sethetter | 5 months ago | on: Vibe coding has turned senior devs into 'AI babysitters'
sethetter's comments
sethetter | 3 years ago | on: The collapse of complex software
sethetter | 3 years ago | on: Ask HN: What are some mentally healthy apps to have?
I've injected some intentional friction into an otherwise compulsive habit, which opens up the opportunity to redirect that behavior. It's been very a helpful switch so far.
sethetter | 4 years ago | on: Examining the covidtests.gov architecture
It's a tricky balance to strike!
sethetter | 4 years ago | on: The daunting task of writing longhand and why you should do it
sethetter | 4 years ago | on: Ask HN: DNS Outage?
Edit: formatting
sethetter | 5 years ago | on: How Go helped save HealthCare.gov
sethetter | 5 years ago | on: Start with pen and paper
sethetter | 5 years ago | on: Start with pen and paper
sethetter | 5 years ago | on: Start with pen and paper
You're touching on a reason I like paper too -- in a digital format, I end up thinking too much about how I'm going to organize the information as opposed to just getting my thoughts down.
Organizing the information is important too, but worrying about it before your thoughts are clarified is a quick way for me to get pulled away from my focus on the problem.
Each tool has it's place!
sethetter | 5 years ago | on: Start with pen and paper
If my goal is to focus in on what I'm thinking about, pulling myself away from the computer and putting pen to paper does a better job than anything digital has been able to provide me.
sethetter | 5 years ago | on: Start with pen and paper
sethetter | 5 years ago | on: Start with pen and paper
The advantage is being clear from potential distractions. A lack of "features" providing a direct line of focus on what you're writing.
Apologies if that wasn't clear from the article!
sethetter | 5 years ago | on: Start with pen and paper
I've ditched pen and paper in the past because it was too slow for me. Over time I've realized that desire to "go fast" can be good in some contexts, and bad in others. Slowing down with pen and paper does a much better job of clarifying and directing my thoughts.
sethetter | 5 years ago | on: Start with pen and paper
Absolutely true, this article is generally a reminder for people (like myself) who can struggle with attention and are a little too easily pulled into things once I'm engaged with a screen.
I try to keep my notifications groomed appropriately, but I also have many allowed through thanks to work. I can groom all I want, but a computer is always going to offer more distractions than paper.
sethetter | 5 years ago | on: Vue.js Creator Evan You Interview
I deal with all of these things as well, but have pretty much decided to not go the anonymous route, because I would rather try to build that confidence in myself and embrace the accountability that comes along with it.
That said, I still don't comment or publish much online out of this same anxiety. /shrug. It's a work in progress :)
sethetter | 6 years ago | on: Book Review: All Therapy Books
I worry about this a lot too. We tend to make sense of the world through the stories we apply to our experience, but with unreliable memories and a desire to find a story that fits what we want to think, confirmation bias even about our own identities leads us to false conclusions.
sethetter | 6 years ago | on: Show HN: Openring, a free and decentralized network of blogs
sethetter | 8 years ago | on: American Equity
The problem that's trying to be solved by this is legitimate, but I don't see much value here beyond it sounding a bit clever. There are ideas out there already that aren't making headway for the same reasons this idea wouldn't.
sethetter | 8 years ago | on: Ask HN: What are your long-term goals?
As for professional goals, I'm often too aware of the fact that new information over time causes me to change my goals, but that's a natural part of the process and I try not to resist that. Instead I just try to make sure I'm learning and growing in some way or another.
One struggle I've had along the way is balancing what I choose to learn about between what I think will make me more employable or better at my day-to-day work and what I am genuinely interested in. Trying to lean more towards the latter, it's much more rewarding and generally still pays off career-wise.