iostream25's comments

iostream25 | 3 years ago | on: Copilot under fire as dev claims it emits 'large chunks of my copyrighted code'

So, it's not Microsofts information they are selling for $10/month. They are wholesale ripping it, sans attribution and sans licenses, IN VIOLATION OF LAW on an industrial scale.

It surely must be stopped and punished, or no license will ever be respected again.

MS is taking OTHER PEOPLES CODE and using it ways those people explicitly do not allow and putting it in a walled-garden tool for paid access: license violation as a service.

iostream25 | 3 years ago | on: Copilot under fire as dev claims it emits 'large chunks of my copyrighted code'

My, how odd that copilot wants to "liberate" other peoples code from attribution, licenses, the project it was ripped from...

How curious that copilot doesn't ripoff Microsoft Windows or Office code...

Spare us the astroturfed ideals. You are not one of "us", Microsoft PR person.

You sound like a Russian diplomat defending the indefensible.

iostream25 | 3 years ago | on: GitHub Copi­lot inves­ti­ga­tion

Either the user-base of HN suddenly became a bunch of unethical folks who don't CARE about copyrights, usage licenses, authorship, or the future of open-source projects,

OR

This place is currently crawling with Micro$oft employees who have been instructed to swamp the place with disingenuous comments basically amounting to:

1) "fair use" is anything I want it to me

2) gimme your code NOW, because I want it, and it's MINE

3) get used to habitual violation of licenses as the new normal

4) you are ruining progress! harming kittens!

I can't see the actual HN crowd all suddenly being copilot users and fans, so that leaves me to conclude the latter.

I find Microsofts continual business model of evil to be rather threatening and annoying and they need to be checked, as they have only gotten worse with the decades. They abuse their market position to stifle any and all tech innovation. Break them up already.

iostream25 | 3 years ago | on: Cool HTML elements nobody uses

Frames made a side or top nav clearly separated from the content in the middle. Framesets were super useful, in that regard, in the era of dialup.

iostream25 | 3 years ago | on: Address by the President of the Russian Federation

My general sense is that not even Putin believes his own rhetoric, such is his inconsistency of thought.

The reality is that Putin has elected to invade a sovereign neighbor country and can unelect to do so. Not one "western" leader, military or civilian, has threatened Russia "existentially" and certainly no one has threatened to invade Russia.

Putin is a liar, to put it simply. He's apparently playing the crazy-card, in attempts to freak the world out, but his constant threats to the entire world of nuclear first-strikes and then saying that "THIS TIME IS NOT A BLUFF" means that people can't really learn much by his unchanging and silly rhetoric. As some boxer said: "Be aware of the main trunk of his body and where it's moving and watch his hands"

iostream25 | 3 years ago | on: Address by the President of the Russian Federation

A quote from Kier Giles, whose article in today's Guardian addresses some of the silliness and contradictions in Putin's speech this morning.

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/sep/21/vladim...

"few of Putin’s contradictory storylines stand up to even a moment’s critical thought: we are winning in Ukraine – but the forces of the west aligned against us are so powerful that now we need to dig deeper to stay in the fight; our proxy regimes in Ukraine need to hold referendums to join us – but we already know they all want to join; we’re protecting the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Russia itself – but to do this requires incorporating part of another country; our war aim has always simply been to “liberate” Donbas – but to do that we’ve also taken so much of Ukraine that we have a 1,000km frontline."

iostream25 | 3 years ago | on: The Portuguese can no longer afford to live in Portugal

not the op. agree that op is not refugee fleeing war on inflatable boat.

I distilled "lack of agency" as: not rewarding initiative, people afraid to take initiative. the portuguese boss does not like the employee to take initiative, and the employee will not do so. copying existing British designs is "safer" socially speaking, than making new designs.

source: I'm portuguese, I'm a weirdo and people always try to conform me to a box.

iostream25 | 3 years ago | on: The Portuguese can no longer afford to live in Portugal

You could say the same about <countryname> where <countryname> is a popular tourist destination that has over 15% of it's economy based in tourism. Czechs were the minority property owners in Prague some 20 years ago, already.

Inflation is occurring at higher rates in some countries than others (cough Estonia, Turkey for example) and Portugal is not exceptional in this respect. The starting salaries for doctors in the Portuguese SNS are terrible, at around 1800 euro for doctors and 1200 euro for nurses. This is insufficient for living in Lisbon or Porto, as the author would agree.

Source: I am Portuguese. I live in central Portugal.

I do not like the authors apparent intentions in trying to incite anti-foreigner sentiments. Portugal has chosen it's own course here, from the Golden Visas to the over-reliance on tourism. Lisbon has it's own management problems that I won't dig into, but suffice it to say that certain places like Lisbon or Porto have become rather expensive, while the majority of the interior of the country continues to be less-inhabited. Our train services were gutted when the public system was privatized and the concession given to a single company.

Monopolies run rampant in Portugal.

Uniquely complaining about PORTUGAL being unaffordable for the PORTUGUESE is such a Portuguese mentality, I can't even. The author needs to live abroad in some other countries for awhile and see how much this is a general issue relating to so-called NICE CITIES becoming horribly expensive. No doubt, we will stop being fashionable at some point, when the "next" cool place becomes king, so the real question is whether we will begin manufacturing and developing other sectors of our economy beyond raw-materials export (low in the capitalist pyramid) and tourism. Make furniture to sell, rather than exporting the timber, so to speak.

iostream25 | 3 years ago | on: Asus put out like 40 models of a laptop called the “Eee PC” (2021)

This is a great opportunity to remind everyone about the extremely negative dampening effects Micro$oft has had on innovation in both hardware and operating systems.

It's a monopoly and should have been broken up. We still can barely find OEM-installed Linux laptops, and an entity the size of Dell or Asus could easily float their own distro or add support dollar$ to an existing one.

iostream25 | 3 years ago

Let's all talk about US actions while Russia invades Ukraine and flattens shopping centers far away from military targets, mass-executes civilians, etc.

While the US certain has plenty of foreign policy history to answer for, I find the timing of such a post to only be for deflection purposes, or?

The US is not the only power with imperialist ambitions, if one pays a modicum of attention to Russian and Chinese efforts as of late.

iostream25 | 3 years ago | on: Amplify UI – Don't just prototype. Connect your UI to the cloud

The true reality that precedes your complaint:

The world wide web was created as a remote-folder document-browsing application in which an index-page told you of the contents of a folder, etc. One still speaks of a "web root" folder etc.

It wasn't designed as a FRP state-machine, or as a 2-way-bound GUI.

Before the XML Http Request, there was only loading new resources, so the notion of dynamically updating a page UI was entirely dependent upon clicking something and waiting for a new page to load with the hopeful results of your posted form data or whatever, reflected in the UI, IF the developer was kind enough to have done so.

This situation created the complicated frontend situation of today as it became apparent that the Web would be a general client-server application UI

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