[-] jmk1ng@programming.dev 56 points 11 months ago

Did it work? How do you know that? A consumer of your package sends a int when your package expects a string.

What now?

[-] jmk1ng@programming.dev 14 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

It's clear Linus has come to the conclusion he's in way over his head. A small channel to a full blown media/tech company is a whole different ball game.

Coming up to the new CEO announcement, you could tell Linus was burning out. He seemed tired, quick to anger, and just generally in a bad mood.

That shit rolls down hill. Pushing for more videos on a tight schedule and burning everyone else out with him has led to the sloppiness.

As for Madison, I believe her. The company clearly has managers who have no business managing and simply got those positions via having tenure as the company grew.

Culture rots when there is no accountability, and when you have a burned out, grouchy CEO trying to do too much, too fast.

So what will matter now is what they do about it. Linus hiring a CEO is a good first step. I feel LMG has always been remarkably transparent and they aren't pretending Madison's story didn't happen.

So if there is accountability for what happened to Madison (as in the people who totally did not do their jobs should be likely fired) and if proper training and processes are in place to make sure it doesn't happen again, then at the end of the day, they're doing what they can when shitty stuff like this happens.

Ideally it never happens. But if it does, do what you can to make sure it doesn't happen again.

Say what you want about the LMS folks, they've always been open. Linus' heart is almost always in the right place. He wants to build an ethical and transparent company. He is a huge tech nerd and that's what makes LTT so entertaining.

If it continues to degrade, yeah, I'm going to pass on further supporting them. But until they prove they can't or won't act in good faith, I believe them

[-] jmk1ng@programming.dev 20 points 1 year ago

Like 85% of the most recent YC class are "revolutionize x with AI" crap.

[-] jmk1ng@programming.dev 22 points 1 year ago

Blockchain? Oh, hah, no no... none of us were ever hyping up a tech we didn't understand as the solution to literally any problem.

Say, have you heard about AI? It's a revolutionary technology that's the solution to any problem!

[-] jmk1ng@programming.dev 9 points 1 year ago

...according to my union statistics...

I mean... you've got to be trolling at this point. No one is this clueless.

[-] jmk1ng@programming.dev 34 points 1 year ago

Nothing wrong with Java or JVM based languages. They're just not the shiny new thing anymore.

I don't know what kind of software you write at your company. It could be that the JVM was a poor fit for the stuff you do and Rust is far more suited. Or it could just be someone in leadership read a blog post where some company migrated from Java to Rust and saw a billion percent perf increase despite their use case being specific and not at all applicable to what you do and decided to decree that everything gets ported to Rust.... or any dozen of reasons in-between

[-] jmk1ng@programming.dev 6 points 1 year ago

Plus it has a large library of great games that can be found cheap/used. Easily worth $100

Most of what you'd be playing on PS5 are PS4 games anyway

[-] jmk1ng@programming.dev 12 points 1 year ago

Buy the cheapest MacBook model you can find with an M-series chip and as much RAM as you can stomach the cost for.

I'd say 8gb is barrrrre minimum for doing app development. You'll want 16gb.

Listen, I'm the last person you'd expect to recommend a Mac. I am an Android guy. No other Apple products in my place.

...but I've owned every top end model from pretty much every relevant PC manufacturer just trying to find something as reliable, hassle free, and well built as my work Mac and it just doesn't exist.

The MacBooks are just in a whole other class. The battery life, the standby time, the speed of those M1/2 chips, runs cool and quiet.

I'm neutral on MacOS. It tends to stay out of my way. I don't use any of the Apple apps. It is usually stable as hell. My work MBP currently has an up time of 68 days without a reboot, and the only reason it rebooted last time was for security patches.

Build quality is unmatched, screen is great, trackpad is still a generation ahead of anything else, keyboard is great.

I accept my fate, Fediverse. Roast away

[-] jmk1ng@programming.dev 7 points 1 year ago

Depends on what you mean by miscellaneous.

Are we talking about things my team calls "chores"? Things like upgrade some dependencies, or fix something annoying about the DX or build, look into that new library the team's been talking about maybe using to replace some jank part of the app?

If so, we have an epic we simply name "chores". We stack the backlog of chores based on priority and we attempt to get at least one done a sprint.

It's not critical stuff. It's not blocking anything (yet). It's just housekeeping and maintenance stuff that doesn't fit into regularly planned and scheduled deliverables.

Whenever someone says something like "man, our version of Node is super old. We should really look into getting onto at least the current LTS". That's when you say "Add it to the chores!" so you all don't forget about it.

[-] jmk1ng@programming.dev 6 points 1 year ago

I actually winced

[-] jmk1ng@programming.dev 8 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I think Reddit does have a legitimate argument that the scales have tipped and Reddit eating the costs of "whales" abusing their APIs for for-profit use cases without Reddit being compensated at all is fair.

3P apps using the API at no cost while simultaneously monetizing Reddit's content by showing their own ads does seem to be taking advantage.

That said, the way Reddit approached this was so scorched earth and bone headed.

For example. Reddit gets 10s of millions of dollars in free content moderation services from volunteers. The moderators of all their biggest subreddits rely on 3P moderation tools since Reddit's are so poor.

So with the new API policy, they're asking their unpaid moderators to PAY them for the privilege. It's such a slap in the face.

Finally to address the original question, Reddit should absolutely block API consumers who are just training their glorified chat bots to regurgitate plagerized content.

8

I have a feeling the hosting costs are going to get expensive fast here, heh. Maybe an OpenCollective?

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jmk1ng

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