The town I live in has 6000 people and there's a play or live music event in the town hall every couple of weeks, maybe more often in summer. I don't go to many, one or two a year, but presumably enough people turn out.
> Harris wasn't likable/charismatic enough to many people, and was largely supported for her policies first and her personality second. Trump, on the other hand, went on a lot of longform podcasts, worked at McDonalds for a few hours, and generally seems more "human" to the average person.
I would argue it was the other way round. They both went on podcasts etc and I'm debate and in rallies Trump was verging on incoherent and boring his own supporters. But on policy he was far stronger. I'm not American and I'm left wing but the trade and tax policies he's proposing do speak to traditional left wing, trade union workers: put up barriers to lower cost countries undercutting American workers. I don't know what Harris vision is, it seems she has trouble articulating it clearly.
Trump went on quite a few very popular podcasts like Joe Rogan and Theo Von, but Harris didn't.
IMO the average voter is quite in-line with Rogan and Theo Von culturally (more than they are with Trump or Harris, for that matter) and so for Harris to skip those was a major misstep that just further made her seem like an aloof member of the DC/Coastal elite.
Biden didn't have this problem because he was more of a blue collar/middle class guy from Scranton and despite his gaffes, was more likable by the average person.
Rogan alone has more daily listeners than left leaning news shows have people watching in a week. I think it was something like 11 million per day. Big mistake to not show up there.
Absolutely - if you look on YouTube alone, the view counts on interviews/podcasts between Trump/Vance and Harris/Walz are dramatically different. For better or worse, people increasingly get their information and news from videos, and to skip that was a major misunderstanding of the cultural landscape.
From what I have read/watched, Rogan didn't refuse to interview Harris and offered to do the same multi-hour interview he does with every guest.
Harris just wanted him to fly to another city and do a 1-hour interview in their studio. To make an exception for a single guest seems unfair and I don't blame Rogan for not agreeing.
There were some new ideas a few (10+) years ago around how to visualize and navigate code, basically letting you edit through the program flow rather than by file. I was really keen on the idea but they only worked for Java, if I recall correctly. I'd love to see those ideas play out again with typescript, rust, etc.
Last time I tried zed it didn't have good git integration. I look at diffs and blame a lot and both vim and vscode have really great plugins.
I don't really want a robot wandering around doing laundry. I think what most people want is a box you dump clothes in and they come out folded, an extra machine next to the dryer. That would be a genuine time saver. I hate scaling Mount Foldmore.
I don't want more machines taking up space in my home. I don't want a bunch of special purpose "smart" devices with buggy software and dedicated apps requiring logins and firmware updates to plug security holes. I want one robot that can do it all. I'd get rid of my security system, cameras, smart thermostat, dishwasher, clothes washer, stand mixer, toaster, etc etc.
I put the laundry on this morning, came into the kitchen and got a bread mix going, made some toast while that was mixing. The dishwasher was just finishing. Having to wait for one machine to serially finish doing each job not quite as well as a dedicated machine, before doing the next job, doesn't sound ideal. Plus when the dishwasher breaks I can still have toast.
The robot can do the dishes and the laundry while you aren't even there. No need for that to happen during breakfast! It can start making breakfast before you even wake up, if you want.
Clearly it’s not easy to solve the folding machine problem because otherwise we would have one of those already. I absolutely wouldn’t mind a robot helper walking around the house and going what my maid currently does.
> 2. The state of the art in SPAs moves so quickly it feels to me like you have to spend a significant amount of your productive time staying in place on the treadmill before you can even consider creating value for your end users.
I think this is no longer true, not how it used to be. Of course, you CAN chase the latest cool. However, if you stick with one of the more popular libraries then things should be stable. My react code now doesn't look very different to my react code in 2019. They've added new things but I haven't used them.
> My react code now doesn't look very different to my react code in 2019
Server components, Next application directory breaking emotion for styling, stricter rules for hooks, the compiler breaking change tracking libraries such as MobX removing the need for useMemo and similar. This is just off the top of my head in React land.
You're complaining about MPA. Maybe if you choose SPA with vanilla React you would've felt that for the last 8 years there's been a flurry of conversation and innovation that's specifically not about SPA. The conversation around SPA has been frozen for nearly a decade.
Unless maybe you want to start talking about CRDTs? But that's kind of niche, and CRDTs are actually an old conversation, one which started before React was first released. That should give you a sense at the pace of conversation for SPAs.
Also, because next broke emotion, toolkits such as Mantine broke backward compatibility in order to move off of emotion, so second order instability effects still affect SPAs
If you have a very large project which uses MobX, I don't think the amount of warning matters. You'll most likely have to (eventually) completely rewrite large amount of code, to the point where it might be easier to migrate to SolidJS.
If you have a large project then it's your victory or fault for whatever comes of using software marked as not ready. The React team has been absolutely clear that it's not ready.
On an aside, SolidJS has been taking a huge momentum hit recently, I think the drop in downloads is a lagging indicator. It's not an easy space, I love SolidJS and recognize that Ryan Carniato likely took a career hit to work on Solid, but my bet is that Solid will fail to catch critical mass. Really sad as I love the Solid experience.
That promise doesn't really make sense to me - although partial compilation will likely ameliorate most migraiton pain for library dependencies if they come pre-compiled with the compiler.
Code written with the react compiler in mind will inevitably be MUCH slower without the compiler, as its not going to manually add any memoization. Likely to the point where its not going to be usable without it.
Is it a big mystery? It's the same reason the British were so rich before the US: the right things happening at the right time and place. For the US, being very large, a large population, a common language, lots of natural resources, these were all the seeds. Then fairly stable relations with the neighbors followed by Europe sparking 2 global conflicts, the second of which devastated the continent. Didn't the US have more than 50% of the entire worlds GDP in the 1950s? These are the factors that continue carrying the US high. Big tech can exist there because of them. And it will probably last a long time, after all Europe is as rich as it is because of it's history before the rise of the US.
> still believe minimum wage should be $6.75 even though they also believe inflation has made groceries too expensive. Are they just stuck in the past or are they nutty?
They're nutty. Other older people manage to understand the value of things and wages in the world now in comparison to when they were younger. I'm only in my 40s, I get surprised by changes since I was in my 20s, but each surprise is an update.
The only problem is that vinegar destroys spray machines. Even though I rinse through after every use.
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