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Have you used chrome? The depth of enshittifaction is staggering. Setting it up from scratch is like watching a Cory Doctorow documentary.

The only change that’d get me to willingly use the engine would be the DOJ mandating the return of manifest v2 support and then barring google from contributing to it for the next 40 years.



Honestly I did not know.

I have had it installed so long I don't even remember when I did it.

Ill look more into it and perhaps re-evaluate


It certainly has quite a reputation, but I suspect it has more to do with dense formalism that was quite unlike everything else. The language itself is actually surprisingly nice for its time, very orthogonal and composable.

They explicitly wanted to make the crime be of the same severity as murder.

Germany is kinda woke central, lots of pure Monkas decisions being done here, daily.


> TypeScript is a wonderfully advanced language though it has an unfortunately steep learning curve; in many ways it’s the complete opposite of Go.

Replace "TypeScript" with "C++" and the same can be said.

It is one of the worst languages ever designed and already built on top of a sloppy foundation (Javascript) compared to Go.

The language encourages escape hatches and tons of flexibility on how it checks its types and creates the risk of inconsistency to engineers on which rules to adopt and there is always one engineer that will disagree with some settings and argue to turn on/off a rule to defeat the purpose of the language.

At this stage, its no better than C++ but significantly slower, and I've seen the same mistakes (enums, allowing "as XYZ" casting, etc) in C++ creeping into TypeScript.

Even the entire language parser and type checker is being rewritten in Go. [0]

[0] https://devblogs.microsoft.com/typescript/typescript-native-...


what qualification does one need to be US President (besides being born in the US and of certain age)? celebrities certainly won’t be doing any open heart surgeries anytime soon :) so there are things you absolutely do not need any qualitications for (Actor/Actress, US President) and there those you do (Surgeon, Attorney…)

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Am I the only one who read this and thought, "doesn't everyone self host a NAT gateway?"

Mine's in the living room, it says TP Link.

More seriously, NAT is fun and all but it can introduce unexpected behaviors that wouldn't exist in a firewall that doesn't do translation. Less is more.


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All of these errors have now been stealth-corrected.

New strategy discovered: Ask LLM to write article, nerdsnipe HN into correcting it, feed corrections back into LLM until people stop complaining


If PL/I was like a C++ of the time, Algol-68 was probably comparable to a Scala of the time. A number of mind-boggling ideas (for the time), complexity, an array of kitchen sinks.

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That's great, I'm going to use that one in the future.

They can once they achieve purpose.

However that seems completely tangential to the current AI tech trajectory and probably going to arise entirely separately.


I find myself struggling to connect. I feel like we live in a dystopian period where its too easy to sit and doom scroll, and most people don't find enough value in just spending time getting to know each other, or economic pressures make social endeavours too expensive for many people I know.

As a lifelong English speaker, I would not pause when speaking in this sentence. Why would there be a semantically meaningless, unspoken comma?

I don't remember any annoying steps to get Real ID at the CA DMV in San Francisco. (For reference, I'm not a US citizen, but am here legally.)

What are the annoying steps others have faced?


Speaking from the perspective of somebody who used to do this for a living.

> But the incentive to making something open source is that someone might improve your work

Device drivers, particularly on mobile, aren't evergreen sorts of software. New hardware is released several times a year, and maintenance after shipping is limited to critical issues. By the time it hits the market, the people who developed that driver have moved on to newer products.

> It is somewhat arrogant to assume that nobody else out there could possibly improve this code or add value

Whatever they did would have completely missed the release schedule. It may provide value to people who want to keep using a 10 year old phone, but how does that benefit a company that only makes income when they sell new models?

> Just like it is arrogant to assume that your competitors don't already know your 'secrets' and haven't reverse engineered anything they found interesting.

This made me laugh. You would be surprised by how minimal reverse engineering goes on in this space. It boils down to the same reason as before: by the time you have made any progress, the product you are reverse engineering is semi obsolete. The vast majority of the time it makes more sense to invest those resources into developing your own stuff.

That's my $.02 from having worked for four major GPU vendors out there. Upper management knows what they are doing, even if outsiders don't get it. The incentives simply aren't there for most GPU vendors most of the time.


Just a few days ago, someone replied to one of my comments saying that considering the lives of people who aren't born yet is a completely immoral thing to do, meaning making anyone alive today sacrifice something to protect the planet in 100 years is immoral. So I guess people can find all sorts of justifications.

This the standard current approach for most models/agent tools because models can do well at "make a plan for this" and "execute this step" but are less good at generating a response string that includes both the plan and every step of the execution without intermediate prompting/redirection/focusing. Helps fight context drift and maximize effectiveness/efficiency of the predictions.

Most advances in tools I've used in the last two years are exactly this sort of "automate the steering and feedback loop that the prompt goes through" automated-fairly-boilerplate-sequencing of refinement of initial idea -> plan -> execution -> feedback.


I dunno man… did the DAO guys ever realize that they had just reinvented an open source co-op?

I feel like co-ops were awful anyway even without the blockchain.


And https://old.reddit.com/r/battrees/ to enjoy the names of the bad ones

> When you are a single person, the math changes.

No, you just have to cook meals that freeze well and learn to use your freezer.


>And even though I consider myself okay at TypeScript, the gap with the more skilled of my colleagues is still impressively huge.

Maybe they're smart, but the even smarter dev would avoid unnecessary complexity in the first place.


Delivering 9 of 10 revolutionary things would, I agree, be amazing.

However...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_predictions_for_autono...

making 31 public predictions about his self-driving cars over 20 years and only being right about one of them is not so clever.


They just fixed the KBAG thing.

This quickly went from Brandolini's Law to Cunningham's Law. Learn how Apple's boot process works by explaining it wrong and waiting for people to correct you!


Caffeine is a weak base, the acidity in coffee is from other compounds in the bean. (Tasty, tasty compounds)

A fully incompatible Blink fork sounds like Gecko with more steps.

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