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hackflip commented on Business books are entertainment, not strategic tools   theorthagonist.substack.c... · Posted by u/ZeroTalent
mgw · 10 months ago
Where does the point of being disagreeable come from and what purpose does it serve in the business world, in your opinion or according to these books?
hackflip · 10 months ago
Disagreeable people are insurance policies. When the group is right, they are a drag. When the group is wrong, they are necessary.
hackflip commented on Software development topics I've changed my mind on   chriskiehl.com/article/th... · Posted by u/belter
latexr · a year ago
> Most won't care about the craft. Cherish the ones that do, meet the rest where they are

> (…)

> People who stress over code style, linting rules, or other minutia remain insane weirdos to me. Focus on more important things.

What you call “stressing over minutiae” others might call “caring for the craft”. Revered artisans are precisely the ones who care for the details. “Stressing” is your value judgement, not necessarily the ground truth.

What you’re essentially saying is “cherish the people who care up to the level I personally and subjectively think is right, and dismiss everyone who cares more as insane weirdos who cannot prioritise”.

hackflip · a year ago
Have you ever noticed that anybody driving slower than you is an idiot, and anyone going faster than you is a maniac?
hackflip commented on Questions censored by DeepSeek   promptfoo.dev/blog/deepse... · Posted by u/typpo
pixl97 · a year ago
See, it's stuff like this where I believe the control issue may be near impossible to solve at the end of the day.
hackflip · a year ago
Censorship just needs to work well enough for the average person. The brightest people who can bypass the censorship will be labeled crazy conspiracy theorists.
hackflip commented on Evaluation of TikTok vs. Instagram Reels   surgehq.ai//blog/tiktok-v... · Posted by u/echen
irq · 4 years ago
This is what keeps me off Tiktok. I feel like I’m losing my mind even having to make a judgement like this, but I trust Facebook more than China. Only a tiny bit, but it’s there.
hackflip · 4 years ago
The Devil you know
hackflip commented on The pandemic erased two decades of progress in math and reading   nytimes.com/2022/09/01/us... · Posted by u/actfrench
hackflip · 4 years ago
We need to stop blaming the pandemic for things that were caused by lockdowns. Young healthy people were forced to put their lives on hold for 2 years so that some 86 year olds would make it to 87.
hackflip commented on Ask HN: Anyone having issues with job applicant fraud?    · Posted by u/lgsilver
boltzmann-brain · 4 years ago
Let me give you a perspective of why people might legitimately not want to do camera during interviews.

A little about me: I've started doing remote work 15 years ago - long, long before the modern remote push. I've been coding for 30 years; I started with 8 bit micros; I can probably work with any technology and any deep problem you throw at me; I've led and launched projects worth billions of dollars. I prefer to work remotely because I hate commuting and open plan.

I've started denying camera interviews for a while now. I still do voice, but no camera, for the following reasons:

1. It impacts not just my earnings, but whether I'll be considered in the first place. There's a lot of sexism and racism happening in tech.

Sexism: if you're presenting as female, or presenting as male but don't look like Jim Halpert from the office, you can get looked at differently, which happened to me. This applies to people who are older, people who have visible tattoos or piercings, people who have blue hair, scars, etc.

Racism: you only need to look at other replies here with people talking about how bad eg Indian developers are. This extends to people of other skin color as well. In Europe there is a huge amount of racism against white Europeans from eastern Europe and from the Balkans and Europeans from Latin countries; in Asia there is racism against people ethnically from other Asian countries; in America there's racism against pretty much everyone; etc. This is endemic. One look at someone's face can be enough to disqualify them at a company that has this problem.

Ageism doesn't even need to be explained.

Based on the three points above, by demanding camera interviews you betray yourself as a company which doesn't have the issue of systemic bias against minorities figured out yet.

Incidental information leaks: The background - the location where you are - is important as well. Is the person located in their bedroom with a single bed? Probably a flat share, pay them less, they'll take it. Are they in their garden? Hmm, they are probably worth what they ask for. Is it dark outside whereas it's light where you are? Uh oh, remote work with someone who's not in your time zone! Better start worrying!

Especially the last one is egregious. Dev work is mostly solitary, asynchronous work; most of the time there's a lot of overlap even between eastern Europe and west coast US which is plenty of time for meetings and pair programming if necessary. People who insist on such things are usually inexperienced with remote work. Misconceptions like these destroy opportunities that can work out very well otherwise. I've had people make comments about "oh it's light out over there" many times in my career and it's always lead to a no-hire.

