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I'm all for capitalism, but still don't understand how people can work in that cost-cutting department.

If I was working there, Id quit the moment I realized what my job was about. Id honestly rather be homeless that get a paycheck from that kind of work.


> Id quit the moment I realized what my job was about

there's a scene in Arrested Development where Buster believes he's playing a airplane simulator video game, when in reality he was piloting drones for the Air Force the whole time

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IWKjZzm9VnU


I might end up visiting Portland just to see the airport.


It really is a pleasant place to be.

There is a free theater with ~16 seats that shows 5-minute film shorts. And famously, any restaurant that has a brick and mortar in town can't charge prices higher in the airport.

I've often thought it wouldn't be a terrible place to take a date, at least in the pre 9/11 security days when you could access the whole terminal.


Airports are starting to bring back the ability to walk around without a ticket!

You obviously still have to go through security, but a ticket isn't required.


How do you get to that correlation? Anecdotal or is there some evidence?


Anecdotal.


>> 1: Being neurodiverse is a superpower

I have a small child on the spectrum. Hes very hard working and its good he is, because pretty much everything is 3x more difficult for him to learn. Language, coordination, emotional regulation. Before diving into this world I also thought it had some benefits, now that I see the daily struggle I dont think it does.


Be careful he doesn't burn out. I did pretty early on because it took me a lot more effort to get some things done.


There's some evidence ludopathy has a genetic component (aside from obviously environmental).

I think it's cruel for us as a society to allow that to be exploited for financial gain.


I can't go back to coding without copilot. I agree it's a real efficiency booster.


I can't go back to using it. I spent too much time reviewing the code it spit out and noticed when it absolutely wouldn't do what I needed it to, I was absolute slog since it was some else code.


There seem to be two different camps here: Copilot-users that use it largely for autocomplete and Cursor/Sonnet-users that use it for generating larger blocks of code. Personally I'm in the former camp; the efficiency gains are substantial and hallucinations are easy to control. Larger blocks are fine if one wants to sit down and review the whole thing, and also as a writer's-block-breaker.

It's the folks generating whole codebases with no ability to review or debug that are in deep Monkey's Paw territory.


Larger blocks are also perfect for scripts and tools for personal use, in this case you can just check if it works or not, Claude 3.5 Sonnet usually does not disappoint.


I tried copilot like 8 months ago for supercharged auto complete only, but I wasn't a fan because it was too high latency. I usually liked what it would write, but the second or so it took would really break my flow and had the overall effect of slowing me down. Makes me wonder if a local LLM could be superior here.


It seems to have gotten much faster recently so it might be worth another look. I also found it much slower while working on remote folders (with VS Code at least).


That's good to know, the first time I tried it I was working on remote folders (just the way things are setup at work). Maybe I'll have to try it on my own computer and see.


Who cares? Solve problem, write test case, move on.

It's a huge efficency boon for those of us who realize our jobs are just mechanisms to make money. It sucks if you're into artisinal coding or whatever..


> into artisinal coding

Is this the new phrase for "writing code that isn't going to blow up in my face in six months"?


Yes it's all about that next paycheck. Churn out whatever drivel you need right?

Btw have you noticed how the world is full of crap lately? I wonder why.


I try LLMs once a month with variations of the same question on a specific library that I use. It hallucinates all the time. I can't use those tools as long as they don't give me the answers I need.


20


Assuming all chapters are the same length, I think 10-20 is the sweet spot where I can randomly pick up the book


I bid you 21 good Sir.


I love it. I too started programming with QBasic in the 90s. I spent many hours modifying (and breaking) the code for bananas.bas and nibbles.bas to give myself all kinds of superpowers.

I haven't touched QB in decades but I'm glad someone did and had fun working on it.


GORILLA.BAS, no?

That being said, exactly the same here. My first program that was ever used by anyone other than me was a National Lottery number picker for my grandad :) saved him 20 minutes a week...


You're right! It was gorilla.bas, cheers!


I made around 200 QBasic games when I was a teenager with no internet to help me, and it gave me so many amazing skills that I still use today!


That's fantastic. Are they published somewhere?


They spend that amount on a bike, because they first bought a $300 bike, then upgraded to a $1500 one, etc. It's the same with guitars, you can start cheap and figure out if it's really for you.


Your parents would have to specifically install the Epic Game Store.

If they did (which I doubt unless they're avid gamers) the only thing available for purchase there is game related.


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