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c22 commented on We are not here to make code   todepond.com/go/we-are-no... · Posted by u/surprisetalk
bdcravens · 2 days ago
I assume there's some implied context that's absent from a standalone post, because I can barely make sense out of this article. What's a "jammer"? What's a "pastagang"?
c22 · 2 days ago
I initially read it as creative sci-fi and found it quite enjoyable in that context. I was even more overjoyed to find out that I am in fact currently living in the future.
c22 commented on The Typeframe PX-88 Portable Computing System   typeframe.net/... · Posted by u/birdculture
jhbadger · 3 days ago
Needs microcassette drives like the original PX-8 (which I actually had for a time, although after it was discontinued and sold by liquidators for a fraction of its former list price).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epson_PX-8_Geneva

c22 · 3 days ago
It looks like there'd be room to stick one to the right of the screen, above the main board. I'd prefer a minidisc drive, though, to bring it into the 21st century.
c22 commented on The Rise of Computer Games, Part I: Adventure   technicshistory.com/2025/... · Posted by u/cfmcdonald
hackshack · 3 days ago
You're on to something. I tried this too, a few months ago, with offline Ollama/Magistral on Mac. "You're a dungeonmaster for a single player adventure game, with me as the player..."

It lost track of things almost immediately. But the foundation was there.

Maybe if we had a MUD-tuned model...

If it has an approximate way to track state, and a "pre-caching" method where it can internally generate an entire town all at once, room by room, so hallucinations are rarer... actually starts to sound like a traditional DM's method of world building for a campaign.

Maybe something like an LLM-assisted Inform (interactive fiction engine). https://ganelson.github.io/inform-website/

Side note: been playing Aesir, then the Aesir 2 MUD since 1994. It's still up!

c22 · 3 days ago
Maybe you could ask an LLM to build a campaign then ask another one to run it.

Deleted Comment

c22 commented on Delivery robots take over Chicago sidewalks   blockclubchicago.org/2025... · Posted by u/mikhael
floundy · 8 days ago
Just turn it upside down then. At best some “Good Samaritan” turns it right side up at some point but the food arrives late, cold, and spilled all over the inside of the robot.
c22 · 8 days ago
Cross your fingers and hope there's less than $300 worth of food in there.
c22 commented on Fighting the age-gated internet   wired.com/story/age-verif... · Posted by u/geox
robot-wrangler · 12 days ago
> The comment "useful idiots" is more a play on the russian KGB strategy.

Oh, I'm familiar with the phrase, but I'm specifically disputing how applicable it really is to people that are self-aware about the situation they are facing. Useful idiots are ones that are tricked, especially ones that are evangelical about tricking others. People forced to choose between 2 extremes where both choices are very bad are called.. normal citizens participating in the democratic process.

> This only works on people who are susceptible to this. I understand how propaganda works

What? You can see through propaganda, but you can't just pencil in your own policy options. Unfortunately and by design, the things you can ultimately vote for are "all or nothing" flavored. Censor everything, censor nothing. Track everybody, track nobody. Tons of parents who totally understand the surveillance state probably got flipped by meta's memo about chatbots being "sensual" with children. They'd rather vote to force corporations to be good citizens, but they can't. So they'll vote for an age-gated internet as the best of the bad options. I wouldn't assume all those people are naive, confused, or duped.. they've simply switched from a principled/abstract stance to a convenience-based calculus after they were forced into it. Meta wins either way, as planned. Either they get to build a more addictive platform, or they track more info about more people

c22 · 12 days ago
I think in this case many of these people are "useful idiots" in the sense that they lack a strong technical understanding of how the internet and www are architected. This can cause them to accept erroneous concepts like "tracking the identity of all internet users is the only way to protect the children" while alternatives like the one proposed at the beginning of this thread can be easily glossed over as some techno mumble jumble.
c22 commented on Coca Cola has an executive dedicated to McDonald's   coca-colacompany.com/abou... · Posted by u/sbolt
Simulacra · 12 days ago
I read that the syrup is stored in these special tanks, and when it's mixed with the carbonated water, it comes out as the best tasting, freshest Coca-Cola you can get. It's always tasted amazing at McDonald's. Almost like bottled Coke.
c22 · 12 days ago
In my experience ever since the coke started coming out of the same nozzle as every other soda it has tasted like ass.
c22 commented on After nearly 30 years, Crucial will stop selling RAM to consumers   arstechnica.com/gadgets/2... · Posted by u/downrightmike
dedup-com · 14 days ago
"Why shouldn't it" does not answer the question, which is "what made desktop computers (and servers, to a certain degree) a unique popular product that customers routinely build out of parts".

I am not questioning repairs (which almost never happen, as PC hardware in general is very robust these days) or upgrades to factory-built PCs (which should account for probably 1% of the PC component retail volume). I am wondering why there is an entire industry selling colorful boxes (as opposed to brown cardboard with a part number) with things that are not usable in any way when taken out of the box and are only functional when combined with 10+ other things in somewhat nontrivial way. Forget about "why shouldn't it" and "it was like this forever" and look at this phenomenon with a fresh eye. This is ridiculous (in a factual way, not saying this judgmentally).

c22 · 13 days ago
I have a couple old radios from the 1940s/1950s. They come apart with a handful of screws and on the inside of the case there is a full schematic. I'd argue that it is perhaps not PCs that have changed but rather the rest of the universe of household appliances.

The first home computers were sold as kits and put together by fervent hobbyists. The original PCs relied on many iterations of standardization and competition amongst clones to become cheap enough to hit peak household adoption. Now PC use is waning in favor of tablets, phones, and smart TVs. As before, the pool of PC users includes a higher-than-average concentration of enthusiasts who enjoy to tinker, thus sustaining a market.

c22 commented on How to Synthesize a House Loop   loopmaster.xyz/tutorials/... · Posted by u/stagas
mstngl · 14 days ago
What‘s going on with all these code-2-music tools these days? See other front page discussion about strudel.cc [1]. Did I enter an established bubble or is there a rising trend? It‘s incredible, though, what people are able to obtain with it, especially when built-up during a live session [2].

[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46052478 [2] Nice example: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=GWXCCBsOMSg

c22 · 14 days ago
Often an article posted to hn will cause a mini-trend as users who are engaging with the subject discover and share more related resources.
c22 commented on School cell phone bans and student achievement   nber.org/digest/202512/sc... · Posted by u/harias
moduspol · 15 days ago
If the teachers and schools cannot implement a phone ban because the students won't listen to them, it might be time to reassess what their purpose is.
c22 · 15 days ago
These sorts of schools already make kids pass through metal detectors on their way in so phones can just be confiscated at that point.

u/c22

KarmaCake day4891November 20, 2014View Original