@Skakerman

7 Followers
54 Following
14 Posts
it's truly amazing what LLMs can achieve. we now know it's possible to produce an html5 parsing library with nothing but the full source code of an existing html5 parsing library, all the source code of all other open source libraries ever, a meticulously maintained and extremely comprehensive test suite written by somebody else, 5 different models, a megawatt-hour of energy, a swimming pool full of water, and a month of spare time of an extremely senior engineer
@grumpygamer sounds like TesterTron3000 needs a union
All billionaires must submit a list of five things they did for society in the last week or their wealth shall be confiscated.

I really am begging organizations to stop using Facebook or Twitter as the only way they distribute information.

Please don't make me make an account to see information

Government officials are worried about tiktok radicalizing young people but I think calling in a militarized police force against their friends who are peacefully protesting a genocide will probably do it.

some people don’t want to climb the corporate ladder, even if they used to.

some people don’t want to go “above and beyond.”

some people want less responsibility, not more.

some people want to do the job they were hired to do and be done.

there is *nothing* wrong with this.

we need to normalize language like this. you don’t have to work 90 hours a week to be “dedicated.” you don’t have to love your job. you CAN be in it just for the paycheck. that’s literally what a job is: payment for services.

this rhetoric of “what success looks like” is a falsity we have been tricked into believing to maximize corporate profits. success looks different depending on who and when you ask… sometimes success is getting up in the morning, and sometimes it’s getting promoted. it’s all relative, and we need to remember that.

#Friday #Thoughts #Work #Life #BeKind #Success

I started developing software in 1976. If you're just getting going in this business, know one thing:

I still have no idea what I'm doing for most tasks. The only difference is that I have experience to guide me.

Learning specific things isn't that useful in the long run. Learning what made something easy or hard is much more valuable.

Take time at the end of every project to make notes for yourself. My latest public example: https://furbo.org/2022/09/13/behind-the-app-wallaroo/

Behind the App: Wallaroo • furbo.org

It’s been awhile since I’ve done one of these deep dives on what goes on behind the scenes during the development of an Iconfactory app. There’s a common thread to each one: I feel the need to document our work when there’s a major change in how we build user interfaces. The first one was […]

Furbo.org by Craig Hockenberry

Using #vim is easy once you learn a few basic keybindings.

h and l - move left and right
j and k - move down and up
η and λ - move backwards and forwards through time
ξ and κ - translation through additional temporal dimension (if applicable)
ᚻ, ᛄ, ᚳ and ᛚ - moving left, down, up, and right through celestial spheres
𐤄 and 𐤋 - switch deity to pantheon member to left or right
𐤉 - supplicate to chosen deity
𐤊 - challenge chosen deity (dangerous)
:q - exit

They said "you can have an existential crisis on Mastodon." No shit, cause nobody can read it.
You can have an existential crisis in the woods, too!
I need a personal project as a creative outlet but last time I tried that I made it tangentially related to my work and now it's my job