axotty | 11 years ago | on: Fasting triggers stem cell regeneration of damaged, old immune system (2014)
axotty's comments
axotty | 11 years ago | on: Why I Quit OS X – Geoff Wozniak
axotty | 11 years ago | on: Why I Quit OS X – Geoff Wozniak
I'm not accusing this Wozniak of malice, however.
I didn't look at the TLD I just clicked. I thought Woz was ditching OS X, I got excited. I was baited.
axotty | 11 years ago | on: Why I Quit OS X – Geoff Wozniak
EDIT: Holy down votes. Don't know what to say. I thought it was Woz, sosume. All I did was agree with the less-downvoted parent.
EDIT 2: Hive mind crit axotty for 9999.
axotty | 11 years ago | on: Fasting triggers stem cell regeneration of damaged, old immune system (2014)
God is often depicted as moody and chronically concerned with what we think of him. I think that's a ridiculous projection of our own human insecurities.
If a creator like God existed, he would be billions of orders of magnitude more intelligent than us. Why would he care if we were skeptical? Humans are arrogant and we project our own humanness onto everything. I doubt God, if he existed, would stop loving me even if I hated him. He would be above all that, in my view.
If there is a creator or God, I personally believe he doesn't care if we believe in him. He's too intelligent and mature for that to ever matter to him
Side note edit: It has always been interesting to me that moderate agnosticism is always the most drowned out religious view. I would be better off as a militant atheist or familiar, friendly theist if I cared about internet points.
axotty | 11 years ago | on: Fasting triggers stem cell regeneration of damaged, old immune system (2014)
axotty | 11 years ago | on: UI Performance Decline – OS X Tiger to Yosemite [video]
axotty | 11 years ago | on: Ask HN: What was the job market like during the dot-com crash?
The end of your second point fails to address the comment you responded to, I was addressing an entirely separate issue about how this community (and to a lesser degree, the programming community) chooses to communicate. Specifically, how it fails to actually remove flaming, trolling, rudeness, and arrogance. It merely wraps these things nicely in pseudo intellectual packages.
Anyways, I wasn't defending my (purely spiteful) "ageist" comment, nor do I intend to. Although, I keep getting baited to address it, so here I am. Rest assured though, while I may never transform into a different gender or race, I will certainly age. I'm sure one day, when I'm older, someone on the internet will say a rude, politically incorrect comment towards me, and I shall weep with regret and understanding.
axotty | 11 years ago | on: Ask HN: What was the job market like during the dot-com crash?
That's the real skill to master, especially amongst the smug closeted egomaniacs in the programming world. But as a normally blunt person, it all seems a little silly(and very insincere) to me.
axotty | 11 years ago | on: Ask HN: What was the job market like during the dot-com crash?
However, the way you phrased your criticism was very polite, yet firm. It drove your point home in a self evident kind of way. It's got me thinking and I appreciate that.
axotty | 11 years ago | on: Ask HN: What was the job market like during the dot-com crash?
I'm actually still in school. So, I tend to muse over learning a lot of different things. Your life story was really neat though ;)
axotty | 11 years ago | on: Ask HN: What was the job market like during the dot-com crash?
axotty | 11 years ago | on: Obfuscating “Hello World” in Python
axotty | 11 years ago | on: Amethyst – A tiling window manager for OS X
I, maybe, have one or two apps sharing a single workspace. Most apps are in full screen.
axotty | 11 years ago | on: Steve Wozniak remembers the early days [video]
I have nothing to add other than I really enjoyed reading this and felt compelled to comment. It upped my mood :) Keep up the positive outlook (sometimes rare on this site) and have a great day.
axotty | 11 years ago | on: Immigration is about talent, not costs
axotty | 11 years ago | on: Show HN: Pi Explained Visually
axotty | 11 years ago | on: A Cautionary Tale of Learning to Code
> there are literally thousands of things you can do that will be much more useful than learning to touch type dvorak.
You could say this about any skill or hobby. You are not the arbiter of usefulness. Plenty of people have derived utility from learning to touch type Dvorak or Colemak. You're writing them off out of pure ignorance.
axotty | 11 years ago | on: A Cautionary Tale of Learning to Code
That being said, you will never know the benefits of touch typing if you can't touch type. You seem to be threatened by the thought of it being a valuable skill so I won't try to convince you otherwise.
axotty | 11 years ago | on: A Cautionary Tale of Learning to Code
I agree that good typing skills do not necessarily make you a more productive programmer. But I do find that it is a skill that compliments other programming skills nicely. It's also nice for countless other parts of my workflow that do not include programming.
God throws a few temper tantrums in the Old Testament. Either way the Christian God is not the God I might believe in. I sometimes believe in a creator who, for the purposes of familiarity, I call God.
> "Overly worried" - I know of no text in all of the Bible that portrays God as anxious about anything. Maybe you mean to say "chronically concerned with" what people think?
Yeah, that is what I meant. I will change that, thanks.
> The categories of love and hate as you are discussing seem to require a little work. Whenever we see God's unchanging love discussed, at least Scripturally, to what does it refer? And if God chose not to love, would that make Him less than divine somehow?
I don't personally believe the scriptures are anything but contradictory pseudo-history combined with fiction, so I cannot answer your question.
> "Humans are arrogant and we project our own humanness onto everything" -- that is utterly true. Thank you for acknowledging it. But could it be you are projecting your own preferences of what God would be like if He existed? How do you escape this human flaw while the rest of us can't or won't?
Of course, I am. I can only maybe accept that there was a creator. Everything else is just pure speculation. I'd like to think that this creator is unfathomable to mankind. That being said, I often doubt that this creator exists at all.
> By the way, if God turns out to be real and He is preeminently concerned with what you think about Him, what grounds would have to object to His preoccupation with making you see how ultimate and satisfying He is?
Well if he was right in front of me I would obviously admit I was wrong. If he cares as much as you say I'm sure he'd be pretty upset at me. At that point he would either have to understand where I was coming from, or send me to hell.
Either way, I'm willing to take that risk.