ElemenoPicuares | 11 months ago | on: Middle-aged man trading cards go viral in rural Japan town
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ElemenoPicuares | 1 year ago | on: Veo 2: Our video generation model
ElemenoPicuares | 1 year ago | on: Ask HN: Job contingent on access to personal email & browser history for mining?
ElemenoPicuares | 1 year ago | on: Ask HN: Job contingent on access to personal email & browser history for mining?
ElemenoPicuares | 1 year ago | on: ID verification service for TikTok, Uber, X exposed driver licenses
ElemenoPicuares | 1 year ago | on: Urban renewal left the U.S. too scared to build
ElemenoPicuares | 1 year ago | on: GPT-4o
ElemenoPicuares | 2 years ago | on: Skulls reveal scale of human sacrifice in Aztec capital (2018)
ElemenoPicuares | 2 years ago | on: Sheldon Brown's Bicycle Technical Info
I always enjoy the folks in bike shops in the cities I live in. I'm definitely not in their 'scene,' but they're super passionate about bikes and cycling as a primary mode of transportation and really want to get as many people on board as possible. I've heard people accuse them of being elitist or whatever, but even in the most notoriously hipster spots, I've always found them just as happy to fix up some kid's beat up used Walmart Schwinn as they are troubleshooting some alignment problem on someone's custom fixie.
That's feels very different to me than the parts of the more "serious" long-distance/touring/sports cyclist crowd I've been exposed to. The folks I've known in person that don lycra and speed down pretty country roads didn't seem unusual, but in groups, they seem like one of the most gatekeep-y, Mean Girls crowds I've encountered. Better have the 'approved' goals, gear, practices and perspectives if you want to sit with them at lunch. Practical transportation cyclists should keep walking, unless they're doing it in full racing gear with clips, wrap-around shades and a helmet that looks like a heavier duty version of what they wore in tron. If you're not cycling hard enough to need a shower once you get to work, you're not really cycling.
Maybe it's a tiny vocal minority? Maybe they're people that are "online only" enthusiasts trying to be cool? I dunno... but it just seems very punitively conformist.
ElemenoPicuares | 2 years ago | on: The fall of Stack Overflow, explained?
Many people in those roles claim they're uptight because they want to maintain the quality of the posts. Well, I assure you that particular SE, at least, is much worse off for it.
ElemenoPicuares | 2 years ago | on: Italian privacy regulator bans ChatGPT
ElemenoPicuares | 2 years ago | on: German police raid DDoS-friendly host FlyHosting
ElemenoPicuares | 3 years ago | on: The window trick of Las Vegas hotels
What makes these monster buildings so unsettling is that instead of a delicate balance of order and variety, they have too much of both. The moster building has too much order - it's a box with long rows of windows. But the façade also has way too much variety because of the AC units and the mishmash of colours and window frames."
(a bunch of declarative statements about hotels based on visual analysis)
"But I think this kind of visual trick could find application in high-rise residential buildings to make façades look nicer and gentler."
They are making technical design analyses of buildings, criticising architects based on that, and making recommendations to architects for future work. Professional design critique also includes matters of artistic opinion mixed in.
Developers and their ilk spend all day thinking up solutions to novel and difficult problems in ways that really matter, and that's awesome. Irreplaceable. At times it seems like the only thing between us and an incredible shining future in so many domains is just having enough dev time to do the research and solve the problems! The other people in the process just sort of fall to the wayside while developers do the real work.
Many developers forget that their knowledge is domain-specific, and no matter how broad the applications are for their skills, it doesn't increase the value of their perspective beyond code. Every designer I've met who's worked in tech, and many others such as communications people, managers, support people, etc have been frustrated by this exact attitude. Confidently weilding criticism and dismissing ideas in realms far outside of their expertise.
If people publicly criticize the work of professionals without the requisite knowledge, they shouldn't be taken aback when someone tells them they're taking out of their tuba.
ElemenoPicuares | 3 years ago | on: The window trick of Las Vegas hotels
ElemenoPicuares | 3 years ago | on: The window trick of Las Vegas hotels
ElemenoPicuares | 3 years ago | on: The window trick of Las Vegas hotels
ElemenoPicuares | 3 years ago | on: The window trick of Las Vegas hotels
ElemenoPicuares | 3 years ago | on: The window trick of Las Vegas hotels
My professional discipline shares some baseline knowledge with architects and I enjoy architecture, but I am not an architect. I know enough about it to realize that you're better off listening to an architect talk about architecture than me, and way better than someone with no design background at all.
Aside from my design discipline, I was also a classically trained chef, and also spent quite some time as a software developer. The number of times a person from an engineering-type background haughtily "explained" my areas of expertise to me is gob smacking. I'm far beyond the point in life where I feel the need to hold my tongue when I recognize someone speaking with authority well outside of their expertise, especially if they're getting attention by doing so.
ElemenoPicuares | 3 years ago | on: The window trick of Las Vegas hotels
ElemenoPicuares | 3 years ago | on: The window trick of Las Vegas hotels
It reads like a non-developer reading a bunch of articles about tech buzzword du jour like blockchain or microservices and then ham-fistedly using that to "explain" the architectural shortcomings of a bunch of complex systems that they couldn't hope to understand designed by heavily educated and experienced professionals. An actual developer would roll their eyes but if the author's readers aren't developers, it not only sounds as credible, it sounds more credible because someone is finally explaining that complex thing in a way that makes sense to people who reason about problems the same way they do.
If you want to learn about some knowledge domain like architecture, you're a whole lot better off reading architectural blogs than a technical person's musings about it. Misconceptions born from a similar perspective to yours are going to seem undeservedly credible and be a lot more difficult to parse and filter out.