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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: January 31st, 2025

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  • As a senior developer, I use the new AIs. They’re absolutely amazing and a huge timesaver if you use them well. As with any powerful tool, it’s possible to over-use and under-use it, and not achieve those gains.

    However, I disagree with the comparison to knowing how hardware works. There’s a pretty big difference between these 2 things:

    Letting a company else design and maintain the hardware or a library and not understanding the internals yourself.

    Letting a someone/something design and implement a core part of your code that you are responsible for maintaining, and not understanding how it works yourself.

    I am not responsible for maintaining ReactJS or my Intel CPU. Not understanding it means there might be some performance lost.

    I am responsible for the product my company produces. All of our code needs to be understood in-house. You can outsource creation of it, or have an LLM do it, but the company needs to understand it internally.



  • It wasn’t even just that. In the companies I worked, it seemed like nobody other than me understood how to escape things for XML. I couldn’t even convince them to just use the right libraries/functions that auto-escape and parse things properly. They keep deciding they were smart enough to do it by hand. And it always ended up biting them.

    JSON, like Javascript (vs C++ or Java) is a lot more forgiving. It either works or it doesn’t, and the values are just strings or numbers. And some people even do the numbers as strings.




  • I was playing Destiny 2 and the lag was only noticeable to me when I compared it to not using Stadia. While I was playing, I didn’t feel like there was anything to complain about.

    I think I saw less lag when connected to my house over Parsec, and definitely had less lag when playing locally at my house. I actually considered continuing to use Stadia, but by that point they had pretty much proven that they were not going to bother improving things further, and it didn’t make sense to pay for a service that didn’t provide an advantage over what I could do for free.





  • Yes, you’re effectively renting a powerful computer.

    Previously, you could just use it without limits, and the math worked out for everyone. It’s something like 3-6 years of service to cover the cost of a decent-to-great computer.

    Now, if you’re a hardcore gamer and go over 100 hours a month, that value changes, and the break-even point is sooner. If you play for 40 hours a week, that time is effectively halved.

    At the current rates, it continues to seem like a really good value, so long as you aren’t bothered by the slight input lag or the video compression.

    But if more people use the service for more time, they’re going to have to charge more money. Either higher base rates, or lower limits. And it’s eventually going to show that it doesn’t really make sense for anyone except as a temporary measure, and then the service will disappear because it didn’t work well enough.





  • I don’t see anything that says they don’t understand Git or Github.

    They know people will look for them on Github, and they do their official releases there. They host their code on the non-profit Codeberg site for reasons of their own. People can still fork from there. They just can’t click a button on Github to do it. They can, however, click a button on Codeberg to fork.

    It sounds to me like they did understand all of this, and decided to let internet popularity work for them (host releases on Github for discoverability and fraud prevention) without giving up how they wanted to manage their code.



  • And it killed all interest I had in Vite as well. This kind of thing practically guarantees that they’ll spend their effort on the for-profit stuff and gut the open source project of things it would otherwise have had built in.

    Sure, maybe not today, but eventually some bean counter is going to look at it and demand it.


  • We could always “stop having pointless arguments about it”.

    Some people enjoy normal, and some people enjoy inverted. Most people have a strong preference.

    There needs to be an option for it in the controls. End of story.

    And yes, I read the article. It just says that people have preferences. It does some weird hand-wavey “science” to say that it’s in their brain (of course it is) and not something they learned. Well, either way, it’s in their brain now. This “science” says nothing about where they learned the preference, or if it was innate. It’s a pointless article.



  • Snapmaker U1 kickstarter is on right now. Watch some videos on how the preview units went and then consider that.

    Or the Elegoo Centauri Carbon is getting a ton of recommendations. No multi-color addon yet, but it should be released soon. We have no idea if it’ll work well or not, though.

    I still love my A1 and A1 Mini and use them a lot. Like you, I’ve frozen them in time. And I use Orca with them. But I’m not actually afraid to upgrade. I think the “dev mode” will probably be fine, and I actually expect to have to update eventually anyhow. I think Orca will probably eventually update to only use the “dev mode” interface and not work with older firmwares. I can’t see them maintaining 2 different ways to connect to a proprietary printer.