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> consider Hey, Basecamp, Shopify

Basecamp is slow as hell, Shopify depends on some insanely specific tuning, and I don't use Hey but it's the same team as Basecamp IIRC.


Why do I need to help? Is this an experiment to see if it can do it on its own, or just another "project" where they give AI credit for human's work for marketing purposes?

I knew it.

I read somewhere (404 media? ) that they spent more on AWS than they got in revenue for 2025.

After getting $8bn in investment from Amazon... (as of nov 2024)

Never in my life have I heard of this security issue.

I think Obama administration waasn't perfect, but I think it was the right move to focus on the citzenship status for deportations rather than racial background. I think if Obama had the Tea party protestors declared "illegals" and authorized lethal force against anyone who disagreed, it'd negatively affect his media coverage.

The problem I've found is coordinating. The idea that we need a sizable chunk of the country to all work together in leaderless organization, is noble but lofty. Every attempt I've ever seen is something extremely easy for the feds to disrupt like a Facebook, Reddit, or Discord group, where everyone collectively bikesheds and no decisions get made.

Completely agree; it's a classic game theory problem. One could start with every union that could be gotten on board, perhaps?

https://www.orawalters.com

Mainly a portfolio for my work in TV.

https://oscar.omg.lol/

If you want to give one to my cat :)


> we can say that a fast language is the one where an average programmer is most likely to produce fast code with a given budget

I'd say most people use this definition, with the caveat that there's no official "average programmer", and everyone has different standards.


Right, but if we assume that programmers' compensation is statistically correlated with their skill, then we can drop "average" and just talk about budget.

That seems like a wild assumption to make.

Statistically? I don't think it's that wild.

If you prefer it, salaries correlate with years of experience, and the latter surely correlates with skills, right?

(No, this doesn't mean that every 10 years XP dev is better than a 3 years XP one, but it's definitely a strong correlation)


A lot of those are paid extras. I know my Adobe CC didn't come with any stock credits.

In general, they are included with CC.

More info here:

https://www.adobe.com/creativecloud.html


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