Readit News logoReadit News
opto commented on Show HN: Poppy – A simple app to stay intentional with relationships   poppy-connection-keeper.n... · Posted by u/mahirhiro
wincy · 9 days ago
I mean, I’m a pretty ADHD guy, very in the moment, and although I sporadically invite friends or old colleagues to catch up for lunch, I mean to do it regularly, but I might forget to invite them for years at a time, so this might be good for me. I could really used an “Anki for lunch”, spaced repetition reminders for people in my Rolodex, as it were.
opto · 9 days ago
You just need a tickler file.
opto commented on Major European payment processor can't send email to Google Workspace users   atha.io/blog/2026-02-12-v... · Posted by u/thatha7777
L_226 · a month ago
As someone who does systems engineering, the only valid requirements include the word "shall".
opto · a month ago
In a completely different field, navigating ships at sea, the Collision Regulations which define how people must conduct ships at sea, they use the words "Shall" and "May" to differentiate legal requirements and what may just be best practice. "Should" intuitively means something more like "May" to me
opto commented on Most Americans don’t pay for news and don’t think they need to   niemanlab.org/2026/02/mos... · Posted by u/jaredwiener
opto · a month ago
Pay licence fee, read BBC news
opto commented on Curating a Show on My Ineffable Mother, Ursula K. Le Guin   hyperallergic.com/curatin... · Posted by u/bryanrasmussen
Phelinofist · a month ago
> ... 'The Left Hand of Darkness'

I read it last year. I found it to be quit boring and it also felt kinda "dated" in the sense that more recent SF is more space-y. However, the social constructs were well thought out.

opto · a month ago
Replying for anyone reading this comment: Le Guin was a Daoist, but also, and concurrently, an anarchist. So much of her writing, especially The Word for World is Forest, parts of Earthsea, The Dispossessed, is informed by her anarchism. Very often you find Le Guin exploring ideas of an anarchist response to colonialism, or just enjoying setting out an anarchist society and imagining how it might work, how it would unfold, the challenges it would face, and the solutions people might try.
opto commented on The evolution of my todo list system over 5 years   njbrown.com/blog/77/... · Posted by u/ntnbr
opto · a month ago
I believe this is a solved problem and you were closest with the analog system. I'll outline my system so people might find it:

You'll need:

- A physical diary to track your appointments

- A 'working' box to hold index cards of whichever size you prefer (I use 3x5 Exacompta cards)

- 43 tabbed index card dividers + some more if you want tabs for GTD-style 'contexts'

- A pouch for carrying index cards on your person (I have a Lochby Pocket Journal which holds plenty of cards)

- A box to act as an 'inbox' for you to dump cards into before processing them

Where you went wrong is keeping a list on a single card. The only solution is 'One Item, One Card'.

The Set Up:

- Take 31 tabbed dividers and write the numbers 1-31 on them. These will represent a day of the month.

- Put these in your Working Box

- Take 12 more tabbed dividers, write JAN-DEC on them. These will represent a month of the year.

- Put these in your Working Box /behind/ the daily tabs

- If you are using tabs to track 'NEXT ACTIONS' with contexts like GTD, write the name of the contexts on a set of tabbed dividers

- Put these in your Working Box /in front/ of the /daily/ tabs - as in, they come first in the box

Daily Routine:

- In the morning, sit down at your desk

- Check your Diary for any appointments you have that day

- Check your inbox for new cards and put them on your desk

- In your Working Box, pull out the cards that are behind today's day tab and move the tab to the next month. For example, today is the 28th of January, so I pull out the cards behind the 28 tab, put them on my desk, and then move the 28 tab back to February (which is already full of the 1-27 tabs from previous days)

- Sort through today's cards - I do this in 4 or 5 piles:

  1) Things I'm going to do now before I go to work

  2) Things I'm going to do today, but not right now - these go in my Pocket Journal so that I can refer to them through the day (things like "Call this person over my lunch break")

  3) Things I'm going to today, but when I get back home from work - these go right in the front of my Working Box, before all of the tabs. I also organise these into an order in which I am going to tackle them

  4) Things I'm going to move to another day, which I then move to another day tab

  5) (optional) things I am not going to do, but don't want to throw away. I put these into storage in a 'Someday' box which I look at once a week
- Go off to work with the cards you sorted into the (2) pile, and plenty of blanks to write down anything that comes to mind that you might want to do - make sure that you put one thing on one card, so that they can be sorted into the box easily

- Come home, dump all of the cards in your Pocket Journal into your inbox, and sort them out there and then or leave them for the next morning's routine

As jobs get done I either throw away the card if it was a one-off job, or move it to another day if it is a recurring thing. For example, I have a card that reminds me to clean my phone which I do, and then put back in the box in 2 days time.

