- 222 points
- > We are now building a new product focused on agentic development
This is sad. It seems innovation has all but stopped for IDEs intended for a human as the primary driver.
- There's more to life than GDP and "free speech".
- Noah's Automatic Reference Counter
- soulJaboy Script
- I like LLM stuff sometimes. But it's too obnoxious, over-eager, loud and incorrect by default. I wish it were modal and I could have an entirely AI-free "normal" mode for when I know what I'm doing, and then enable all the AI crap when I actually want it.
- Same here in London.
- They'll all sink when they crash in to the dumped Lime bike reef (purchased from China)
- I thought it was going to be about the shell
- Sizes tend to be a lot smaller. One poster above said a large soda in the USA is almost one litre! In the UK it's roughly half that size at 500ml.
As the sugar level is directly proportionate to the overall volume, it can be quite surprising how much sugar there is when you aren't used to such massive servings.
- Ok cool, this bodes well for my "disposing of household waste by dropping a nuclear bomb on it in Central Park" startup
- This doesn't seem like a very sensible policy. There are a great many harms that once done, cannot be undone.
- We have always been at war with Eurasian beavers (Castor fiber).
- I had a horrible time with Localstack. It's very similar to AWS but not exactly the same, so you hit all kinds of annoying edges and subtle bugs or differences and you're basically just doing multi-cloud at that point. The same kinds of problems you encounter with slightly inaccurate mocks in automated testing.
The better solution in my experience is to create an entirely different account to your production environments and just deploy things there to test. At least that way you're dealing with the real SQS, S3, etc, and if you have integration problems there, they're actually real things you need to fix for it to work in prod - not just weird bandaids to make it work with Localstack too.
- > Software teams at apple really need to get their act together.
WatchOS 26 has rendered my Apple Watch almost useless. It's gone from lasting a whole day including 2 cycling 'workouts' for my commute and the occasional lunch time run (or gym session before work) to now being at 40% battery by the time I make my mid-morning coffee and dead before I get home.
I don't use most of the 'smart' features anyway - I'm mostly using the fitness features - so I'll probably switch to a Garmin at some point.
- if the language or std lib already allows for chaining then pipes aren't as attractive. They're a much nicer alternative when the other answer is nested function calls.
e.g.
So this:
To your example:take(sorted(filter(map(xs, x => x \* 2), x => x > 4)), 5)
is a marked improvement to me. Much easier to read the order of operations and which args belong to which call.xs |> map(x => x \* 2) |> filter(x => x > 4) |> sorted() |> take(5) - Often mine is relatively empty on arrival and I fill it with wines and other souvenirs to take home
- why do you need one? I see a lot of "edc" stuff online where people seem to carry knives and tools with them everywhere they go. I've never found a need to do so and never been caught out in a situation where I would have benefitted from a knife.
- Disney characters work too, from what I hear.
It's because English has no (or very few - I can't think of any) words that begin with the same phoneme.
That's just what happens with loan words. Japanese loaned "Arbeit" (アルバイト) from German and they also pronounce it "wrong".