than what they say they want.

Scrolling is such a natural behavior for internet natives. Being able to leverage a large screen to visually compare things has its place, but the article uses a horrible example:

> Our condensed product page prototype took the same information from the original dispersed page and arranged it in a 2x2 grid that allowed users to compare multiple services simultaneously, without having to remember the details of each service.

What's to compare? They're disparate services.

I do like the example of the product specifications. But that was more of an objective usability issue: requiring more clicks for more information.