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l8nite commented on Oncall shift should be Tuesday to Tuesday   arthur-johnston.com/tuesd... · Posted by u/RyeCombinator
ljoshua · 9 months ago
My team does Wednesday to Wednesday for many of the same reasons mentioned in the article, and it works great. We switch at 11am and hold a hand-off meeting at that time, and invite the whole team.

Hand-off meetings with the whole team work really well (in my opinion!) when you have a relatively small team--we have 9 FT teammates. Often someone else may have been delegated the page or bug that arose and can discuss how they handled it, or someone who wasn't involved may have insight for how to handle a situation better the next time. Since we're all going to be on rotation at least once during a quarter, it's great to know what happened in case a similar page pops up later.

Finally, we also fill out a running Doc before/during the meeting with links to the pages/bugs, along with short descriptions of how they were handled. This forms a great living memory of how to deal with incidents, and is also often the birthplace of new playbooks for handling new types of incidents.

l8nite · 9 months ago
Same here. Except we do a two week rotation, and it aligns with our sprints. The active on-call engineer doesn’t have any assigned sprint work and focuses their effort on fixing bugs or cleaning up the backlog when they’re not actively triaging an incident.
l8nite commented on Asqi: A codebase explorer designed to help navigate and understand Git projects   dev.asqi.io/... · Posted by u/guitarsteve
st_asqi · a year ago
It's actually pretty straightforward; we use tree-sitter for parsing and it takes me about 2-3 hours for each language. So I'm planning to add a lot more in the near future.

If you have any that you find especially valuable, let me know and I'll see if I can prioritize them.

l8nite · a year ago
Kotlin would be awesome!
l8nite commented on Ask HN: How do I stop political SMS spam?    · Posted by u/datadrivenangel
l8nite · a year ago
On iOS I've been using "Bouncer" for the past several months to filter messages using regular expressions. It's been doing a great job so far for me.

https://apps.apple.com/us/app/bouncer-private-sms-blocker/id...

l8nite commented on One in Five Americans Use Buy Now, Pay Later to Afford Groceries   bloomberg.com/news/articl... · Posted by u/mfiguiere
josephcsible · 2 years ago
Isn't using a credit card instead also going into debt to buy groceries? What's the difference? Either way, aren't you not paying any interest if you pay it all on time?
l8nite · 2 years ago
Yea, I've basically just swapped to the BNPL lenders because they don't charge compounding late fees if I decide not to pay the bill off.
l8nite commented on Affirm cuts 19% of workforce; shares tank on earnings miss   cnbc.com/2023/02/08/affir... · Posted by u/ejb999
operatingthetan · 3 years ago
Their business model of offering financing for low cost consumer items always made me uneasy about how much they were contributing to consumer debt for people who couldn't really afford it.
l8nite · 3 years ago
I like that the loans are a fixed schedule and have no compounding interest, fees, or ways to get me into further debt beyond paying what I committed to pay.
l8nite commented on Betting on things that never change (2017)   collabfund.com/blog/betti... · Posted by u/Brajeshwar
galdosdi · 3 years ago
I remember that time, and no, it was nothing like crypto. A better analogy would be electric vehicles today.

Yes, a loose analogy can be made in that there was a hyped technology that some people thought might become huge, others thought might merely become large or medium sized, and most others were pretty unaware or didn't care.

Unlike with crypto, during the late 90s internet/PC/web usage explosion, though, there were decades of successful smaller scale use (BBSes, academic use of the internet, etc). It was just a matter of scaling it up. The future was already here, just unevenly distributed.

Unlike crypto, a lot of the usages were not just emotionally exciting, but actually practical. You could look up a stock quote right away instead of looking at an outdated quote in the paper, or calling a broker on the phone, or having a dedicated fancy service just for that. You could email a friend half way around the world. You could read the full text of a book for free, if it was from before 1923. In general, you could transmit information freely and cheaply across the world -- as long as both recipient and sender were on the internet somehow.

All of those things previously were not possible that easily. There were faxes and landline phones already, but they had their obvious limitations.

Crypto is totally different. It's been hyped for two decades and, except for illegal activities, still hasn't enabled anything that could not be done more efficiently with SQL database to track who owns what, and a system of courts and law enforcement to enforce property rights and enforce contracts.

If you think they are similar you probably don't remember just how different it was to not have a single simple easy way to get and receive information. You had to actually go specific places or talk to specific people. You would do stuff like check movie times in the newspaper, and make specific plans to meet people at specific times.

I still remember when Tell Me came out. It was a phone number interface to some basic internet applications like weather, news, sports, movie times. You called 1-800-TELL-ME and followed the prompts. It was massively popular.

Where is crypto's TellMe moment? Nowhere. The only useful thing I've ever been able to do with crypto is accidentally profit $8000 because I forgot I had owned some I had bought as a joke... which came directly out of someone else's pocket later when it crashed.

If you're looking for a historical analogy, tulipmania is a good one. So is the boom in joint stock companies in the 1600s. So is the plank road boom of the late 1800s.

Nobody had as strong opinions about the internet being a horrifying scam, like many do about crypto. Because it wasn't, and there was no reason to think it was. The main "issue" was, would it catch on? Was it too nerdy? I mean, it's not like now, where the internet is almost slightly cool to some young people. Buying a modem was extremely uncool. And it cost a lot of money. So it was more of a question of "Is it really ready for prime time yet or does it need to become easier to use and cheaper?" much like EVs today. And, again, like EVs today, the problem was solved gradually but exponentially... each succeessive cost decrease or simplicity increase lead to another wave of converts, which made the whole thing more useful, solving the chicken and egg problem gradually

l8nite · 3 years ago
I’m replying only because I worked at Tellme, and I’m happy other people remember it still! :)
l8nite commented on Ask HN: What is the thing you've built that you regret the most?    · Posted by u/Octabrain
l8nite · 3 years ago
In the early 00s I designed and wrote a system that procured abandoned domain names, analyzed them for SEO purposes (existing pagerank scores, inbound traffic from other respectable domains, etc) and then generated a web of links and artificial content designed purely to sell ads and boost other client domains. The part I enjoyed the most was automating Apache and systems administration work for the server farm, but I regret working on it. I was broke and desperate at 20, and I ended up quitting the job after a few months anyway.

Dead Comment

l8nite commented on Klarna to raise fresh cash at slashed $6.5B valuation   wsj.com/articles/klarna-t... · Posted by u/fjk
tempsy · 3 years ago
Wow Affirm’s stock has literally gone down more than 90% in 7 months or so. Crazy.
l8nite · 3 years ago
Yea. My equity has been dismal. The benefits are fantastic though.
l8nite commented on Goodbye Zachtronics   kotaku.com/zachtronics-fa... · Posted by u/danso
xbar · 3 years ago
Well said.

I wish I could have convinced more people to play TIS100. I will have to try some more.

l8nite · 3 years ago
I’m proud of myself for getting all the way through TIS-100, and I think I still hold the records amongst my few peers who tried it.

u/l8nite

KarmaCake day95April 26, 2017
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[ my public key: https://keybase.io/shaunguth; my proof: https://keybase.io/shaunguth/sigs/Iv8dbnua9DmPrG3VYom0Dk83hPA0wnCKGRLjiB75swE ]
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