ExtremeDullard

joined 7 months ago
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[–] ExtremeDullard@piefed.social 59 points 8 hours ago (12 children)

What you discovered is that today's mediocre developers implement everything in web browsers, or web brower-like frameworks like Electron, and set them up to masquerade as normal applications, but with 100x the disk, RAM and CPU footprint.

[–] ExtremeDullard@piefed.social 1 points 8 hours ago

Well, they also elected Trump twice. Dumb people will do dumb.

[–] ExtremeDullard@piefed.social 42 points 9 hours ago (1 children)

Nothing says "working towards the need of the working stiffs" like grandiose pointless architecture.

Fun fact: all dictators like architectural megaprojects. This is what Hitler had in mind for Berlin for instance. Or this monstrosity built by Ceaucescu. The Arc de Epstein and the Epstein ballroom should tell you something about Trump.

[–] ExtremeDullard@piefed.social 8 points 9 hours ago* (last edited 8 hours ago) (2 children)

I have been saying for years that Altman is on borrowed time, and is essentially a walking dead man.

He's the face of the technology that will throw millions of people out of their jobs and create worldwide poverty. AI is not his fault - or rather, what psychopathic corporations do with AI - but he represents AI. And he too is one of the Epstein-class billionaires.

I guarantee you there will be no shortage of unemployed people who have been replaced by AI and struggling to feed their families who will want to whack Altman. This dude is only the first of many more to come.

[–] ExtremeDullard@piefed.social 8 points 9 hours ago (1 children)

How can you finish a war that has already been won, and whose military objectives have been exceeded?

I'm so confused... Sometimes I think Donald Trump is gaslighting me - something that would be extremely surprising from a man of such honesty and moral standing.

 

2026 is set to be l’année de Linux.

[–] ExtremeDullard@piefed.social 0 points 9 hours ago* (last edited 9 hours ago)

The title is pure clickbait.

Linus rants a little about Youtube serving 90-second unskippable ads, but then swiftly moves on to other topics, because ultimately LTT's entire business model relies on advertisement revenues from Youtube.

I will point out something Linus won't tell you of course, since he has a vested interest in not telling you: you can watch Youtube without ads using ad blockers, or one of the many third party Youtube players such as FreeTube, Newpipe or Grayjay.

[–] ExtremeDullard@piefed.social 1 points 15 hours ago

Those are the old outlets. There will be more - and 3-phase too.
No drywall: the walls will be bare OSB boards. It's fine for a workshop.

[–] ExtremeDullard@piefed.social 1 points 21 hours ago (1 children)

If you want to do the same thing, do it! YOLO

 

Follow up on this post: our builder works fast and he's been busy putting up the frame for the new wall today.

It's fun to see the new workshop take shape almost in real time. I can't wait to bring some machine tools in there and start making chips.

[–] ExtremeDullard@piefed.social 68 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (3 children)

She has as much right to act outraged and self-righteous about Trump as a former smoker to shout at someone's cigarette.

SHE MADE TRUMP! The only honorable course of action for her is to shut the fuck up and humbly ask for forgiveness.

[–] ExtremeDullard@piefed.social 8 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

The orange pedo sending his normally-invisible gold-digger of a wife to talk about Epstein - of all things! - clearly to throw a distraction from his Iran war should tell you how well it's going.

 
[–] ExtremeDullard@piefed.social 8 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

I'm not sure, I'm not really into construction. But it's one of those eco materials - i.e. it's not glass wool and it's recyclable. Glass wool is rarely used in my neck of the woods.

 

The conversion of half of my garage into a workshop is going well!

 

President Trump kicked off Easter Sunday with a foul-mouthed tirade against Iran and praising Allah — warning the regime to "open the f—in'" Strait of Hormuz or else he will ensure the Islamic Republic's leaders end up in hell.

 

Is Trump’s war on Iran the new Vietnam?

Will Pam Bondi’s replacement be even worse than she was?

 

Trump told the man who controls 12% of the world’s oil to kiss his ass. That man just restructured Middle Eastern security with Ukraine, telling Trump, "It's over".

 

The International Energy Agency has described the disruption as the largest supply shock in the history of the global oil market.

 

Criminal lawyer Robert McWhirter warns Pam Bondi could face disbarment after Trump removed her as attorney general over cases she brought against political opponents

 

We had nice northern lights last night. This is the entire geomagnetic storm from start to finish, sped up 10 times.

 

AI is coming where I work. My employer is cautious and only gingerly rolls it out, but it's coming.

As a long-time employee, I'm responsible for some of the most critical bits of software in our products - APIs and libraries that are used absolutely everywhere. They're not particularly complex, but I've spent a lot of time over the years to ensure that they are tested to death, and they're 100% reliable, bomb-proof code. You know, the sort of code you can include in your own code, and if the final product has bugs, you can be completely certain the bug is in your code, not in mine.

I'm one of the few employees who are OCD enough to have spent the countless hours required to make this code as stable as it is. It didn't seem like a good use of my time at the beginning. But as the years rolled by and my code got used more and more, became more and more foundational to our products, and proved to be totally problem-free, my company and I reaped the rewards: bug-free stuff that can be relied upon.

And so as a result, I'm pretty much the only one working on it. I do offer my changes for review now (it wasn't like that before), but mostly it's just to follow good practices: unless I messed up in that code - and I rarely do - what I say goes, and nobody touches it without my approval.

I never planned it that way, it just came to be like that over the years. I'm the de-facto gatekeeper on those bits of code the entire company depends on.

On Monday, one of the new employees who use AI a lot for non-critical side projects submitted a PR to one of the core libraries I maintain. It wasn't a trick: he freely admitted it was AI-generated, and even commented that he expected me to reject it outright with a smiley. Which I promptly did - with a smiley also 🙂

I had previously indicated that I would NEVER let AI touch that code, because the last thing I need is mediocrity and uncertainty in that stuff. So no great surprise to him. I told him I understood what he needed to do and I would implement it myself.

So I did: it took me two days and it's done right: it's coded cleanly and it's tested every which way intelligently, with proper understanding of what needed to be implemented and tested, and with consideration for backward compatibility with older firmware versions and idiosyncrasies of our test equipment with very slow processors.

For shits and giggles, I took a peek at the AI stuff: yeah, it worked, but it totally missed the deep architecture of the library: it added 50 variables and methods to a class instead of instantiating another class that already existed, that had all the necessary bits. It reinvented the wheel in all sorts of clumsy ways, copied code from other methods just because it was done a certain way there, without understanding that it didn't apply elsewhere... Yeah, functional. But do that 10 times and you end up with a pile of shit full of subtle bugs. And I wasn't about to let that happen to my code.

Today, my boss called me in his office for one of those uh-oh..., closed-door one-on-ones:

"I heard you rejected Jason's code on Monday."
"Yeah, it was AI and it wasn't good enough."
"But Jason said it worked."
"Yeah, it worked. But it wasn't good enough. Working isn't high enough a bar for this code. You want perfect there, not just working."
"But we lost two days on the new feature..."
"Yeah, but I warned everybody that I wouldn't let AI touch any of this, and nobody objected. If this is a problem, then we need to have a serious discussion about it. Is this a problem?"
"No. I just wanted to tell you you did the right thing."

Admittedly, I could only impose no-AI because I'm senior enough, and because the company isn't exactly thrilled to let the tidal wave of mediocrity lick its boots in the first place. But it feels good to be backed by management on this.

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