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More specifically, using AI bots that can write functions, sometimes entire classes, refactor code, etc.

GitHub copilot which is mostly single line completions isn't "vibe coding".

I think vibe coding also entails some "what it did was so simple, I didn't bother to check it".


It's easier to identify women's fashion among millennials imo:

2000's: jeans

2010's: leggings

2020's: not those


What kind of database is this using and how is the search so performant?


Was curious too and checked the API docs - it's Elasticsearch. The docs even show the index mapping. https://documenter.getpostman.com/view/26019452/2s93Y5PKmb#d...



Their current rate is about ~20% cheaper (4k/day), so missing the deadline isn't that big of a deal.


If I had a dollar for every time I had to teach someone how to share screen in Google Meets...

In Google's defense, text labels are hard for i18n, but icons without text is low effort, bad UX too.


The meanings of icons can also be highly dependant on culture, we just tend to ignore those dependencies easier than with text.


But if they are doing accessibility they have to create alt text for the icons anyway and that needs to be translated. So the only i18n complexity left would the ltr vs rtl languages and depending on how you place the text they wouldn’t need to really change the layout to accommodate both.


As someone who's done a fair amount of frontend work, the hard part is always squeezing text into a clean UX.

The problem language is usually German, so if you have copy like "share screen", you have to find a way to fit in 12 (2x English) 'M' characters comfortably.


  $ aspell dump master | egrep -i '^i.{18}n$'
  institutionalization
  internationalization


They're institutionalized into replacing text with icons.


And they'll never know people are struggling. How would they?


These glasses are super interesting - if laptops didn't have displays, their form factors could change considerably.

I'm imagining a rectangular shape with the track pad right aligned to the keyboard, rather than underneath.


There was this "SpaceTop" startup making a laptop with no screen [https://www.pcworld.com/article/1919392/spacetop-is-the-firs...], just a built in case for XR glasses like this (except the case was built into the body). They gave up and pivoted into AI...

I was thinking I'd want to make my own. How hard could it be? Just a phone, keyboard, and usb hub fitted into some framing. I tried 3-4 demos of XReal glasses though and (when I found a pair that wasn't broken, cable damage?) the FOV was much smaller than they seemed to be claiming. I think the bridge of my nose sticks out so the glasses are significantly farther away.

I still like the idea.


I would love that. Happy for it to be a thin client type of thing too. Imagine a plane where you have room for a keyboard but that is it.

Makes me think: with this your phone is fine. You can run a Linux on your Android then have a thin client. Lots of options!

The laptop form factor makes a laptop fragile. To the point where a 2 yr old XPS has been serviced 20 times (pro tip: get all the top level service options for 3 yrs it was about 30% added to the cost). And I have a probably 12 year old Dell desktop with no issues at all.


I'm on my third xps across 8+ years. 2 cases of services, the first one was a faulty keyboard on delivery and the second was a 1 meter drop into concrete that busted the screen.

Still looking for alternatives for my next one and thinking the System76. Gotta say though, I'm really happy with the xps model so far.


I was spinning a ThinkPad diagonal corners between my palms, fumbled it, my catch attempt put more energy in to it, landed on front right corner on the kitchen floor, bounced.

Nothing wrong with it, nothing broke, everything worked.

This was back when IBM still ran the brand.

I wouldn’t encourage anyone to try that with my HP x360.


There a a number of people removing their screens from Mac Airs and others, some of them using these glasses too.

I think I saw in here. In the meantime

https://www.notebookcheck.net/Screenless-MacBooks-masqueradi...

Actually tempted to buy one with a broken screen and ply around.


Amazing. Someone ran similar setup with a thinkpad workstation with deadscreen in studio, they fucked up screen replacement but ended up just using bottom chasis hooked up to a externaml monitor for the rest of school.


In my family, we always called those 'half-tops'.


There were some people doing something similar with the Vision Pro and detaching the monitor from a MacBook Air[0]. It looks really slick, but how well it actually works, especially given the drawbacks of the Vision Pro, is… up for interpretation.

0: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QUa_pPUbpGQ


Hadrius | UI/UX Design | NYC (FiDi) | ONSITE | Full-time | $90k–$170k + Equity | https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/hadrius/jobs/ObynDF9-f...

Hadrius is a B2B SaaS app for legal and compliance teams in the finance space. We help our users save time and automate the tedious and predictable aspects of compliance. We're breathing life into an overlooked space and design is a big part of that - we're looking to bring someone on who will lead the team in design and lay the foundation for a strong design org in the future.


A team of 3 doesn't need an EM. A team of 7 probably does.


Because some things are only possible at a certain scale, like an effective state run healthcare system.


Which state is an example of an effective state run healthcare system?


In comparison to the Us? Literally every other state in the world. And I do mean "literally".


The Nordics.


NHS before the conservatives gutted it?


True but also the sheer number of people now trying to use it. Other factors include the difficulty of getting an appointment with the first call GP (once known as the family doctor) and the utter madness of many A&E departments. They do a great job but can't cope. 12-hour waits are not unknown. I see no reason to expect a turnaround with the Labour Government.


It would seem building better systems is not enough. We must strive to maintain, continuously improve, and scale them to meet demand.

Sadly culture in the US is diluted into believing that profit motive is a silver bullet that fixes all problems. And many are raised in religions that teach one to deny critical thinking, embrace appeals to authority, and love confirmation bias.


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