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>the honest truth

>maintaining an open source, self-hosted project is:

> more work than building it > different fun than building it > more rewarding than you'd expect > harder than you'd expect > worth it

I'd say the title is not misleading: what they don't tell you is that is more rewarding than you'd expect and worth it. (Because yes, we mostly hear the "it's too much work and not worth it" story.)


Surprising that no bug should take more than 2 days, yet most developers fixed only 4 bugs in 5 days.

Moss spores survived outside. The difference is significant, it's like saying "Banana trees survived in space" when it was just banana seeds...

Banana seeds can’t drive health conditions.

like "the tristate"

It would be interesting to see a version with the grid line gaps included.

Hmm I wonder how hard it would be to incorporate into maps. There's often a big problem laying out road labels legibly along windy roads.

Google Maps, since it is WebGL-based, I think would not support these advanced font rendering features out of the box. Probably could be added?

Troika text (a font-to-signed-distance-functions tool) can do a lot of the heavy lifting of using fonts in WebGL apps. It can also do the process of converting from font data to SDFs in glsl, so it's fast. No idea if it supports variable fonts these days though. https://github.com/protectwise/troika/tree/main/packages/tro...

Fundamentally they seem different. The web looked like it had the potential to make lots of money but no one knew exactly how.

AI literally does people's jobs for them. There's not much imagination required.


But currently, nobody's actually making money on AI.

It's also not doing peoples' jobs for them, for the most part. AI's supporters do very loudly proclaim this, though.


What would it take to make money? Double or triple the pricing. Most of these companies messed on pricing initially. ChatGPT Plus/ Claude Plus (or whatever it is called) are $20/month. These should be $80 to $100/month products. Probably even more, $200.

But then, how do you get the users and growth figures that justify the current boom in infrastructure build-up? A high equilibrium might be profitable to a few companies and useful to a few rich customers, but it’s far from justifying current valuations.

For the most part, current AI tools do tasks for people, not their jobs. And for the most part it does rather poor quality, low-depth work (but with superhuman speed and superhuman breadth).

If the task is normally "hire a person to do X" it comes out the same.

People aren't usually hired just for some tasks.

The closest thing I can think of is fiverr type gigs, and I'm still paying someone on fiverr for like, UI assets/design for an extremely simple game with 5 screens, and it's not particularly close.


Which jobs is it doing, exactly?

From what I can tell at this point it's a solution looking for a problem. Incredibly impressive, not so useful


Customer service.

Only for the most basic of requests. I have interacted with a fair share of AI front loaded customer service chat portals and they are often misleading, sending outright incorrect info (telling us that the dev team would work on it even when they weren't going to) and I almost always just want to talk to an agent. Yes, it's a good first layer to prevent people who haven't even bothered to read any FAQ or informational pages, but it's not doing real customer service work.


You cannot trust GenAI to do this job, so no, it's not doing this job

Anything that requires reasoning over data and applying experience, such as technical troubleshooting, is outside of this scope.

Organ symphony and piano concerto for me.

Someone yells from the back “What about the cellos?” :D

Why do you say metagaming? Did he really advance the art so far? I think he was just incredibly good at producing music within his specific parameters.

(Said as a huge fan of his work. I spent a year playing essentially nothing but one of his fugues.)


Yeah he did hugely advance it.

This didn't really get noticed in his own day, as they were busy dumbing things down into the classical period, but he was hugely influencial through rediscovery.

Except for Italian humanists rediscovering Greek and Roman writings, I'm having a hard time thinking of an earlier instance of a chiefly posthumous legacy.


I don't care for Mozart but Saint Saens yes. The second movement of the organ symphony is utterly sublime.

By a ridiculous stroke of luck I got to perform that piece as soloist once. Unforgettable.


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