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rekenaut commented on Sunny days are warm: why LinkedIn rewards mediocrity   elliotcsmith.com/linkedin... · Posted by u/smitec
LeftHandPath · 8 days ago
The posts I see most often on LinkedIn are ones that try to capture a trope of "flipping expectations" that people associate with great business people. Silly, inane conclusions are made about everyday events so that people who are startlingly mediocre can cling to them as a differentiating factor.

Basic politeness is sold as the secret hack to become the next Steve Jobs. Boasts of frugality are made and used to explain why the poster will inevitably become ultra-rich (no avocado toast, no lattes!). HR people explaining the mostly arbitrary reasons they passed over anonymous candidates, seeking to be seen as oracles of career success. Tech people saying "Ten things that separate junior developers from seniors" and then citing meaningless things like the modulo and ternary operators, or the poster's personal favorite whitespace style.

Realistic advice is hard to find, probably because it's so general in its best form that material would run out quickly. I think of Rob Dahm's old video where he suggested, Lamborghini in the background, to "Find something that you're so good at it feels like you're cheating." Or a quote from Kurt Vonnegut's player piano, "Nobody's so damn well educated that you can't learn ninety per cent of what he knows in six weeks. The other ten per cent is decoration... Almost nobody's competent, Paul. It's enough to make you cry to see how bad most people are at their jobs. If you can do a half-assed job of anything, you're a one-eyed man in a kingdom of the blind."

rekenaut · 8 days ago
> Or a quote from Kurt Vonnegut's player piano, "Nobody's so damn well educated that you can't learn ninety per cent of what he knows in six weeks. The other ten per cent is decoration... Almost nobody's competent, Paul. It's enough to make you cry to see how bad most people are at their jobs. If you can do a half-assed job of anything, you're a one-eyed man in a kingdom of the blind."

This advice surprises me. With one foot in the classical music world when I was younger, there are absolutely music skills that take many years if not decades to get to 90% on. And those that have put the work in are absolutely and obviously competent.

Similarly, when I'm working with someone who started off as a machinist, then a designer, then went to school and became an engineer, I find it baffling to think that I can absorb 90% of their knowledge in 6 weeks.

rekenaut commented on How ChatGPT spoiled my semester (2024)   benborgers.com/chatgpt-se... · Posted by u/edent
tossandthrow · 19 days ago
The difference in 20$ and 200$ + significantly more effort.

I don't think these students necessarily would have bought.

rekenaut · 19 days ago
The difference is much greater than this. It’s $20/month for a machine that can provide instant answers to any prompt in any topic hundreds of times a month vs $200/assignment that may take days to received and you have to edit yourself if you want a change made.

I think it’s quite clear that most students who are using AI now to generate assignments would not have bought.

rekenaut commented on How ChatGPT spoiled my semester (2024)   benborgers.com/chatgpt-se... · Posted by u/edent
hvb2 · 19 days ago
You seem to think that before ChatGPT there were no students cheating?

There will always be people that try to outsmart everyone else and not do the work. The problem here is those people, nothing else.

rekenaut · 19 days ago
Is it possible that the methods of cheating in the past were a lot more ineffective, risky, or expensive? If a tool like ChatGPT makes cheating a lot easier and less risky, of course more students will use it.
rekenaut commented on Many countries that said no to ChatControl in 2024 are now undecided   digitalcourage.social/@ec... · Posted by u/nickslaughter02
chrischen · 25 days ago
Why not have one organization that collects $1 from everyone to fight on behalf?
rekenaut · 25 days ago
Because whether the government gets it or this collective organization gets it, you’re still out a $1. Besides, very few people will actually care enough about $1 to partake in literally any amount of effort to regain it.
rekenaut commented on US companies, consumers are paying for tariffs, not foreign firms   bloomberg.com/news/articl... · Posted by u/petethomas
rekenaut · a month ago
This isn’t remotely true, the United States is the second largest manufacturing nation by value [1]. And manufacturing is still the dominant industry in many regions of the US. We might not be great at making consumer goods, but consumer goods is only a small subset of all manufacturing.

1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manufacturing

rekenaut commented on macOS Icon History   basicappleguy.com/basicap... · Posted by u/ksec
ashvardanian · 2 months ago
Yes, macOS/iOS aesthetics reached their peak around 2013-14. Hardware-wise, the story is similar; the 2012 MacBook Pro was the most marvelous piece of hardware I've ever bought.

I miss that feeling. No part of me would agree that Apple is a more impressive company today than it was 13 years ago, despite its market cap.

rekenaut · 2 months ago
Perhaps it’s just nostalgia on my part, but I really don’t understand imposing the constraint of making every Mac app look like the rounded iPhone app buttons. To me, it makes it harder at a glance to distinguish one app from another compared to the older designs.
rekenaut commented on Electronic Arts Leadership Are Out of Their Goddamned Minds   aftermath.site/ea-dice-ba... · Posted by u/dotmanish
rekenaut · 2 months ago
Is it feasible to get 100 million people to play this game even if it was free? I have to imagine that once you get to $400 million, every additional dollar has effectively no value add. When is it not better to just target a smaller user base and spend way less money? I’m unfamiliar with the ins an outs of this industry, so I am genuinely unsure.
rekenaut commented on AI note takers are flooding Zoom calls as workers opt to skip meetings   washingtonpost.com/techno... · Posted by u/tysone
rekenaut · 2 months ago
Trust me, the 80% meeting workday became prevalent loooooong before the 2020s.
rekenaut commented on Touching the back wall of the Apple store   blog.lauramichet.com/touc... · Posted by u/nivethan
msgodel · 2 months ago
Smartphone hardware is almost completely useless because of the software. At this point it's pretty obvious that the potential (but unrealizable) utility is just more of the luxury illusion they're selling.
rekenaut · 2 months ago
In my pocket, I have a wallet, timer, alarm clock, calculator, telephone, atlas, directory, camera, stock broker, flashlight, tape measure, television, music collection, encyclopedia, transit time table, library, notepad, and translator. How are these utilities an illusion?
rekenaut commented on Touching the back wall of the Apple store   blog.lauramichet.com/touc... · Posted by u/nivethan
ericmay · 2 months ago
I largely agree with you, but I think one of Apple’s secret sauces (and they aren’t the only one) is that while their products are to some marketed as luxury items, they are in fact coupled with extremely high utility which is a somewhat new concept, in my view.

The iPhone or your equivalent Android device truly is one of the most useful inventions humanity has ever created, especially for the era that we currently exist in.

rekenaut · 2 months ago
Outside of urban centers, the only other device that is similarly valuable is a car, but the average American new car purchase costs 65 times the average American new phone purchase. While there is obviously a lot of nuance here, this makes phones feel downright cheap (or conversely, cars downright expensive) compared to imparted value.

u/rekenaut

KarmaCake day136April 18, 2025View Original