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You bet I do. That's an hour of rubber-ducky time working through new architectures with someone who won't get tired of my endless blathering. I've worked through a bunch of bad ideas that way, without embarrassing myself in front of my colleagues.

I also use it to explore topics that I wouldn't spend desktop time on, but that I was curious about. It's like having a buddy who's smarter than me on their special interest, but their special interest is "everything you don't know.". And your buddy's name is Gell-Mann. : - )

It beats passively listening to the radio.


..this is the saddest thing I’ve read in a while if true. Whiteboard sessions with coworkers designing architectures and playing out/bouncing ideas is one of my favorite things to do at work.

Just don’t invite the folks with unearned arrogance.


You know what's pretty good at cleaning up data that's a total trash fire? _More_ LLM. :-)

I run a web service whose primary purpose is cleaning up messy, SEO-enshittified data from Google, eBay, etc. After years of fine-tuning my own heuristics, I threw a super-cheap LLM at it and it massively out-performed my custom code. It's slower, but the results are well worth it.


The description of the algorithm notes that each irregular pentagon is divided into four sub-pentagons. Eyeballing the maps, I don't see any group of 4 pentagons forming a similar larger pentagon.

I noticed that you had an analog to the H3 landing page on your landing page, allowing zooming in. If you could also steal the next-higher / next-smaller overlay like they did on the H3 landing page, it would make it clearer the relationship between the larger and smaller pentagons.

I've used H3 extensively, and one of the things that always bugged me about it was that each large hexagon was _mostly_ covered by a group of the next smaller ones, but because geometry, the edges have some overlap with the neighbor large hexagons. So I can't just truncate an integer mapping, for example, to get the ID of the next-largest.


Are the examples all actual outputs of the program? It's entirely possible that my understanding of the grammar is off, but it looks like these examples are wrong:

$ echo 'cat dog' | trre 'c:bat|d:hog' bat hog

$ echo '' | trre ':a*' # <- do NOT do this dog

$ echo '' | trre ':(repeat-10-times){10}' dog


The second line actually is an output. I've modified the README. The last example is a typo. Fixed. Thanks!


And the first one? Wouldn't the output be

batat hogog


Can't reproduce.

I have the following:

> echo 'cat dog' | ./trre 'c:bat|d:hog'

bat hog


it reads like '(c:b)at|(d:h)og' and not 'c:(bat)|d:(hog)'


We got one, and we love it. My daughter dropped hers and bent the case. We ordered a new case (which, admittedly, was a significant percentage of the price of a new laptop) and had it repaired within an hour of delivery.


That was my first thought also. OTOH, Framework's business model is "we're going to charge you more to get that thing you actually wanted without locking you into stupid business models."

I would absolutely pay a premium for a decent TV without all the advertising crap that pops up every time I turn on the TV.


I'm not sure that is the business model. Framework laptops are more expensive, but not by much. They compete well with Macs and the high end laptops they are aiming to replace.

On the other hand, TVs can be bringing in quite a significant amount of their revenue post-purchase, like $100/year.


Dragons Egg by Robert Forward had always been one of my favorites. Asks the question "what would like be like if it evolved on a neutron star," and has 20 pages of his notes on working out the physics at the end of the book.


I remember one wit on Usenet saying that the strangest aliens ever portrayed in science fiction were the people in Robert Forward books....

Certainly the physics in the couple books of his I read was interesting but the writing left a lot to be desired.


I read Dragon's Egg and the sequel, Starquake, as a teenager. I remembered them being deeply engrossing.

I revisited the first one 20-ish years later in an attempt to get my partner interested. I only made it a few chapters before I decided to abandon the attempt. There are some really good parts (the science stuff), but the way the human characters' interactions were described I just could not get past.


They did make a straight album, cleverly titled "The Smothers Brothers Play It Straight."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Smothers_Brothers_Play_It_...


