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Tryk commented on Beej's Guide to Learning Computer Science   beej.us/guide/bglcs/... · Posted by u/amruthreddi
beej71 · 17 days ago
Appreciate it!

This response turned into more of an essay in general, and not specifically a response to your post, marginalia_nu. :)

Sharing information, to me, was what made things so great in the hacker culture of the 80s and 90s. Just people helping people explore and no expectation of anything in return. What could you possibly want for? There was tons of great information[1] all around everywhere you turned.

I'm disappointed by how so much of the web has become commercialized. Not that I'm against capitalism or advertising (on principle) or making money; I've done all those, myself. But while great information used to be a high percentage of the information available, now it's a tiny slice of signal in the chaff--when people care more about making money on content than sharing content, the results are subpar.

So I love the small internet movement. I love hanging out on a few Usenet groups (now that Google has fucked off). I love neocities. And I LOVE just having my own webpage where I can do my part and share some information that people find entertaining or helpful.

There's that gap from being clueless to having the light bulb turn on. (I've been learning Rust on and off and, believe me, I've opened plenty of doors to dark rooms, and in most of those I have not yet found the light switch.) And I love the challenge of finding helpful ways to bridge that gap. "If only they'd said X to begin with!" marks what I'm looking for.

I'm not always correct (I challenge anyone to write 5000 words on computing with no errors, let alone 750,000) or as clear as I could be, but I think that's OK. Anyone aspiring to write helpful information and put it online should just go for it! People will correct you if you're wrong[2] :) and you'll learn a *ton*. And your readers will learn something. And you'll have made the small web a slightly larger place, giving us more freedom to ignore the large web.

[1] When I say "great information", I don't necessarily mean "high quality". But the intention was there, and I feel that makes the difference.

[2] It can be really embarrassing to put bad information out there (for me, anyway). I don't want people to find out I don't know something and think less of me. But that's really illogical--I don't even personally know my critics! And here's the thing: when the critics are right (and they're often right!), you can go fix your material. And then it becomes more correct. After a short time of fixing mistakes critics point out, you get on the long tail of errors, and these are things that people are a lot less judgmental about. The short of it is, do the best you can, put your writing out there, correct errors as they are reported or as you find them, and repeat. I cannot stress how grateful I am to everyone who has helped me improve my guides, whether mean-spirited or not, because it's helped me and so many others learn the right thing.

Tryk · 17 days ago
Really appreciate your work! We use your git tutorial as an (excellent) reference for a university course on Software Development I teach.
Tryk commented on WhatsApp will become interoperable with other messaging apps in Europe   tuta.com/blog/whatsapp-in... · Posted by u/marvinborner
pedrozieg · 18 days ago
What WhatsApp really needs to do is allow people to store their chats in the cloud. WhatsApp is the only communication tool that forces people to keep everything on their phones - or delete information. This causes WhatsApp to take up a large chunk of the available space on most phones.
Tryk · 18 days ago
No thanks, I wouldn't want my text messages used to train an AI. Or my metadata used to improve surveillance.
Tryk commented on AI isn't replacing jobs. AI spending is   fastcompany.com/91435192/... · Posted by u/felineflock
hshdhdhj4444 · a month ago
Yeah. One of the most ridiculous things in my entire life of 40 years was seeing 90% of my fellow SW industry workers using the 2 or so years during/after COVID where we had more power than we’ve ever had to advocate hard for making ourselves much more easy to replace by insisting on remote work, and insisting on reducing our productivity (even if not actually, at least in the eyes of the employers) so we couldn’t justify our higher salaries anymore.

Just outright insane.

Tryk · a month ago
Imagine if there was a push to create a professional organization to handle qualification, certifications etc. Like there is for doctors, dentist, accountants and other fields
Tryk commented on Rockstar employee shares account of the company's union-busting efforts   gtaforums.com/topic/10041... · Posted by u/mrzool
exabrial · a month ago
Every union I've been a part of has been more of a pain than its worth, or has tried to keep individuals from become any more successful that others. I don't understand the obsession with them on HN.
Tryk · a month ago
Do you like not working on weekends?
Tryk commented on Zohran Mamdani wins the New York mayoral race   nbcnews.com/politics/elec... · Posted by u/jsheard
Workaccount2 · a month ago
Brutal to everyone. Society is a chain linked web, not a loose cluster.
Tryk · a month ago
What about tax cuts for the rich, quantitative easing? Who are they brutal to? Everyone? Where in that chain linked web does it hurt the most when you distribute money to the wealthiest 10%?
Tryk commented on Google flags Immich sites as dangerous   immich.app/blog/google-fl... · Posted by u/janpio
93po · 2 months ago
it wouldn't work. they'd hire some minimum wage person to go to all of them and just read the terms and conditions you agreed to that include language about arbitration or whatever
Tryk · 2 months ago
Terms of service, written by a corporation, do not overrule the law, of a country.
Tryk commented on Sora 2   openai.com/index/sora-2/... · Posted by u/skilled
raincole · 3 months ago
As a social experiment to reveal how senseless and pointless pop entertainment could be.

(personal rant) I've been in a mild existential crisis since I read Amusing Ourselves to Death. Can one form of entertainment really be more well-regarded than another? Is fine art fundamentally different from pop art? Are there 'finer' pop cultures amongst all pop cultures? I do still think reading The Song of Ice and Fire is more meaningful than scrolling TikTok. The crisis part is that I can't justify this belief with words.

Tryk · 3 months ago
One analogy is to liken tiktok (and shortform content) as exploring the shallows. Walking around, close to the shoreline, you explore pieces of flotsam that the sea washes your way. You might spend a lifetime on this shore, walking up and down, but most would argue that you've actually never gone anywhere.

On the other hand, reading a book is like getting on a boat. You've made certain preparations for acquiring the vessel and set course through unknown territory. A journey away from the shore and away from what's immediately at hand, which can also turn out to be a journey towards self-discovery.

Tryk commented on Unexpected productivity boost of Rust   lubeno.dev/blog/rusts-pro... · Posted by u/bkolobara
bkolobara · 4 months ago
My intention with the blog was to show that Rust's lifetime tracking and trait system allow you to catch much more complicated issues than just "one type doesn't match another" errors.

That's the main reason why I chose to compare it with TypeScript, that is also a statically typed language, but just can't catch some issues that Rust can.

Tryk · 4 months ago
The notion of a type is not fixed, Rust has a more generous conception of what is a type and what its static type system checks.
Tryk commented on AI is different   antirez.com/news/155... · Posted by u/grep_it
boulos · 4 months ago
Our next vehicle sensor suite will be able to handle winter weather (https://waymo.com/blog/2024/08/meet-the-6th-generation-waymo...).
Tryk · 4 months ago
Blog post is almost exactly 1 year old...

u/Tryk

KarmaCake day362December 16, 2021View Original