mbrutsch's comments

mbrutsch | 9 years ago | on: Phrack 69 released

Only if one assumes these groups do not overlap. Anonymous is anonymous for good reasons.

mbrutsch | 9 years ago | on: Apple Stole My Music

Lie with dogs, you get fleas. I have zero sympathy for those who fall prey to closed ecosystem BS like this, including my own wife. People just don't listen.

mbrutsch | 9 years ago | on: I wrote a small piece on planned death

Choking to death on your own vomit is what you consider a painless death? I hope you have a painless death.

> A DNR is not an order to cease basic life-support post-resuscitation.

And no one said it was; no one even hinted at it.

> For which of these does he deserve to suffer for, more than he has already?

The first, the violation of her express written wishes that led to her "painless death".

Sadly, he's dead, which means his suffering has ended. The rest of us get to continue remembering until we too pass.

mbrutsch | 9 years ago | on: I wrote a small piece on planned death

My mother had a DNR. She contracted meningitis, and died. She was resuscitated, suffered severe brain damage, and lived another 2 years as a semi-vegetable before dying in her sleep after choking on her own vomit.

If I believed in such things, I would hope my stepfather is in Hell.

edited for spelling

mbrutsch | 9 years ago | on: Reddit and Facebook Veteran on How to Troubleshoot Troublemakers

>You don't want to be working with someone who can't work with other people.

That describes me pretty well, and those with whom I work love me. They just keep me in my little box, leave me alone and let me do my work. But they are also a grown-up company that doesn't make people wear 27 hats. PMs do their job, Infrastructure does theirs, Client Support does theirs, etc. Not every job has the same requirements as every other job.

mbrutsch | 10 years ago | on: You probably don't need a JavaScript framework

> I actually upvoted you, for the record.

That's why I said "you and my downvoters", rather than "you and my other downvoters". I am apparently very bad at making simple points.

> But you drew a distinction between "in-house standards" and "the framework's standards"

One is used in-house for all things relevant, one applies to a framework. In that, they are distinct.

> (which are by definition probably taken from widely adopted standards).

Probably.

> If you were implying that those two things might be identical then you did a bad job of conveying that.

sigh. Two things can be true at the same time. I give up.

mbrutsch | 10 years ago | on: You probably don't need a JavaScript framework

> naively doing everything your own personal way (including at the team/company level).

You, and my downvoters, all assume (naively) that any in-house standard must somehow be different than "widely-adopted coding standards (that most frameworks probably use)". Obviously, that need not be true, and in my limited 40 years of experience, it rarely is. Not sure how you even got there.

mbrutsch | 10 years ago | on: You probably don't need a JavaScript framework

> As someone else pointed out in this thread, a great advantage of established frameworks is that they provide a coding standard for a team.

So it's useful for young, inexperienced developers. Do you kids really not have in-house coding standards anymore, or do you rely on your toolsets to provide that for you?

mbrutsch | 10 years ago | on: Don’t Blame Silicon Valley for Theranos

There is a segment of the populace who feels that every "wrong" must be "punished", and they generally make life miserable for everyone else. Usually no one will speak up for fear of being punished along with the "guilty".

mbrutsch | 10 years ago | on: Don’t Blame Silicon Valley for Theranos

I disagree. A different approach would be to say "Don't know what happened before, but moving forward Ted is accountable for A, Alice is accountable for B, etc". Knowing what happened before serves zero purpose except to shame. All that effectively matters is what happens from this point forward. You put a process in place this time, to monitor what Ted and Alice are doing. Next time, it's your fault when it breaks, because you were forewarned, and you should have known better. Next time, you know what happened, because you put controls in place.

Or just throw someone under the bus and keep repeating the same mistakes.

mbrutsch | 10 years ago | on: Aphantasia: How It Feels to Be Blind in Your Mind

I take it from the article that this would solve one of my biggest internal issues: songs getting stuck in my head. It's gotten so bad in recent years that I don't listen to music at all, because it may stimulate a "earwig" that will not stop.

mbrutsch | 10 years ago | on: The murky history of moderation and how it’s shaping the future of free speech

> You should learn more about stress disorders

Uh, why? Am I a counselor?

> allow yourself to empathize with the plight of the moderators

To what end? What possible constructive purpose is served by allowing myself to share (or wallow) in the negative emotions described by others? Does it stop "bad things" from happening? Does it lessen their pain? Does it lessen anyone's pain? Or does it increase the overall amount of suffering in the world?

brb, going to voluntarily take a job that makes me feel bad, so I can cry about it on the internet...

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