Why This Works:

I've been using a system like this for about two and a half years. Before this I used Org Mode and spent a lot of time tweaking agenda views and tagging systems etc. Index cards work better for me for the following reasons:

- The system works offline

- It requires no technology, so I can have a productive day without touching a computer or phone, which is good for my mental health

- I work a job where I cannot always pull out a phone to take notes

- The act of writing things down helps me to remember that I need to do them, and stops me writing down frivolous things (think about how many people have a TODO app full of odd little jobs they'll never do which got there because there's no friction to adding things to their lists)

- Because I have a good habit of writing down anything that I think about doing, and can trust my physical system, I have confidence that what is in my box represents everything I /need/ to do. I don't have to think about whether things have synced properly, leaving me unsure if my I am missing items.

- Once the box is set up there is no need to spend time tweaking the system, which is a time-suck for people who use things like Org Mode

- Because there is one item per card I can easily reshuffle my plan for the day, and move jobs from one day to another and back without crossing things out and re-writing them (this is the drawback of systems like Bullet Journals, and your one)

I'm sure there are other benefits which no longer appear to me because I am so used to it.

opto commented on Found: Medieval Cargo Ship – Largest Vessel of Its Kind Ever   smithsonianmag.com/smart-... · Posted by u/bookofjoe
asymmetric · 2 months ago
> On its stern, researchers were shocked to find extensive remains of a castle, a kind of covered deck where the crew would have sought shelter. Records show that castles were distinctive features of medieval cogs, but no physical evidence of them had previously been identified.

I suppose this explains why the thing that exists on more modern ships is called a “forecastle”.

PS go check the pronunciation for that word as it’s quite surprising.

opto · 2 months ago
The forecastle of a ship is in the forward part of a ship — at the front, not the back. Looking at renderings of cogs, the 'castle' at the stern seems more to anticipate the modern bulk carrier, with an accommodation block with bridge on top at the aft end, looking out over the cargo holds.
opto commented on Pairing with Claude Code to rebuild my startup's website   blog.nseldeib.com/p/pairi... · Posted by u/nadis
opto · 6 months ago
> I wasted several hours on occasions where Claude would make changes to completely unrelated parts of the application instead of addressing my actual request.

Every time I read about people using AI I come away with one question. What if they spent hours with a pen and paper and brainstormed about their idea, and then turned it into an actual plan, and then did the plan? At the very least you wouldn't waste hours of your life and instead enjoy using your own powers of thought.

opto commented on A simple way to measure knots has come unraveled   quantamagazine.org/a-simp... · Posted by u/baruchel
1024core · 6 months ago
Speaking of knots, and not to hijack this post: I am interested in learning, say, 10 most useful knots that could be useful in most situations: joining two ropes, attaching a rope to a tree branch, etc. etc. Is there a youtube channel people would recommend I watch to pick them up?
opto · 6 months ago
I work as a merchant seaman and for our regular day's work everyone basically exclusively uses bowlines, round turn and two half hitches, and clove hitches. We'd use reef knots or single sheet bends for joining ropes.
opto commented on Vibe coding cleanup as a service   donado.co/en/articles/202... · Posted by u/sjdonado
eru · 6 months ago
You can use vibe coding in strongly type languages?

I agree that vibed code can often be treated like other legacy code. However is it true that people are reluctant to change vibe code?

opto · 6 months ago
I think most often people have some vibe coded stuff that kind of does what they want but they don't really understand what it all is and how it works, or any confidence it can be made into something useful, so rather than spending time cleaning up AI code they just use it to grasp the idea and write it themselves. Whether any time is saved by going through this process with the AI seems doubtful to me. Sitting down with pen and paper and thinking through things would probably be more useful.
opto commented on A high schooler writes about AI tools in the classroom   theatlantic.com/technolog... · Posted by u/dougb5
textadventure · 6 months ago
ANY real kid that is unpretentious would do. A "I use AI to cheat at school" article would be far more interesting that this "Oh my God, my peers are hopeless but not me" piece.
opto · 6 months ago
I think this is a good point because "cheating at the work I have to do, as quickly as possible, well enough to not get fired" is the actual use case for AI for 99% of people.

All the stuff you see in this thread about how kids are going to use AI to bootstrap an education for themselves even better than what their teachers give them (not sure why there's so much hostility towards teachers) is a fantasy.

HN obviously overrepresents kids who were interested in tech things who may do something like that. The vast majority of kids will use AI as a tool to blurt out essays and coursework they don't read, so that they can get back to their addiction to TikTok and Instagram.

As will, of course, everyone using it at work. This is already the case. This is what AI is for. "Do this for me so I can scroll more".

u/opto

KarmaCake day59February 26, 2025View Original