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leoc commented on C isn't a programming language anymore (2022)   faultlore.com/blah/c-isnt... · Posted by u/stickynotememo
jagged-chisel · 4 days ago
The Fine/Fabulous/Fucking Article

Choose your own adjective

leoc · 4 days ago
To further explain: it comes from 'RTFA' https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/RTFA which was developed on Slashdot as a variation on 'RTFM'.
leoc commented on When internal hostnames are leaked to the clown   rachelbythebay.com/w/2026... · Posted by u/zdw
hsbauauvhabzb · 5 days ago
Sounds like a great way to get sentry to fire off arbitrary requests to IPs you don’t own.

sure hope nobody does that targeting ips (like that blacklist in masscan) that will auto report you to your isp/ans/whatever for your abusive traffic. Repeatedly.

leoc commented on 1 kilobyte is precisely 1000 bytes?   waspdev.com/articles/2026... · Posted by u/surprisetalk
nerdsniper · 7 days ago
Final edit:

This ambiguity is documented at least back to 1984, by IBM, the pre-eminent computer company of the time.

In 1972 IBM started selling the IBM 3333 magnetic disk drive. This product catalog [0] from 1979 shows them marketing the corresponding disks as "100 million bytes" or "200 million bytes" (3336 mdl 1 and 3336 mdl 11, respectively). By 1984, those same disks were marketed in the "IBM Input/Output Device Summary"[1] (which was intended for a customer audience) as "100MB" and "200MB"

0: (PDF page 281) "IBM 3330 DISK STORAGE" http://electronicsandbooks.com/edt/manual/Hardware/I/IBM%20w...

1: (PDF page 38, labeled page 2-7, Fig 2-4) http://electronicsandbooks.com/edt/manual/Hardware/I/IBM%20w...

Also, hats off to http://electronicsandbooks.com/ for keeping such incredible records available for the internet to browse.

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Edit: The below is wrong. Older experience has corrected me - there has always been ambiguity (perhaps bifurcated between CPU/OS and storage domains). "And that with such great confidence!", indeed.

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The article presents wishful thinking. The wish is for "kilobyte" to have one meaning. For the majority of its existence, it had only one meaning - 1024 bytes. Now it has an ambiguous meaning. People wish for an unambiguous term for 1000 bits, however that word does not exist. People also might wish that others use kibibyte any time they reference 1024 bytes, but that is also wishful thinking.

The author's wishful thinking is falsely presented as fact.

I think kilobyte was the wrong word to ever use for 1024 bytes, and I'd love to go back in time to tell computer scientists that they needed to invent a new prefix to mean "1,024" / "2^10" of something, which kilo- never meant before kilobit / kilobyte were invented. Kibi- is fine, the phonetics sound slightly silly to native English speakers, but the 'bi' indicates binary and I think that's reasonable.

I'm just not going to fool myself with wishful thinking. If, in arrogance or self-righteousness, one simply assumes that every time they see "kilobyte" it means 1,000 bytes - then they will make many, many failures. We will always have to take care to verify whether "kilobyte" means 1,000 or 1,024 bytes before implementing something which relies on that for correctness.

leoc · 7 days ago
> The article presents wishful thinking. The wish is for "kilobyte" to have one meaning. For the majority of its existence, it had only one meaning - 1024 bytes. Now it has an ambiguous meaning. People wish for an unambiguous term for 1000 bits, however that word does not exist. People also might wish that others use kibibyte any time they reference 1024 bytes, but that is also wishful thinking.

> The author's wishful thinking is falsely presented as fact.

There's good reason why the meanings of SI prefixes aren't set by convention or by common usage or by immemorial tradition, but by the SI. We had several thousand years of setting weights and measures by local and trade tradition and it was a nightmare, which is how we ended up with the SI. It's not a good show for computing to come along and immediately recreate the long and short ton.

leoc commented on See how many words you have written in Hacker News comments   serjaimelannister.github.... · Posted by u/Imustaskforhelp
jader201 · 7 days ago
It’s funny how I spend so much time on HN, yet couldn’t point out a single username (that I don’t know IRL) besides dang.

This is one reason I feel an odd disconnect (anonymity?) with HN that isn’t felt on other social platforms I’ve been a part of. Those often have avatars or some other visual form of recognition that helps put a “face” to a name.

I’m not sure if that’s a good or bad thing, but I definitely think it’s intentional.

leoc · 7 days ago
As an old lag there is a fairly large number of names which I recognise on sight, quite a few of them from the old days of /r/programming and even the main reddit. I'd have trouble listing many of them completely unprompted though.
leoc commented on Richard Feynman Side Hustles   twitter.com/carl_feynman/... · Posted by u/tzury
rcxdude · 11 days ago
Often the highly paid consultants are there entirely to get the organisation to listen to the right ideas that already exist within the company.
leoc · 11 days ago
That's basically what happened with Feynman's involvement in the Challenger enquiry, as he himself freely admitted in his memoir.
leoc commented on Show HN: Moltbook – A social network for moltbots (clawdbots) to hang out   moltbook.com/... · Posted by u/schlichtm
leoc · 11 days ago
The old "ELIZA talking to PARRY" vibe is still very much there, no?
leoc commented on Stevey's Birthday Blog   steve-yegge.medium.com/st... · Posted by u/throwawayHMM19
lovich · 19 days ago
If you are quoting Moore's Law in 2026 as the reason LLMs will be profitable, I don’t know how to interact with you.

I guess we’ll make up the losses per unit at scale, and grow to infinity.

leoc · 12 days ago
I'm not making some general claim about LLMs being profitable. To be clear, are you claiming with high confidence that LLM training costs will show no meaningful reduction, for some fixed quality, over roughly the next 10 years?
leoc commented on There's only one Woz, but we can all learn from him   fastcompany.com/91477114/... · Posted by u/coloneltcb
al_borland · 13 days ago
He was a cofounder because of his skill and Jobs talking him into it. Woz would have been perfectly happy as an engineer at HP, that was his plan.
leoc · 13 days ago
He wasn't entirely unworldly though. He didn't like BASIC as a language, but he gave the Apple I and II a BASIC capable of running the programs from Ahl's BASIC Computer Games because that's what the market was demanding.
leoc commented on Doing the thing is doing the thing   softwaredesign.ing/blog/d... · Posted by u/prakhar897
myst · 14 days ago
Coming up with excuses is not doing the thing.
leoc · 13 days ago
Who claimed it was?
leoc commented on World’s most powerful literary critic is on TikTok   newstatesman.com/culture/... · Posted by u/insistey
leoc · 16 days ago
How good is the book he successfully sold to HarperCollins, The Uni-Verse? Either he's pretty good, or he was quite lucky, or he had some inside track.

u/leoc

KarmaCake day6418February 20, 2007
About
I am the leoc at http://all.reddit.com/user/leoc . I am not the leoc at Slashdot, MySpace or LWN.net .

leocomerford@gmail.com

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