Hansen's Second Law: Clever is the opposite of maintainable

There is nothing that will stop a code review quicker than "I discovered a clever way to..." A dozen engineers are going to have to try to reverse engineer your cleverness in order to safely make any change to your code, so you'd better make double-sure that the performance you're buying with your cleverness is worth the total maintenance cost going forward.

There are some times it's worth it (the Fast InvSqrt hack and many others), but most of the time, it's just tickling our intellectual curiosity for our own benefit, and that's a bad trade.


I was discussing low-load index investing with a friend, and the 7% over the last 200 years sounds great.

He suggested the hypothesis that that's a reflection of the rise of the United States as a superpower over the last 200 years, and if anything were to impugn the United States' status as the market of refuge, those numbers would not be predictive of consistent long-run returns in the future.

That's a hard hypothesis to refute. Are there similar long-run numbers from all stable countries around the world, or is the US market unique in that aspect?


Here's a source referencing the UK stock market: https://globalfinancialdata.com/stocks-for-the-very-long-run...

"Between 1692 and 2018, stock prices increased at an average rate of 1.87% per annum before inflation and 0.36% after inflation, and with reinvested dividends averaging 5.04% per annum, investors received a total return of 6.62% per year. £1"

Now, that being said, during this time frame, clearly the UK is also a western superpower, and after a certain point in time the UK & US stock markets probably have a very strong correlation with the rise of electronic trading/risk management.

For another example of an older equity market, we might look to Japan, which has had a negative rate of return: https://www.afrugaldoctor.com/home/japans-lost-decades-30-ye...

That being said, as we see in that article the monthly $833 purchase DCA still gave a positive return over 30 years.


I think it's hard to compare Japan with the US or UK or other countries because unlike those countries, Japan can't turn on what I'll call an immigration valve and just flat-out import people to grow the economy.


Don’t forget the high taxes on investments in Japan. Basically, US is good for investors but Japan is good for workers. Japan’s median wealth is higher than US.


Not sure I would call Japan good for workers. There is a reason for japanese having the word "karoushi", which has the meaning of a person that has died due to overwork.


Can't or won't?


Would be much harder even if they wanted to. Lots of countries teach their kids English, only one teaches their kids Japanese.


You don't need to speak the local language to live and work some place. I wouldn't be surprised if the majority of migrant workers (temporary or permanent) around the world are unable to speak the local language upon entry.


That works in America and the UK because there are already large immigrant communities for you to arrive into. If you arrive in Japan speaking Spanish or Hindi today, how's that going to go?

It's not impossible, but it would take a lot of time and Japanese culture isn't exactly known for xenophilia.


It’s completely possible. Most people in e.g. Qatar can’t speak much Arabic. The most common languages spoken in the Gulf are Hindi and English.

I doubt that Japan will be going in that direction any time soon, but if they wanted to, they could.


The xenophobia is the point of the reply I assume. Financial life isn’t that great for most of the world. People will go places for a better life. Language isn’t going to stop that. Xenophobia will.


Both really. They can't because they won't, but also because they can't.


only so much space on an island. Japan is pretty crowded as it is, isn't it?


About the size of east coast, from Canada to Florida. It’s fairly large.

Tokyo is crowded, however.


Not at all. It's largely a chain of mountains so most people live down on the coasts.


The US stock market is semi-unique: there are others around the world in the 20th-21st centuries that are comparable, but also correlated.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_stock_exchanges


UK stock markets have returned a similar 7.5% over the last 119 years (~4.9% above inflation).

MSCI China over the last 2 decades has returned over 12%.


I tried to look up what you said about China. IShares MSCI China ETF data on portfoliovisualizer.com only goes back to 2012 and shows 4.27% returns .

I don't know if your statement about MSCi China is correct but if so you are cherry picking based on an unusual start date.


> MSCI China has returned over 12%

Not per year: https://www.msci.com/documents/10199/aa99c3a4-d48b-44ac-8caa...


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