mike_k's comments

mike_k | 3 years ago | on: RavynOS – Finesse of macOS, freedom of FreeBSD

It is interesting how you only have purely visual "signs" on your list ). It can't be only this for a tech crowd. There is so much more about the way software is shipped, configured & used.

Also, the hardware. (It is much harder to make it work reasonably well across so many platforms without an army of full time devs.)

mike_k | 3 years ago | on: Ask HN: Is WWIII already in its early stages?

It sounds like it is possible to justify the invasion, if you have a good enough story...

It is still not clear if the threat was real or imagined, I'd the "deescalation" proposition had real things or was just a very unrealistic set of terms and essentially an excuse to proceed. NATO was less ready to accept any new members half a year ago than it is now.

mike_k | 3 years ago | on: Ask HN: Hobbies/Skills which can be picked in 30s and compete at world level?

Coffee brewing. Both pour over and classical barista world championships are possible once you win your nationals. I know someone who came 2nd in higly competitive nationals in my country and the person has a different full time job. It is a very deep skill with a lot of science behind it, if you wish, and not fully explored yet.

mike_k | 4 years ago | on: Russia War Crimes

On the Kramatorsk train station attack. No, Russia had Tochka U officially in use (and of course we're also able to bring them up from storage, as it does with other old equipment now). Can you show the source for the serial number?

https://t.me/CITeam/2463 I am linking a report by an inependent Russian citizens driven "Conflict Intelligence Team". This way it may look more credible or less biased in your eyes.

All in all, Russia can't deny these cerimes but makes everything to leave you uncertain and confused. Eventually you stop treating any version or investigate seriously. It seems this strategy works (

mike_k | 4 years ago | on: Watching the World Wrecking

Being in Ukraine, I appreciate such a cencire and public view on this war from a Russian citizen.

I have two major objections, though.

1) Solzhenitsyn & Brodskiy are very anti-soviet and famous guys, but they only go thus far. The first one was still an imperialist (at least in his later years) to a large degree and the second one had example(s) of a very anti-Ukrainian position in his poetry. Not the best characters to mention in the current context. And probably they illustrate a broader problem: it is so deep in the culture (history), that can not be treated as an accident.

2) The Man on top was not born out of a vacuum. Many generations before and during his "rise" share at least some of the responsibility. I don't want to blame the nation or "all the citizens", but too many individuals encouraged that. There was a point, when it was safe to protest, now it is not... but it is still much safer than to be in Mariupol.

mike_k | 4 years ago

A surprisingly long list of hybrid war tactics shared by two figures. It looks like history have taught us almost nothing.

Originally published: 21 December 2018. Translated into English: March 2022.

mike_k | 4 years ago | on: Was China Betting on Russian Defeat All Along?

Good points. But I somehow hope we underestimate the moral aspect here (and the WWII lessons) that EU leaders and people take into account. Also, hasn't Russia proved to be an unpredictable and dangerous partner? Rethoric question: how can any European country justify making business with it now? (Sadly, it is still easy to imagine...)

mike_k | 4 years ago | on: The curious case of Russia's missing Air Force

> [...]a no-fly zone that no one will enforce given it would mean engaging with, guess what, the air force. Oh, and starting a nuclear war at the same time.

A thought experiment:

- if Putin is not insane and wants to live and enjoy his lifestyle (but plays his role to frighten everyone)

- that means he is unlikely to use nukes

- which means it might be practical to establish a no-flight zone, etc

If you believe he is insane, however, the West has nothing else to do than to let him grab whatever he wants (Estonia, maybe?). This is a dead end for NATO.

mike_k | 4 years ago | on: Was China Betting on Russian Defeat All Along?

Do you really think there is no difference for US/EU with what kind of regime to cooperate _now_? Purely economical short term gains proved to be too risky even for Germany. Moral and cultural aspects are still important enough. Regarding nuke and other hi tech: it might turn out Russia is not as good at it as many anticipated.

mike_k | 4 years ago | on: UK rejects opening borders to Ukraine refugees

Real Nazis are as close to Stephan Bandera's groups in 1940s as they are to IRA, for example. Don't mess these movements, motivation and historical context. It was more about getting rid of Red Russia then about anything else.

>The current President Zelenskyy constantly talked about them...

I was impressed about the way his silly rethoric has changed in the last 2 weeks (or really last one year). He is a different person now. Go and ask him about any of that nonsense now.

mike_k | 4 years ago | on: Appeal to Ruby Community from Kharkiv Rubyist

Good point about public perception. But there's a deeper problem with this: people _want_ to believe it is a justified and necessary act of violence. And this is really hard to change now. Too many years many of us/them were passively silent and now it is almost too late to take an action.

mike_k | 4 years ago | on: UK rejects opening borders to Ukraine refugees

> large Neo-Nazi supporting population in Ukraine

Do you care to list those sources? It sounds exactly like a successful work of Kremlin propaganda.

Please, ask anyone, any foreign citizen who lived in Ukraine, if they ever saw people like that in person and if it was anything but a short "demonstration"/provocation happening once a year.

mike_k | 4 years ago | on: Ukraine Conflict Live Map

I wonder, what is the current state of satellite technology available to military? Can they stream near real-time hi-res images that would "prove" that one side or the other is effectively responsible for a certain escalation?

An (non-existent) international institution to analyze and take action is the other part of the puzzle.

mike_k | 4 years ago | on: Putin will recognise breakaway regions as independent states, Kremlin confirms

This kind of a very short-term thinking is what brought us here. In the recent history: look at how "effortless" the Crimea invasion was for them and what they did a few months later. They will certainly use this chance to bring even more military there and no one around will be more safe than they are now. Would you call it a "peace"?

mike_k | 4 years ago | on: Ask HN: How can I calculate my market value?

I would be very surprised if that is the real "high" point there. Maybe, the country is very small or lacks tech universities & engineering/math "tradition". Tax systems are very different in the region, but with 6 years or experience and intermediate/advanced English even in Ukraine capital the median is $54K, while the third quartile is $66K. Those are NET numbers for contractor-type empoloyment, though. According to the very latest salary widget here: https://dou.ua/salary-widget-test/?period=2021-12&position=S...

mike_k | 4 years ago | on: Department Press Briefing – February 3, 2022

As someone born in Crimea and moved to Kyiv in 2014, I can tell you that a preventive strike is the last thing people in Ukraine really want now. And that is exactly what Russia wants to provoke or stage if that fails. And I will have to decide (if l will have the time for that choice) if I am going to fight or run. The former is more "right" , but the latter might be more "practical". Just appreciate the fact that most of HN audience do not have to make that kind of choice.

mike_k | 4 years ago | on: Russia says Ukraine talks hit 'dead end', Poland warns of risk of war

Regardless of the content, it should be noted that Pozner had (and probably still has) a very nice broadcast time on one of the most popular Russia's channels. He is smart enough not to look like an obvious regime proponent, but he is far from being very critical, AFAIK. He is like a figure made for all those "liberal" conformists, who think they are very progressive.
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