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GoToRO commented on 'Active' sitting is better for brain health: review of studies   sciencealert.com/not-all-... · Posted by u/mikhael
dexwiz · 24 days ago
I don't even think it's the same across viewers. When my partner and I watch some shows, we make prediction for the plot and evaluations of characters. We even have a bet book where we record and score predictions for some shows. It's makes watching much more engaging, especially if the creators hide details and foreshadowing in the background. But you don't even need high quality content to do this, just tighten the restrictions. Law and Order and Hallmark movies only get 30 seconds of content before we make predictions.

It's much more stimulating than just passive consumption. If I don't do this I feel like brain turns to mush after a few hours of TV.

GoToRO · 23 days ago
Gambling for movies?
GoToRO commented on Lessons from 14 years at Google   addyosmani.com/blog/21-le... · Posted by u/cdrnsf
jama211 · a month ago
I feel like the best lesson in here wasn’t numbered, but in the opening statement:

> the longer I’ve stayed, the more I’ve realized that the engineers who thrive aren’t necessarily the best programmers - they’re the ones who’ve figured out how to navigate everything around the code: the people, the politics, the alignment, the ambiguity.

I have been banging on about this for _years_. I’ve seen engineers much smarter than me and who write much better code fall afoul of this too. Being personable and easy going and insightful for one hour in a meeting can do more for your reputation within a company than a month of burning yourself out completing more tickets than anybody else. I really wish more people understood this.

At the end of the day, a manager or a project director who _wants_ you to join a meeting just because you’re a joy to be around and you may have some insight, shows you’re more valued than the best coder on the team if they’re a pain to bring into a meeting because they’re hard to talk to.

GoToRO · a month ago
I manager that invites people in meeting based on how obedient they are, is a bad manager. Multiplied by the number of reports. Fix that.
GoToRO commented on Italians celebrate village's first baby in 30 years   theguardian.com/world/202... · Posted by u/andsoitis
homeonthemtn · 2 months ago
Here me out here:

We make wfh a right for all appropriate jobs

We improve fiber optic connectivity in rural communities

We incentivize young families to move to rural communities

---

The main thing here is we break the unnecessary chains of offices and commuting and allow families to build where they have the space and want for them.

Cities are inherently isolating - space is at a premium - which means there is constant pressure to not expand in many different ways.

GoToRO · 2 months ago
Normally there should be higher taxes for companies that force work from office when there is no need for that. That is if we really want to be green and also care about the people.
GoToRO commented on Italians celebrate village's first baby in 30 years   theguardian.com/world/202... · Posted by u/andsoitis
TylerLives · 2 months ago
No, poor people have more kids (I'm guessing you implied the opposite).
GoToRO · 2 months ago
on the other hand, poor people don't fully understand their situation.
GoToRO commented on CO2 batteries that store grid energy take off globally   spectrum.ieee.org/co2-bat... · Posted by u/rbanffy
openasocket · 2 months ago
I don’t know much about chemistry, but is there a reason why they are using CO2 as the gas medium instead of something else? I was thinking ambient air would be readily available, and you don’t have to worry about suffocating people if it ruptures. Is CO2 particularly efficient to compress?
GoToRO · 2 months ago
Air is no good because it has moisture in it. When you decompress it, it becomes ice, blocking and breaking pipes.
GoToRO commented on AI is wiping out entry-level tech jobs, leaving graduates stranded   restofworld.org/2025/engi... · Posted by u/cratermoon
alwillis · 2 months ago
FAANG has shedded between 81,000 and 87,000 workers in the past 5 years; I suspect a significant chunk of these jobs aren't coming back.

Seems to me the companies are mostly in a holding pattern: sure, if an important project needs more bodies, it's probably okay to hire. I suspect that lots of teams have to make do until further notice.

Are some teams using AI instead of hiring junior engineers? I don't think there's any doubt about that. It's also a trial period to better understand what the value-add is.

Based on listening to engineers on various podcasts, almost all of them describe the current level of AI agents as being equivalent to a junior engineer: they're eager and think they know a lot but they also have a lot to learn. But we're getting closer to the point where a well-thought out Skill [1] can do a pretty convincing job of replacing a junior engineer.

But—at the rate AI is improving, a company that doesn't adopt AI for software engineering will be at a competitive disadvantage compared to its peers.

[1]: https://www.anthropic.com/engineering/equipping-agents-for-t...

    Meta (Facebook)

    2022: ~11,000 employees (13% of workforce)
    2023: ~10,000 employees plus 5,000 open positions eliminated
    2024: Multiple smaller rounds totaling ~100-200 employees
    2025: ~3,600 employees (5% of workforce, performance-based cuts)
    Total: Approximately 24,700-25,000 employees

    Amazon

    2022: ~10,000 employees
    2023: ~17,000 employees (split between multiple rounds)
    2024: Smaller targeted cuts
    2025: ~14,000 employees announced
    Total: Approximately 41,000+ employees

    Google (Alphabet)

    2023: ~12,000 employees (6% of workforce)
    2024: Multiple smaller rounds, hundreds of employees
    2025: Several hundred in Cloud division and other areas
    Total: Approximately 15,000-20,000 employees

    Apple
    Apple has been an outlier among FAANG companies:

    2022-2023: Minimal layoffs (hiring freeze instead)
    2024: ~700+ employees (primarily from canceled Apple Car project and microLED display teams)
    2025: Small cuts in sales and other divisions
    Total: Approximately 800-1,000 employees (significantly less than peers)

    Netflix

    2022: ~450 employees across two rounds (150 + 300)
    2023: Smaller targeted cuts in animation and drama divisions
    2024-2025: Minimal additional cuts
    Total: Approximately 500-600 employees

    Overall FAANG Totals

    Across all five companies over the past 5 years: approximately 81,000-87,000 workers
    have been laid off, with the vast majority occurring in 2022-2023
    during the post-pandemic correction period.

GoToRO · 2 months ago
One of those companies sent me a linkedin request with a specific role. I searched on their website and there were very few roles and none like the one they proposed. So they are doing stealth hiring now. You can't let the world know you need people when you are supposed to use AI.
GoToRO commented on Gut microbial imbalance can impact memory, says study   newindianexpress.com/stat... · Posted by u/sundarurfriend
GoToRO · 2 months ago
Gut anything impacts everything.
GoToRO commented on Working from Home Is Harming Young Employees. They're Starting to See That   nytimes.com/2025/12/01/bu... · Posted by u/ghaff
s1mplicissimus · 2 months ago
I always dreaded those social activities. Even when "not mandatory" it was always expected to show up and pretend to have more in common with the peers than "I'm here to do the work and collect a paycheck" anyway.
GoToRO · 2 months ago
I dreaded them too. It turns out not having them is even worse.
GoToRO commented on Working from Home Is Harming Young Employees. They're Starting to See That   nytimes.com/2025/12/01/bu... · Posted by u/ghaff
GoToRO · 2 months ago
Well before WFH companies did all kinds of social activities for their employees. After 2020, they choose to completely forget about those things.
GoToRO commented on Apple to beat Samsung in smartphone shipments for first time in 14 years   sherwood.news/tech/apple-... · Posted by u/avonmach
the_black_hand · 2 months ago
Why are Samsung so big on the folding phone nonsense?
GoToRO · 2 months ago
I went in a shop to see this nonsense with my own eyes,and I almost bought one.

u/GoToRO

KarmaCake day1405January 12, 2016
About
Senior JavaScript/Angular developer $80/hour.

https://www.linkedin.com/in/ioanvalentinmaxim/

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