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verisimilidude commented on Nobody knows how to build with AI yet   worksonmymachine.substack... · Posted by u/Stwerner
lordnacho · 2 months ago
But you also can't not swim with the tide. If you drove a horse-buggy 100 years ago, it was probably worth your while to keep your eye on whether motor-cars went anywhere.

I was super skeptical about a year ago. Copilot was making nice predictions, that was it. This agent stuff is truly impressive.

verisimilidude · 2 months ago
AI's superpower is doing mediocre work at high speed. That's okay. Great, even. There's lots of mediocre work to do. And mediocre still clears below average.

But! There's still room for expertise. And this is where I disagree about swimming with the tide. There will be those who are uninterested in using the AI. They will struggle. They will hone their craft. They will have muscle memory for the tasks everyone else forgot how to do. And they will be able to perform work that the AI users cannot.

The future needs both types.

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verisimilidude commented on Duolingo CEO tries to walk back AI-first comments, fails   htxt.co.za/2025/05/duolin... · Posted by u/Improvement
_aavaa_ · 3 months ago
I disagree with this in principle. Gamification is something we should be very wary of because it is inherently bad. It reduces what you care about in an activity to points and a progress bar.

Instead of sticking with language learning because you have some intrinsic reason to want to learn it (or even a external one such as wanting a new job) you're substituting that with whatever Duolingo puts for their gamification. To the degree you engage with and are motivated by the gamification you are substituting your own metrics of success and progress for points and streaks.

And soon enough we end up here, where Duolingo has gamified their internal numbers and in doing so gamified your "learning".

verisimilidude · 3 months ago
If the gamification is fully disclosed, I don't see the problem. People should be able to agree to game themselves, if it helps them complete a task they otherwise wouldn't finish.

But consent is key. Maybe we need regulation that compels companies to disclose these manipulative techniques in digital services. Give people the chance to opt in or out.

verisimilidude commented on Why Ruby on Rails still matters   contraption.co/rails-vers... · Posted by u/philip1209
taormina · 7 months ago
I mean, any scenario? I'm not trying to be snarky but server-side Javascript has always been a weird code smell from first premise. Now, when to use RoR vs a lighter-weight framework like Sinatra is a more interesting question, but it's about what you need out of the box.
verisimilidude · 7 months ago
Server-side JS is fine, and actually very nice in some contexts. The language and runtime(s) have come a long way.

But anyone who tries it without really understanding JS is eventually going to have a bad time. It’s important to know how to work with the event loop, how to properly use promises, etc. Server-side JS is a lot more unforgiving than front-end JS when it comes to these concepts.

verisimilidude commented on Apple will soon receive 'made in America' chips from TSMC's Arizona fab   tomshardware.com/tech-ind... · Posted by u/rbanffy
AnthonyMouse · 8 months ago
> Maybe it's not that simple. But few chip companies have to compete against startups for workers. And that probably won't change.

It seems like what EE needs is something similar to open source, so that does happen.

The way things like Google or AWS got started is they started with Linux and built something on top of it, so it could be a startup because they don't first have to build the world in order to make a contribution, and they're not building on top of someone else's land.

There isn't any reason that couldn't inherently work in EE. Get some universities or government grants to publish a fully-open spec for some processors that could be fabbed by TSMC or Intel. Not as good as the state of the art, but half as good anyway.

Now people have a basis for EE startups. You take the base design and tweak it some for the application, so that it's a startup-sized job instead of a multinational-sized job, and now you've got EE startups making all kinds of phone SoCs and NVMe drives and Raspberry Pi competitors and whatever else they think can justify a big enough production run to send it to a fab and sell it to the public.

An interesting license for this could be something along the lines of: You can make derivative works, but you have to release them under the same license within five years. In other words, you get five years to make money from this before it goes into the commons, which gives you the incentive to do it while keeping the commons rich so the next you can do it again tomorrow.

verisimilidude · 8 months ago
I believe you’ve just described the RISC-V project, though I could be mistaken.
verisimilidude commented on Innovation heroes are a sign of a dysfunctional organization   steveblank.substack.com/p... · Posted by u/sblank
bearjaws · a year ago
> Why Innovation Heroes are a Sign of a Dysfunctional Organization

Because often you can solve 99% of companies problems with boring software.

I am reminded of this blog post from earlier this week:

> Most organizations cannot ship the most basic applications imaginable with any consistency, and you're out here saying that the best way to remain competitive is to roll out experimental technology that is an order of magnitude more sophisticated than anything else your I.T department runs,

https://ludic.mataroa.blog/blog/i-will-fucking-piledrive-you...

verisimilidude · a year ago
"Innovation" in this context does not mean cutting-edge technology. It just means changing processes to deliver better results. The tech is often the easy part, and there's plenty of room for boring software.

The hard part is navigating the bureaucracy and building consensus toward a change. This management-craft is where the clever thinking and emergent solutions are found and deployed.

verisimilidude commented on Bun’s New Crash Reporter   bun.sh/blog/bun-report-is... · Posted by u/zackoverflow
vvpan · a year ago
So, anybody using Bun? Does it live up to hype?
verisimilidude · a year ago
The Bun libraries made it very easy to create my own static site generator. Not a huge lift, I know, but it’s been a delight to work with.

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verisimilidude commented on The Radiating Programmer   dev.37signals.com/the-rad... · Posted by u/kiriakosv
Rapzid · 2 years ago
I'd rather have a 5-10 minute standup than have to write such an oddly detailed report twice a week on what I "weighted" in on.
verisimilidude · 2 years ago
I would probably spend an hour or two just writing something like that. On the surface, I'd agree.

With that said, in my experience, many stand-up formats devolve into some version of "the two most talkative people have a conversation for 30 minutes while everyone else listens". I'd probably get more value out of doing a write-up than sitting through a meeting like that.

It really depends on the health of the stand-ups on the team.

verisimilidude commented on US Confidence in Higher Education Institutions Continues Long Decline   news.gallup.com/poll/5083... · Posted by u/barry-cotter
SliceOfWaifu · 2 years ago
My advice to all high school graduates is that you should not go to college if you don't already know exactly what you want to major on, and have at least some idea of what career path you plan to pursue.
verisimilidude · 2 years ago
I would recommend community college to smart kids without direction. It’s a great place to explore subjects without going into debt.

u/verisimilidude

KarmaCake day1038May 25, 2012View Original