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jaxr commented on Why I don't ride the AI Hype Train   mertbulan.com/2025/06/26/... · Posted by u/mertbio
jaxr · 2 months ago
Lost me un the first section. It's like when anti-vaxers say vaccines are bad because they were developed unethically. It's just a bad argument.

Also, I learned about Bitcoin when it was worth 8 USD and got obsessed with the tech but always thought it was over hyped. I never owned one Satoshi. I still think crypto ended up being hype and not adding real value to the world. But I could be very very wealthy if I had jumped to that hype train XD.

I think with all the hype, AI does provide some real value to the world. That's the train I'm jumping in.

jaxr commented on The Einstein AI Model   thomwolf.io/blog/scientif... · Posted by u/9woc
jaxr · 6 months ago
The most useful way to leverage LLMs for me has been as "content fillers". I'm a software engineer, and work with a rather large code base. Some parts are rarely touched, and loading the context into my brain whenever I need to go back to them requires quite a bit of effort. I found that asking cursor/Claude to suggest how to make the required chande rarely comes up with the right solution but usually points me in the right direction and is enough to help me load the context up. Similarly with my side projects, which typically involves knowledge that I don't use in my day to day.
jaxr commented on Are noise-cancelling headphones to blame for young people's hearing problems?   bbc.com/news/articles/cgk... · Posted by u/vinni2
000ooo000 · 6 months ago
Anyone find their tinnitus got a little worse after using noise cancelling headphones?
jaxr · 6 months ago
I get that feeling too. I have the Samsung Galaxy buds3 pro. They seem to be worse than my Bose 700. After wearing them for a while with NC, I feel like I have to take them off or turn the sound louder. I defaulted to using them with NC off unless I'm in a very loud environment.
jaxr commented on Most-Watched Software Engineering Talks of 2024   techtalksweekly.io/p/100-... · Posted by u/cempaka
Ygg2 · 7 months ago
What do you mean? That wasn't a Q&A session, they interrupted the speaker and ate all the time arguing. The speaker didn't get to finish his presentation.

This makes me think, whoever wrote these top 100 talks has either questionable tastes or just did a simple query and filter (SELECT * FROM youtube.video WHERE tag = tech SORT BY youtube.video.views LIMIT 100).

jaxr · 7 months ago
It clearly says the most watched talks, so yes. The author mentions in the article "from the conferences I follow"
jaxr commented on Ask HN: Would you recommend a framework laptop?    · Posted by u/ramon156
jaxr · 9 months ago
I mostly loved mine... While it lasted. I owned a 12th gen, and it ran really well. The stories about running hot, draining battery while sleeping and the lack of firmware updates are all true. I could live with that. I live in Argentina, and had to travel to SF for work. I ordered the tougher hinges in advance (the ones that came were very flimsy, but they fixed that in newer models). I changed the hinges, and it was a breeze, so they delivered there. The thing is.. the laptop never booted up again! I called support, and they instructed me several things to try bring it back to life. Nothing worked. Last message was: you're out of warranty, sorry. Which I'm ok with. But then it got me thinking about repairability. I'm by no means a hardware expert. For sure I messed up when changing the hinges. But still, the whole situation just fell awful, and the promise if repairability just stopped selling for me. I still want framework to exist. I love their mission. But I needed to work, so I ran to an apple store and bought a MBP. After 20 years of using Linux, it breaks my heart a little bit, but the hardware is unbeatable. I'm kind of hating macos tbh, but I can live with it. And who knows, Asahi might get good enough at some point...
jaxr commented on YC is wrong about LLMs for chip design   zach.be/p/yc-is-wrong-abo... · Posted by u/laserduck
jaxr · 10 months ago
I don't know the space well enough, but I think the missing piece is that YC 's investment horizon is typically 10+ years. Not only LLMs could get massively better, but the chip industry could be massively disrupted with the right incentives. My guess is that that is YC's thesis behind the ask.
jaxr commented on Kagi Assistant   blog.kagi.com/announcing-... · Posted by u/darthShadow
jaxr · a year ago
I've been trying out the new Android app. I know it's still beta, but it sucks big time. I'm a fan and paying user of kagi, just wanted to point that out in case any kagi developer is reading :)

among other things, it randomly says I have no connectivity in an awful modal, I click to search and the keyboard doesn't open, I hit "enter" to search and nothing happens (I need to tap on the search suggestion). pretty bad so far. will try it again in a couple of weeks to see if there is any progress...

jaxr commented on Panic at the Job Market   matt.sh/panic-at-the-job-... · Posted by u/speckx
caesil · a year ago
>According to all the interviews I’ve failed over the years (I don’t think I’ve ever passed an actual “coding interview” anywhere?), the entire goal of tech hiring is just finding people in the 100 to 115 midwit block then outright rejecting everybody else as too much of an unknown risk.

As a (now) senior/staff-level engineer back out on the job market for the first time in a while, I'm begrudgingly coming to accept that coding interviews might not actually be all that bad. Mostly because I find myself passing them due to having picked up skills in the past few years rather than spending a ton of time studying, which suggests they might actually be picking up some signal. I once thought they were purely hazing with zero relevance to day to day work, but as I get more senior I drift further away from that opinion.

jaxr · a year ago
What type of coding interview do you find more valuable for the interviewer? Algo code interview always looked like the interviewer trying to show off to me. Guess it depends on the requirements of the job, though...
jaxr commented on Iconography of the X Window System: The Boot Stipple   matttproud.com/blog/posts... · Posted by u/todsacerdoti
drooopy · a year ago
The stipple and X cursor are forever ingrained into my memories. I remember it so vividly how back in 1998 when I installed my first Linux distro (suse 6-ish) and after some configuring i typed "startx" and then BOOM! Grey "unix-y" weirdness for a minute or two and then KDE 1. It will never not hit me with immense levels of nostalgia whenever I come across it, which admittedly is not very often these days.
jaxr · a year ago
Wow, I could have written that exact comment myself. Those were the happy startx, after you got the monitor sync rates right. The myth went that if you got them wrong, you could fry the monitor. I remember that suse package came with a couple of pins. one tux and one suse chameleon. I preserved them for a long time. But I moved way too many times. Fun times. Thanks for the nostalgia:)
jaxr commented on Show HN: Flox 1.0 – Open-source dev env as code with Nix   github.com/flox/flox... · Posted by u/ronef
jahsome · a year ago
The line about nix making it easier for newcomers in the readme and similar statements always trigger me. I am quite a competent person and I've never once thought "that was easy" when trying to use nix.

I adore the concepts of nix, but the user experience is awful. Maybe that's what this tool solves? It takes a frustrating amount of effort and incessant config tweaking with little to no documentation and navigating seemingly endless already-deprecated methodologies to reach that point. Perhaps I'm just dumb, or looking in the wrong places.

In any case in my experience the end result is every time I see something related to nix, I find myself thinking "I can't wait til that's easy"

jaxr · a year ago
Exact same experience here. Been fiddling with nixos for quite a while, but never got comfortable with .nix or flakes. The base concepts keep escaping my mind, I have to revisit every time I have to configure something new and I just got tired. Issues are difficult to debug and you have to go through very specific commands and a hellish filesystem to understand what's going wrong. I love the concept, but I feel like it just gets too much in my way.

u/jaxr

KarmaCake day123January 15, 2015
About
Love science and tech since forever. Coding for a long time. Parenting since 2012. Co-founder of Sytex (YC S22): Project management for the deployment of infrastructure in the field.
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