idiocratic
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6 months ago
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on: How to stop feeling lost in tech: the wafflehouse method
What has always worked for me is the exact opposite: no goal from the start, just try as many things that interest you as possible until you have one or two areas that work for you.
Repeat when you’re burned out.
idiocratic
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2 years ago
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on: The Greening of Milan: Porta Nuova and Vertical Forest
It is nice, but nobody except celebrities and super rich people can afford any of these apartments.
It’s easy to create nice things for extremely rich people, the real challenge in Milan is to provide aesthetically pleasing and environmentally sustainable buildings and neighbourhoods for the 99%.
idiocratic
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2 years ago
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on: Ask HN: Which is the oldest software alive still in 0.x, used by many?
idiocratic
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2 years ago
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on: Encyclopaedia Metallum
Or maybe thanks to this strong moderation, not despite it.
idiocratic
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2 years ago
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on: Encyclopaedia Metallum
I disagree. They were such a great door into escapism and friendship for me, a standard guy from a small town in Italy with no metal friends at all until the internet came about.
Forums in particular provided the opportunity of meeting people with very different backgrounds sharing similar music tastes, and it was also fun to argue about silly things like what is true and not true metal and getting banned by mods.
I built amazing memories of road trips together, motorcycles, seeing bands and meeting each other somewhere basically every weekend.
Not to say that what you experienced is not true, but it’s not the case for every forum out there for sure.
Also, what made metalheads special was their status as a total outcasts of society, of course we were very much an insular culture. I miss the group spirit, the “family” side of all of this amazing subculture.
idiocratic
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2 years ago
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on: France plans to close tax loophole benefiting Airbnb
> I don't understand audacity of people who are trying to dictate to real estate owners what they can and can't do with their property
I don't understand this argument. If you live in the middle of a desert or if you own an entire building in the suburbs, sure, do what you want, that's what it's allowed in those places.
But if you own a flat in the middle of a very densely populated city, with rules, where even buying a home is regulated and taxed because society wants that, then this argument doesn't hold. You literally can't do what you want with your property. In Europe at least we have regional building regulations, town taxes to pay for garbage we produce, natural disasters dictating how things are built, and we even have specific rules for each building where your flat is located in. For example in my flat I can't have BBQs on the balcony where other people might do their laundry, or I can't smoke in the elevator, etc, etc... basic rules and compromises for basic societal well-being. It's very far from being able to do whatever we want.
idiocratic
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2 years ago
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on: Dark Matter Developers: The Unseen 99% (2012)
Great quote. It applies to pretty much any profession that isn't pure art. Knowing how it works in medical and research fields, it would be a great analogy for that too.
idiocratic
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3 years ago
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on: A mistake that killed Japan’s software industry?
So many parallels with the Italian software industry. Plagued by low pay, clerical work and system integrators monopolising the entire industry for decades.
I also see cloud computing and Silicon Valley glamour as the turning point for the industry.
idiocratic
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3 years ago
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on: Oscar Niemeyer’s French communist party headquarters
While in some places Communism has definitely been responsible for atrocities, in many countries (especially Western Europe, Asia and South America) Communist parties have been on the frontline of liberation movements, indigenous rights, human rights, workers’ conditions, etc.
That’s why for many Communism != atrocities.
idiocratic
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3 years ago
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on: Bank of Canada increases policy interest rate by 75 basis points, continues QT
Marginally, from a historic perspective.
idiocratic
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3 years ago
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on: Difftastic, the fantastic diff
Great article. It’s inspiring to see what applications some simple algorithms can have.
Kudos for building the tool and sharing your approach.
idiocratic
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3 years ago
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on: Health effects of the use of non-sugar sweeteners: a review and meta-analysis
This to me seems less of a problem where I come from, Italy.
It's true that most Italians indulge in sugar when drinking coffee (which it's a terrible practice, we should instead push for better specialty-grade coffee that doesn't need sugar).
At the same time what Americans call "condiments" it's basically just olive oil, some salt and pepper for 95% of our dishes.
A traditional mediterranean diet, made primarily of grains, legumes and vegetables with some occasional meat and fish is what me and most of my friends' families would have for dinner.
Of course, there's the ice cream, the cakes, the BBQ with friends, etc. But I'm just thinking about the normal daily diet here. And the standard seems pretty healthy, with most sugars coming from seasonal fruit.
idiocratic
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3 years ago
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on: Tell HN: Coinbase now requires physical address of recipient in crypto transfers
The promise of crypto is still valid. It’s the centralized idea of crypto platforms like Coinbase that is evaporating, and that’s a good thing.
idiocratic
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4 years ago
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on: Building Remote Teams for Startups
I don't understand how you don't count meetings and context switching as part of work hours. You're helping others, making decisions, etc. It's not that what's not coding is not work.
idiocratic
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4 years ago
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on: Portugal bans bosses texting staff after-hours
Others already replied in useful ways that reflect my thoughts here.
I know some people can and will make it, but it’s definitely not for everyone or even the majority of them, especially here in southern Europe. Think mums with kids doing 9 to 6, men in their 50s doing shitty jobs in shitty companies, young professionals living with their parents because they can’t afford to pay rent. Yes, they could go abroad and reinvent themselves, making a substantial improvement to their quality of life, etc. But in the meantime I like that our governments take steps to regulate overworking and crazy demands for those who don’t give a shit about their work beyond getting their salary and moving on with their life. I empathise and understand their context, even if I’m in a quite different situation.
That’s empathy, not pitying others because they are less privileged than me. Maybe they are even happier than I am, who am I to judge?
idiocratic
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4 years ago
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on: Portugal bans bosses texting staff after-hours
Not everyone can have a better job. Sorry but your comment reveals how little empathy we, software engineers, can have at times.
idiocratic
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4 years ago
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on: Framework Patterns (2019)
The problem with doing this in Python is that there is no typing or interfaces to help you. Basing it purely on naming of arguments breaks the assumption that argument names are local to the function/method. I find this extremely confusing to reason about, let alone the possible unwanted side effects if some developer isn’t aware that a name is magical. It’s also very non Pythonic for good reasons.
idiocratic
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5 years ago
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on: DDD Is Overrated
The way I see it is that DDD works well with very consolidated process modelling. Think finance, insurance, but also e-commerce, billing systems, etc.
If your business is for example into "data" processing or in the discovery phase at a startup, then I can see how DDD can feel like ultra over-engineering. But it has its place, for sure.
idiocratic
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5 years ago
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on: Facebook to staff: Avoid company-branded clothing for own safety
I'm sure there are lots of... brands... that don't have any visible branding on their clothes.
2 that come to my mind right now are Uniqlo and Muji. But I'm sure there's plenty more to buy from in every country.
idiocratic
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5 years ago
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on: More than half of all whale and dolphin species are of conservation concern
Even if cloning was an option, extinction is just a side effect of habitat erosion. Without habitat, there's no place where those species, even when cloned, could thrive.