cfeduke's comments

cfeduke | 6 months ago | on: Tesla is looking to redesign its door handles following trapped-passenger report

I bought a Model 3 in 2018, a Y in 2020, and another 3 in 2024. The end user design has only continued to get worse on various aspects of the car. Regarding non-safety issues, living in the northeast and mid-Atlantic, the door handles freeze shut during the winter and become impossible to open from outside of the car.

But why continue to buy these poor end-user design experiences, you think? My car maintenance costs since 2018 has been a gallon of windshield wiper fluid and new tires. So I deal with poor design decisions.

But the cup holders in the latest Model 3 may be my breaking point.

cfeduke | 1 year ago | on: Ask HN: Is it wrong not wanting career progression beyond senior?

> Generally speaking, for most people, bills go up as they age (kids, health, yada-yada).

To a point yes. There was a time when you could realistically pay off your mortgage before you were fifty, and for some people maybe this is still the case. College expenses are another consideration, just depends on how much you as a parent are going to shoulder those costs compared to grants/military/self earn.

For myself, costs have lowered and I'm able to donate more money to charity. So if you can swing a bigger paycheck and you're motivated help others I think it's worth doing so.

cfeduke | 1 year ago | on: AWS Secrets Manager Agent

From AWS pricing:

> Per 10,000 API calls

> $0.05 per 10,000 API calls.

So imagine you have some number of cron jobs which require a bunch of secrets and these things fire every minute or 30 seconds or what have you. You could save as much as $0.25 a month!

cfeduke | 1 year ago | on: AI's $600B Question

Okay I guess I've just had a different experience entirely. Maybe I'm jaded by hallucinations.

The code ChatGPT generates is often bad in ways that are hard to detect. If you are not an experienced software engineer, the defects could be impossible to detect, until you/ChatGPT has gone and exposed all your customers to bad actors, or crash at runtime, or do something terribly incorrect.

As far as other thought work goes, I am not consulting ChatGPT over, say, a dietician or a doctor. The hallucination risk is too high. Producing an answer is the not the same as producing a correct answer.

cfeduke | 1 year ago | on: Tesla owners file class-action alleging repair, parts monopoly

My personal experience so far with Tesla specifically - and this is not to say they are doing the right thing in regards to parts or anything - was when my wife hit a deer and a bunch of the driver's front side of the car had to be replaced was that it took six days. Of course the bill insurance covered was around $12K which is just insane (headlight, hood, fender, panel, side mirror, camera). The timeline to repair was probably because the Tesla density for my area (around Richmond, VA) is not high like it is in places such as California.

Other than that, which was $0 out of pocket, I've had my Model 3 for six years in July and almost $0 in parts or service. I replaced the 12v battery which I had to buy for $75 and tires twice. This way more cost effective than my Lexus (around $4,000 in repair service over 5 years, not counting tires) and Mercedes (around $3,000 in repair service over 2 years, which - not counting tires and I had these AMG rims that were wider on the rear tires so tire replacement had to happen early). So its hard for me to complain about Tesla, but I can see where for other people who have had issues where there are a lot of Teslas on the road could be an issue.

cfeduke | 1 year ago | on: Please don't mention AI again

If its tech and they want a 30-45 minute interview with live coding on something like hackerrank - especially if whatever brain teaser they've chosen has absolutely nothing to do with the field they operate in - I'd put the chances around 80%.

cfeduke | 1 year ago | on: Please don't mention AI again

> I don't see how AI, quantum and block chain are at all equivalent.

It's not that there is any claim to equivalency, its that these are the technology trends that are most useful - the trend itself, nevermind any sort of usable technology - for those who grift.

cfeduke | 1 year ago | on: IKEA's retailer's solved global 'unhappy worker' crisis by raising salaries

For all these "it is better" points, it still doesn't even begin to outweigh the "you get to spend time with your children" point. This is the most important part of child rearing and once they've moved on you'll be thankful you spent your time with them instead of... whatever all that income/societal optimization stuff is. You get to raise your children once.

cfeduke | 1 year ago | on: Square Enix to record extraordinary loss of 22.1B yen

> browser search bar and get perfectly good answers

That depends. If your search engine is Google, you'd get things like "The best 17 AAA games by budget to buy in 2024" or "22 triple A games for a tight budget in 2024."

cfeduke | 2 years ago | on: Ada 95: The Craft of Object-Oriented Programming

In the early 90s I ended up taking a Pascal course in high school for a math credit. Afterwards I joined the military in a computer software MOS and was trained in Ada. Of course... my actual day to day was often working with Visual Basic or VBA. The government employees assigned to my unit regularly worked in COBOL or Fortran... we had a single Ada system that required rebooting into 16-bit DOS to compile, but ran under Windows 95. Imagine the fun that was to debug from a single computer!

I am happy to contribute to your off topic meandering.

cfeduke | 2 years ago | on: Stonelifting Etiquette

We pour concrete to make Atlas stones for specific weights knowing that these artificial stones will eventually be ruined by accident by the people who have a new interest in stone lifting. We also collect natural stones which may get ruined by mistake so people in the club can get used to lifting irregular shapes.

But when it comes to the historical stones, all the prep work above is so these stones are not ruined. It's a privilege to try to lift a stone that Irish or Scottish men would lift to become huscarls for their lord and breaking one out of carelessness is a loss for everyone in this hobby.

cfeduke | 2 years ago | on: Goodbye non-KISS appliances

I had a Sears Admiral refrigerator that was built in the 90s which recently (three months ago) had the compressor go out. I've had the refrigerator since I purchased the house in 2001 and I have performed zero maintenance on it, so it was no surprise that the... uh... solid dust build up finally wore out the compressor fan. Though my wife and I did purchase a new refrigerator I intend to replace the compressor in the Admiral because >25 years is a good run and I expect the resurrected refrigerator [when I get around to resurrecting it] will outlast the new one.

I've never hooked up water lines for ice makers for my refrigerators, including refrigerators at my other properties. Call it a hunch.

cfeduke | 2 years ago | on: A man who collects lost pet posters

It's not problematic, its just plain wrong.

Also, the phone number is right there on the flier so its not like the fliers owner can't be contacted after seeing a flier to see if the animal has been found and if the flier can be removed. Doing the right thing sometimes takes a bit of work.

cfeduke | 2 years ago | on: Get Out of Jail Cards, 2

Corruption is everywhere, not just in big cities. The more rural the county in US, the greater the chance that "stuff like this only happened in 3rd world countries" is necessary to get anything done [permits especially]. Anecdotal personal experience - living ~30 years in rural Virginia versus ~15 years in a city in upstate NY.

cfeduke | 2 years ago | on: Alaska 737 cockpit voice recorder data erasure renews safety debate

> Why would anyone think a two-hour buffer for something so critical would be appropriate?

This sort of negligence is intentional. My guess would be it started as a requirement for analog recording and was carried over without change and purposefully left at two hours when equipment went digital. The fact that EU has a 25 hour length requirement and the FAA refuses to update their rules to extend to some reasonable length tells us everything we need to know about this situation.

cfeduke | 2 years ago | on: Do It Yourself Blind Repair

I have fixed numerous home appliances over the past two decades almost entirely thanks to YouTube and eBay, and a willingness to apply myself. If the YouTube video has no intro and its subject is about your problem, you can be almost certain you're about to find out how to fix the problem.
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