5C5C5C

joined 2 years ago
[–] 5C5C5C@programming.dev 94 points 2 months ago (2 children)

They want to place all the blame for the problems in America on the shoulders of this one hapless clown because it spares them from reckoning with the deep systemic problems that led to us having this syphilis petri dish in the highest seat of power of the nation with the most powerful military in human history.

[–] 5C5C5C@programming.dev 13 points 2 months ago

So you are in fact the opposite of this meme.

[–] 5C5C5C@programming.dev 7 points 2 months ago

I assume you're referring to the technicality that the thirteenth amendment allows unpaid labor to be legally compelled out of prisoners, and that's a valid thing to be outraged about, but your statement is wildly misleading to anyone who isn't already aware of that technicality.

The existence of the loophole is terrible and should be amended, but it's nowhere near the humanitarian crisis that widespread chattel slavery was. Ironically that will probably make it that much harder to be fixed since it's more difficult to draw pubic outage towards it.

[–] 5C5C5C@programming.dev 4 points 2 months ago (2 children)

Your description actually illustrates how terribly inaccurate the metaphor was. If enslaved people imitated the people who enslaved them, they'd be sitting in a rocking chair on a porch sipping lemonade.

The US has a unique and relatively recent relationship with chattel slavery so people are more sensitive to it now.

The earliest record of the master/slave terminology being used in engineering is 1904 by which point slavery was already outlawed in almost every country, including the US. You're right to say that chattel slavery in the US was a uniquely grotesque form of slavery, but there is no system of slavery in history where slaves are primarily imitating their masters. No matter what anyone's sensitivity to the topic is, it's a bad fit for what's being described.

[–] 5C5C5C@programming.dev 29 points 3 months ago

There's equal evidence for the groyper claim as there is for the trans roommate claim, which is to say nothing but hearsay being pushed out by the Governor of Utah.

[–] 5C5C5C@programming.dev 1 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Outside of my own specialty I can people in the software industry bogged down by managing excessive boilerplate. I think this happens most often in web dev and data science.

In my opinion this is an indication that the software tools for those ecosystems need improvement, but rather than putting in the design effort to improve the tools in the ecosystem, these Big Data companies see an opportunity to just throw LLMs at it and call it a commercial product.

[–] 5C5C5C@programming.dev 50 points 3 months ago (4 children)

As a senior dev I hate vibe coding. I can write code an order of magnitude faster than I can review it, because reviewing code forces you to piece together a mental model for something made by someone else, whereas when I write the code myself I get to start with the mental model already in my head.

Writing code is never the bottleneck for me. If I understand the problem well enough to write a prompt for an LLM, then I understand the problem well enough to write the code for it.

[–] 5C5C5C@programming.dev 3 points 3 months ago (2 children)

Looks like this whole post is an ad for someone's project. The links hardly have to do with the post.

[–] 5C5C5C@programming.dev 2 points 4 months ago

Wise people plant trees whose shade they'll never stand in.

[–] 5C5C5C@programming.dev 8 points 4 months ago

If two characters are hurting your 260 character limit then you have other more serious problems to contend with.

[–] 5C5C5C@programming.dev 1 points 4 months ago

Until people start applying the same logic everywhere for consistency, not just in file names.

[–] 5C5C5C@programming.dev 3 points 4 months ago (2 children)

Just you wait...

view more: ‹ prev next ›