2. Issues that remote work solves can be brought to light in an ugly manner. For example, maybe the person feels they are not attractive, and are just generally shy around people in person - something that a lot of technical people share; their performance in front of a camera will be worse. Being shy when physically around other people perfectly fine for remote work. Maybe the person has special needs. Maybe they have to use an oxygen tank, or are missing an eye, or teeth, or a hand, or are sitting in a wheel chair, or are obese. Maybe the tapestry on their wall falling off and they haven't had money to fix it due to an economic downturn or because someone in the family had cancer so that's where the money went. None of this is stuff that the employer needs to know - but they are things that none the less can impact the recruitment and later career by a lot.

3. I experience fewer of the issues brought up in 1 and 2 than most others; however, I still deny camera interviews to see what will happen. Being this worried about job applicant fraud betrays that you likely can't afford it. Job applicant fraud is a little time off your hands and a little money as well. That fraudulent applicant wasted maybe 3 hours through interviews across people in your company, and maybe up to $10k wasted money. If you can't factor this into your business, it means to me - an experienced developer who has plenty of choice - that you can't afford me at all, and that working for you, should it happen, will be precarious. I'll probably skip over you. It is my experience that the most resilient companies - and ones that are well established already - absolutely don't care about seeing your face on camera.

Additional wasted time after the hire is mostly on your hands: either it's a complete bait and switch (smart person interviewed, substituted by someone unsuited) - and that's something you figure out on the first day - or it's someone who's never been good enough, and you weren't a good enough interviewer to figure this out in the several hours you've spent with them; at that point you'll probably take a few weeks to figure out that they're not great at their job, but that's on you.

--------

TLDR: a camera interview is purely a disadvantage to minorities and people who aren't well off by leaking things that are for good reason illegal to ask about; a job interview where this is demanded or implied betrays the company is standing on a shaky foundation.

hackflip · 4 years ago
If a company is going to discriminate against me, I want it done early, before both parties waste their time. Interviews are a two way street.
hackflip commented on U.S. life expectancy drops sharply, the second consecutive decline   statnews.com/2022/08/31/u... · Posted by u/davidbarker
panny · 4 years ago
It stands to reason that

* If the vaccine is safe and effective, life expectancy would improve some over 2020

* If the vaccine is safe and ineffective, life expectancy would stay about the same as 2020

* If the vaccine is unsafe and ineffective, life expectency would drop below 2020

We are now witnessing the third outcome.

hackflip · 4 years ago
All else equal, yes.
hackflip commented on U.S. life expectancy drops sharply, the second consecutive decline   statnews.com/2022/08/31/u... · Posted by u/davidbarker
hexsprite · 4 years ago
Good point, one could measure (est.) years lost rather than lives lost as a way to quantify that.
hackflip · 4 years ago
"Let's lock down young healthy people's lives for 2 years so that the 86 year olds make it to 87"
hackflip commented on U.S. life expectancy drops sharply, the second consecutive decline   statnews.com/2022/08/31/u... · Posted by u/davidbarker
odshoifsdhfs · 4 years ago
Not really and this is the problem.

My quality of life decreased after my booster shot. Had severe reaction and my athletic performance dropped quite a bit afterwards never going back to the baseline pre-vaccine. Also having more heart palpitations and a decrease on VO2max.

But apparently when I talk about this, I am either labelled anti-vaxx (even though I got the damn vaccine), a conspiracy crazy or people try to justify my issues with something else that magically coincided with the date I took the booster.

hackflip · 4 years ago
My young healthy sister got myocarditis after her booster and had to be hospitalized. This is after successfully fighting off a covid infection months prior.

I'm far from antivax, and have had 3 shots myself. But it's crazy that you aren't allowed to talk about this stuff without being labeled a conspiracy theorist.

hackflip commented on Is the internet killing the nude beach?   theatlantic.com/family/ar... · Posted by u/fortran77
Beltalowda · 4 years ago
The Muslim population isn't that large though; between 4.5% and 5% for both France and Denmark (roughly the same in the rest of Europe), and this is offset against the decline of Christian Danish and French people.
hackflip · 4 years ago
A vocal minority doesn't need to be very large to influence culture.

u/hackflip

KarmaCake day230December 7, 2016View Original