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jinwoo68 commented on Slowness is a virtue   blog.jakobschwichtenberg.... · Posted by u/jakobgreenfeld
jasode · 2 days ago
The timing of this article and the submission seems to coincide (and possibly a reaction) to the other story on HN frontpage: Working quickly is more important than it seems (2015) (jsomers.net)

To clarify, some are misunderstanding James Somers to be advocating sloppy low quality work, as if he's recommending speed>quality. He's saying something else: remove latencies and delays to shorten feedback loops. Faster feedback cycles leads to more repetitions which leads to higher quality.

"slowness being a virtue" is not the opposite of Somer's recommendation about "working quickly".

jinwoo68 · a day ago
Shortening feedback loops was what Kent Beck and TDD advocates were emphasizing. Now TDD has been ruined by "experts", people are realizing the importance of fast feedback loops from a different perspective.
jinwoo68 commented on AI and the ironies of automation – Part 2   ufried.com/blog/ironies_o... · Posted by u/BinaryIgor
jinwoo68 · 5 days ago
"Most companies are efficiency-obsessed."

But what most of them do is not to be more efficient but to be shown to be more efficient. The main reason they are so obsessed with AI is because they want to send the signal that they are pursuing to be more efficient, whether they succeed or not.

jinwoo68 commented on We chose OCaml to write Stategraph   stategraph.dev/blog/why-w... · Posted by u/lawnchair
stonemetal12 · a month ago
>One operation can't corrupt another operation's view of state because state is immutable by default.

How true is this in practice? I mean on the one hand sure Operation 2 doesn't seem some half modified state from Operation 1. On the other hand Operation 2 now has some stale state and makes the wrong decisions does the wrong thing because it didn't see Operation 1's changes.

jinwoo68 · a month ago
That happens whether immutable or not. In the mutable world, you have to guard that using a mutex or something. In that case, operation 1 may be blocked by operation 2, and now you get a "stale" state from operation 2. But that's okay. You'll get a new state next time. The real problem occurs when two states are mixed and corrupted.
jinwoo68 commented on The Multiverse (1995)   youtube.com/watch?v=SDZ45... · Posted by u/jinwoo68
jinwoo68 · 2 months ago
Interview with Dr. David Deutsch "Het Multiversum" from Noorderlicht. Published in 1995.
jinwoo68 commented on A Postmark backdoor that’s downloading emails   koi.security/blog/postmar... · Posted by u/ghuntley
jinwoo68 · 3 months ago
It's almost always npm packages. I know that's because npm is the most widely used package system and most motivating one for attackers. But still bad taste in my mouth.
jinwoo68 commented on Easy Forth (2015)   skilldrick.github.io/easy... · Posted by u/pkilgore
7thaccount · 3 months ago
It looks like it's still being developed, but I feel like the 0.1 version number hasn't changed in 10 years. What cool projects are people making?
jinwoo68 · 3 months ago
Its version seems to be 0.100, not 0.1. And it was released last year: https://downloads.factorcode.org/releases/
jinwoo68 commented on Take Two: Eshell   yummymelon.com/devnull/ta... · Posted by u/nanna
johnisgood · 5 months ago
Does it have to be the GUI version of Emacs?
jinwoo68 · 5 months ago
No. Vterm works fine even in a terminal version of emacs.
jinwoo68 commented on Chromium Switching from Ninja to Siso   groups.google.com/a/chrom... · Posted by u/hortense
westurner · 6 months ago
Blaze (and gtest) did exist then, but it was integrated with Omega scheduler.
jinwoo68 · 6 months ago
IIRC even blaze didn't exist. The Chrome project existed before I joined Google (in 2007) but blaze came out after I joined Google.
jinwoo68 commented on Chromium Switching from Ninja to Siso   groups.google.com/a/chrom... · Posted by u/hortense
RainyDayTmrw · 6 months ago
Kinda impressive and terrifying that Chromium needs its own build system. Kinda strange that Bazel was right there, also from Google, and they not only choose not to use it, but also reference it in the name of the new tool.
jinwoo68 · 6 months ago
To be fair, Bazel didn't exist when Chrome started.

u/jinwoo68

KarmaCake day329September 1, 2012View Original