JesseObrien | 21 days ago | on: How the Moat Is Moving
JesseObrien's comments
JesseObrien | 2 years ago | on: Woman with rectifier and electric car (1912)
That's not what the commenter said. Don't put your interpretation of the words into theirs.
It is very feasible that the investment of 100-some-odd years of battery research and a marked non-future invested as deeply into oil and gas as we have now would have rendered our entire world vastly different. This is not a claim that the future would have happened sooner, but rather the events that unfolded and the research would have been different.
JesseObrien | 4 years ago | on: Ask HN: Hiring managers, which type of engineer is hardest to find nowadays?
JesseObrien | 4 years ago | on: Upgrading Executable on the Fly
JesseObrien | 4 years ago | on: Real Problems That Web3 Solves, Part 1
> Many people, including myself, believe that the individual should be able to own their own identity.
Yes, this is nice wishful thinking, but on a global scale it's not really possible or feasible.
> OAuth2 should be used for what it was intended to, which is for a web service to provide another web service with a user’s data given that user’s consent. It should not be used as a global digital identifier because that’s too important to be owned by anyone but the individual themselves.
So, instead of OAuth being in the hands of FAANG[1] it's in the hands of ${blockchain-of-the-year}? How does moving the trust from a centralized company to a centralized blockchain change MY ownership? If I move everything away from FAANG to someone's blockchain, I have no assurance that chain will continue existing. If there's a flaw found in it and everyone moves to another chain, now what? Sure, we can make the same claim about FAANG not continuing to exist, but the point is there's no inherent advantage here, they're equal. FAANG are supported by millions of individuals and companies that are all, together invested in their success. There's no unilateral agreement on blockchains and I doubt there ever will be.
>With social recovery, instead of having to trust Google, you can choose who you trust, and instead trust a given set of friends, family, and services.
Again with the trust this and not that. All of my friends, family and other services need to then agree that they're all going to trust ${chain} instead of FAANG. It doesn't fix the problem. "the blockchain" isn't just one thing. Who's chain do we all shift trust to and from and based on what security? At least with Google I can rely on their security because if they end up with a breach of trust it's going to have a massive, real impact on share prices and consumer trust around the globe. That's incentive enough for me to rely on it day-to-day.
This article has some interesting tidbits but overall seems like just a baseless rally against FAANG by someone who knows very little about complex authentication or trust and security in the real world.
JesseObrien | 4 years ago | on: The main thing with kids is to keep them alive
[1] https://www.statista.com/statistics/971473/number-k-12-schoo...
JesseObrien | 4 years ago | on: Mosquitto: An open-source MQTT broker
JesseObrien | 5 years ago | on: Hate Your Job
JesseObrien | 5 years ago | on: Git is not a success story, but a failure as a system with a bad user experience
JesseObrien | 5 years ago | on: As Joe Rogan’s platform grows, so does the media and liberal backlash – why?
The reason his podcast is popular is because his guests are almost always interesting and contrary to a LOT of media in our era, he lets them speak. I think the viewpoint that somehow there's a cult of Joe Rogan followers who listen in only to hear Joe's POV on things is really tonedeaf.
JesseObrien | 6 years ago | on: A Cold Take on IBM, Red Hat and Their Hybrid Cloud
JesseObrien | 7 years ago | on: This Is Silicon Valley
I made an honest attempt to understand someone before engaging with them, next time I'll just spew some uninformed BS if that's better?
JesseObrien | 7 years ago | on: This Is Silicon Valley
JesseObrien | 7 years ago | on: An update about Redis developments in 2019
This is why I fell in love with Redis right from the beginning. Having a data store that gets out of the way and just gives you the structures (a lot like programming data structures) to do what you need feels awesome. Picking up the commands and putting them to use feels as natural as reaching for any vector/list/whatever structures I use anyway in my programs.
Thanks so much for everything you're doing antirez.
JesseObrien | 8 years ago | on: How our heartbeat shapes our thinking [video]
I'm sitting here reading this article thinking "My gods, I wouldn't wish this on anyone, forget about your heartbeat before it drags you into panic attacks!"
JesseObrien | 8 years ago | on: NASA reveals delay for Hubble successor
JesseObrien | 8 years ago | on: NASA reveals delay for Hubble successor
JesseObrien | 8 years ago | on: Jupiter is deep
JesseObrien | 8 years ago | on: A Message to Our Customers about iPhone Batteries and Performance
You're literally proving the point here. There's much, much more transparency on the Android side of things. Custom ROMs and the stock Google Android images have been combed over for almost the last decade by loads of different individuals and groups around the world. Now, we surely don't control the Samsung-esque bloatware that they slap on top of stock Android, but there's absolutely no way there's throttling code that lives in Android that we don't know about yet.
Anecdotal evidence of my own: I have a Nexus 5 that's nearly 5 years old now that my kids use daily. It's using a stock Lineage ROM. The battery certainly isn't the best anymore, but the phone doesn't feel different than the day I bought it, and it doesn't crash.
JesseObrien | 8 years ago | on: Vim after 15 Years