namingthingsiseasy

joined 2 years ago
[–] namingthingsiseasy@programming.dev 9 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I'm not a fan of AI personally, but the "copying others' work" argument never resonated with me. The internet makes copying data trivial - if you still get worked up over people using a technology that has been trivial since the '90s, well, I don't know what to tell you, but you're just not going to win that one. People are just going to keep doing it anyway and maybe it sucks, but there's nothing you can do about it.

The only reason file sharing is illegal today is because nobody bribed politicians to keep it legal.

I can confirm. I've worked for two different companies since 2023, and in both of them, there was a cabal that were super hyped up on AI while the rest just ignored them. In one of them, it was half the company, but that company was more like a cult.... People in my current one are more level-headed, but that just makes the divide look even bigger.

Something about convincing people about things their income depends on....

There's probably also a tragedy of the commons kind of situation. Yes, it's bad, but everyone else is doing it so you have to as well. If 99% of people do it and you don't, you're even worse off than everyone else.

Economics often turns into a terrible social policy.

They don't actually believe a single word they say. They're just too scared to stand up to their shareholders.

Well, actually, they do believe it. They're just delusional. Because they're too scared to stand up to their shareholders.

It has been obvious for far too long that ICEs will go extinct and be replaced by EVs.

The people who have been holding out have no excuses at this point. They should have started the transition a long time ago.

[–] namingthingsiseasy@programming.dev 18 points 4 days ago (3 children)

Big congratulations to the people of Hungary. Hopefully this is the start of a much better chapter in their country's history.

Even the early internet didn't have content of this high quality

"Young people enjoying their youth in ways that make older generations scornful and jealous" - the perennial headline

Damn! Matchmaking is definitely really hard at high MMR levels, and I remember back when I read reddit about how many people would post angrily about matchmaking - there's no easy solution to that problem at that point. I remember watching a twitch stream after TI9 where Ana was fountain farming an opposing team until they got an abandon. (The deserved it for being asses in the allchat to be honest, but the skill gap was still obscene.)

But at the same time, your experience is exactly how I figured things would go if I ever tried to play Dota seriously. When I played football in my teenage years, I realized that eventually, you reach a point where getting better stops being fun because everyone else is equally talented and trying their hardest to get to the next level too. At that point, I realized that I just wanted to have fun and stopped competing. Still played recreationally in my regional league though. We had terrible results, but losing on a bad team was a lot more fun than winning on a good one.

Glad to hear that Dota helped you kick all your bad habits. It's always good to find a silver lining, no matter how crappy the situation is.

[–] namingthingsiseasy@programming.dev 2 points 1 month ago (2 children)

In my case, it's age. I only have so much free time during a day, and ruining it on a shitty Dota2 pub match just makes me feel like trash for weeks later. Even today, I cringe when I think back on some of the stupid things I did in that game.

The last thing I need is more embarrassing memories running through my brain when I'm trying to sleep at night.

[–] namingthingsiseasy@programming.dev 3 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

I got to about the same level of ascension in Slay the Spire. Eventually, I realized that dying 10 times in a row before getting the dream deck for finishing a high ascension level just... wasn't that entertaining. When a game has too much RNG, it becomes about as much fun as flipping a coin and trying to get heads 5 times in a row. Oh and also, when you do get that perfect deck, it becomes even more stressful making sure that you don't screw it up and have to start from the beginning all over again!

Now I just play with ascension off entirely. The A20 achievement is the only one I don't have, and probably never will.

 

The creator of systemd (Lennart Poettering) has recently created a new company dedicated to bringing hardware attestation to open source software.

What might this entail? A previous blog post could provide some clues:

So, let's see how I would build a desktop OS. The trust chain matters, from the boot loader all the way to the apps. This means all code that is run must be cryptographically validated before it is run. This is in fact where big distributions currently fail pretty badly. This is a fault of current Linux distributions though, not of SecureBoot in general.

If this technology is successful, the end result could be that we would see our Linux laptops one day being as locked down as an Iphone or Android device.

There are lots of others who are equally concerned about this possibility: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46784572

 

I'm at a relatively stable point in my life (working part time, financially stable), so I'm thinking about trying out as a freelancer, but just casually to start out and see if I like it. I'm curious how people get started - primarily, how to find work and connect with people who have available work and are willing to hire.

Other things to have in place before getting started (professional website, portfolio, other things) would also be helpful to know, but since I'm pretty casual about trying this out, I would hesitate to do additional stuff unless it's really important and makes a serious difference in obtaining potential clients.

Thanks in advance!

 

Now the win with PSG has even more eyes on Al-Khelaifi, whose claim to be the most important man in football grows ever stronger.

As well as being president of PSG, the 51-year-old former tennis player is chairman of the European Clubs Association — which represents the interests of 700 European clubs — is on the executive committee of UEFA — which organizes European football including the Champions League — and on the organizing committee for the upcoming FIFA World Club Cup. He is also a minister without portfolio in the Qatari government and chairman of state-owned broadcaster BeIn Sports, which has bought the rights to the Champions League.

 

I've used a US-QWERTY keyboard layout my entire life. I've seen other layouts that do things like reduce the size of the enter/backspace keys, move the pipe operator (|) and can't wrap my head around how I would code on those.

What are your experiences? Are there any layouts that you prefer for coding over US English? Are there any symbols that you have a hard time reaching ($ for example)?

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