avastmick | 11 months ago | on: Organised gangs behind rise in QR 'quishing' scams
avastmick's comments
avastmick | 1 year ago | on: How I Stay Motivated Working on My Solo SaaS (When It Feels Like Nobody Cares)
avastmick | 1 year ago | on: How much are LLMs boosting real-world programmer productivity?
At first I was all in with Copilot and various similar plugins for neovim. It helped me get going but did produce the worst code in the application. Also I found (personal preference) that the autocomplete function actually slowed me down; it made me pause or even prevented me from seeing what I was doing rather than just typing out what I needed to. I stopped using any codegen for about four months at the end of 2024; I felt it was not making me more productive.
This year it’s back on the table with avante[0] and cursor (the latter back off the table due to the huge memory requirements). Then recently Claude Code dropped and I am currently feeling like I have productivity super powers. I’ve set it up in a pair programming style (old XP coder) where I write careful specs (prompts) and tests (which I code); it writes code; I review run the tests and commit. I work with it. I do not just let it just run as I have found I waste more time unwinding its output than watching each step.
From being pretty disillusioned six months ago I can now see it as a powerful tool.
Can it replace devs? In my opinion, some. Like all things it’s garbage in garbage out. So the idea a non-technical product manager can produce quality outputs seems unlikely to me.
avastmick | 1 year ago | on: I am (not) a failure: Lessons learned from six failed startup attempts
avastmick | 1 year ago | on: Is artificial consciousness achievable? Lessons from the human brain
I am not sure what new learning all the research and thinking brings: I am lost it all the “arguments”; I really do not understand.
A lot of way smarter people than me think it’s a worthwhile concept to wrestle with. Maybe I’m just not smart enough to get it.
A lot of people way smarter than me agonised over the nature of the soul too. Is it that debate replayed? Are we just trying to justify humans “specialness”?
avastmick | 1 year ago | on: Entire home spotted floating across San Francisco Bay
Most houses here are wooden construction with corrugated steel roofs which keeps the weight down.
avastmick | 1 year ago | on: Ask HN: What is the most useless project you have worked on?
We as a team worked super hard and were super proud of what the platform could do. We even won some awards. But due to politics and bureaucracy its capabilities were never used and today the service is a national joke and really only used to logon to government services. It is going to be replaced with something new and shiny.
Now, I look back and think why did I care so much and work so hard. Why was I so naive that it would be used as designed.
avastmick | 2 years ago | on: Plastic bag bans work
My wife is Irish, and they started the removal of plastic bags over 20 years ago. It was carefully phased in over time. It led to a 90% reduction in plastic bag use [0]. They also weigh your trash (in Dublin, anyway) as a means of cost pressure to reduce waste and encourage recycling. It is stated to have reduced waste by 50% [1].
[0] https://www.irishenvironment.com/iepedia/plastic-bag-levy/ [1] https://www.irishtimes.com/business/economy/why-it-pays-to-c...
avastmick | 2 years ago | on: The Data Science Manifesto (2020)
The data science/ engineering domain appears to often produce outcomes like a good deal of 1990s software projects - projects that don’t produce good or expected results [0].
I posted a counterpoint recently [1] that said we should stop approaching data engineering like software engineering. Given what appears to be an almost endless number of data projects that produce little to no value to businesses, what should data professionals do to address the problem? This manifesto at least attempts to make a statement.
[0] I contributed to many of these at the beginning of my career!
[1] https://betterprogramming.pub/data-engineering-is-not-softwa...
avastmick | 2 years ago | on: Construction Time Again: The quality crisis in American building
I live in a townhouse with shared walls on both sides and we never hear our neighbours. I’ve asked them if they hear us (we have teenagers) and one said never, the other said sometimes an occasional thud (teenagers wrestling).
Similarly we have a private outdoor space or deck and a shared open area. Both are great and well designed. I think it can be done well.
I know too that often it is not.
avastmick | 2 years ago | on: Mercedes beats Tesla to autonomous driving in California
[0] https://theconversation.com/suburban-living-the-worst-for-ca...
avastmick | 3 years ago | on: NZ’s biggest data breach shows retention is the sleeping giant of data security
It was built to directly mitigate events like the Latitude breach whereby the service gives an answer to an identity question rather than spraying PII across the economy. Answers were formed by pulling data from disparate authoritative sources in real time, a set of tokens were created and an audit record created and shared with PII owner consent. No personal information was ever intended to be shared or stored. It was an elegant solution for New Zealand, though we were mindful of a potential scaling issues in larger jurisdictions.
The financial sector was the initial target to help with AML/KYC flows. The banks in particular lobbied for access to the PII rather than an answer to the question so the service was devalued from the get go. If we’d won that answer I believe that digital identity and personal information sharing would be very different today.
avastmick | 3 years ago | on: GPT-4: A Copilot for the Mind
avastmick | 3 years ago | on: Launch HN: Electric Air (YC W23) – Heat pump sold directly to homeowners
avastmick | 3 years ago | on: Study Suggests Fructose Could Drive Alzheimer's Disease
My own journey may reflect this. I suffered from gout and also other worrisome blood work markers that indicated metabolic syndrome. I am now largely vegan, alcohol free and avoid sugar and processed food. I have not had a gout attack for a long time. Then in a recent blood test my uric acid was through the roof. My (excellent) doctor first wanted to raise the amount of allopurinol I was taking but I suffer from side effects and was reluctant. My doctor did some research and found that uric acid levels are raised during periods of weight loss.
So it’s complicated and not well understood.
avastmick | 3 years ago | on: GitHub staff are required to use Teams by Sep 1, 2023
Distributed, connected collaboration in real-time, at (massive) scale - it's a big functional domain. Offering video, chat, document storage, sharing and collaboration, as well as project management and integration into a plethora of other apps and tools. This is surely a hard space.
Just look at apps that inhabit much, much simpler function spaces - say, Twitter, given the start point of the discussion. It doesn't get that glare of all day, everyday work use. It doesn't have the function and criticality to people's day. Twitter is down? It's just not a thing 99.9% of people will freak out over. Post-pandemic, Teams or Zoom is down means loss of a sales, key workshops stranding participants, distributed Teams losing comms during critical releases, and the list goes on.
avastmick | 3 years ago | on: TSMC founder Morris Chang says globalization and free trade 'almost dead'
My view entirely: (some) people will start to see themselves as the true commodity of value and either move to where they are valued or work remotely. This is already starting to happen. The more enlightened nation states will get on the bus and compete for people resources. Those more backward thinking will seek to lock the door and regress and live increasingly in tyranny.
Just my view.
avastmick | 3 years ago | on: DVD drives turned into microscopes
avastmick | 3 years ago | on: The most dangerous road for cyclists in America
avastmick | 3 years ago | on: Everyone should be ‘quiet quitting’
The problem is the seemingly ubiquitous paucity of quality management - there is literally no one appreciating your effort. Many managers, right up to a CX level are so detached from the purpose of the business they manage they can’t determine whether work done good or not.
My belief is this general lack of appreciation of excellence and intrinsic disinterest in excellence is the creation of the Friedman/Welch school of business - that the purpose of a business is to maximise value to shareholders. I see this as abstract and empty. It removes any value placed on, “we create great products that out customers love,” and replaces it with the dollar reward for shareholders. Make great products everyone wants? Why bother when you can create crap products with misused staff that are cheaply produced that returns more dividends for our shareholders. If you have talent and can produce quality go somewhere where you are appreciated. If you don’t, maybe go with the Homer Simpson approach and sink those companies who equally can’t deliver.