- I find these tools super awesome, but i never use them beyond trying them out once, because they don't usually come with coreutils or something like that.
Haven't found a way to use these tools in a user-local way.
For my own homemade tools, i put the binary in my dotfiles and they end up in .local/bin and i can use them by default. I can do that because I don't need to update them.
- I'd pay for news, even bad ones. I see it like a donation to the Red Cross or something.
My experience and reasons for not paying anymore are similar. Used to pay for The Guardian for some time, but when they started pestering me about a subscription renewal the whole thing felt a lot less classy. Now it suddenly was about me and not news anymore.
Me too: never again. I would pay for anonymous vouchers or similar where I'm not identifiable to the newspaper, though.
- I found I'm ok with the divide. Both can coexist and in our case it works.
I manage people and anecdotally I see engineers having collectively more output if they are in the office, and they do grow in seniority on average.
The remote folks produce sum-of-its-parts impact and do well, but grow slower and not as much.
More senior folks really benefit from WFH, they have similar performance, but I as the manager of the team miss out on a senior person training the junior folks.
We don't offer remote positions for junior candidates.
- Are you asking because you have the power to implement some of the missing features, or because you will tell me I don't actually need what i think i want.
1) i never could get password/autofill syncing between several devices working quickly and reliable as in chrome.
2) no app mode in Firefox
3) on desktop i don't like the UI and i would need to install userchrome stuff to "fix" it.
- You want to censor me because i have a different opinion than yours?
I assume you have good intentions and want to advocate for Firefox and have it have wider adoption. I want the same thing, but it's imo not enough that Chrome gets shittier (it doesn't in my opinion btw in terms of UX), Firefox needs to become better to win.
- You still need a tangible reason for switching. Maybe we can push, but Firefox would need to sustain the momentum and I don't see them doing it.
My pet peeves: sync and app mode. I don't want to switch at the moment, tried many times, but it doesn't stick for me. If i ask my my aunt to do that, and she dislikes it, she won't do it again and won't trust me anymore on top of that.
- I tried kagi with the free trial offer and liked it a lot. However, i was not converted to a paying customer.
I don't actually really know why. There is nothing technically that makes me hesitate. When my trial was over, and I stared at the form for my credit card I kinda went "nah I'm good. I'll go back to google for now, i can switch when i really need to". I never really needed to.
- I think this is a very valuable comment, and the replies don't do it justice.
I strongly agree from my own and my peers experience with the sentiment that latency from zero to running code is just higher in Rust than Python or Go. Obviously there are smart people around and they can compensate a lot with experience.
- Not convinced yet of AMD an Linux for mobile devices. Just sent back a T14s Gen 4 with Ryzen I wait for a long time because of power/stability issues (S2idle, sleep+wakeup problems, GPU, WiFi, ...).
I really hope AMD gets quality on par with Intel in this space. Maybe Framework did a better job than Lenovo, but I'm done experimenting for (going X1 Gen 11 now).
- The incentive for the company is also different depending if they sell subscriptions or credits/usage. Kagi doesn't have competition in the paid search so space so they shouldn't need to go the subscription route yet as a differentiator.
Using dark patterns like subscriptions at this point seems to me that kagi doesn't trust their product or its users.
- You are just describing a junior position (more or less).
Do you understand the business and can contribute to it? As SRE you can help save cost in production (harder to make money directly by building products or features). That's a way to a more senior position.
Can you automate the task you were given? can you use you new free time to identify where else you can save cost?
- Your main point was about salary negotiation (and I don't know much about that) but your example about interviewing is interesting to me:
> I spent a full day interview [...] and yet I thanked every single interviewer for their time, and told them how much I appreciate [...]
Where I work we became very sceptic about this trait in candidates, especially if someone is overdoing it. Then the suspicion rises whether they are overcomensating for another trait they believe about themselves.
I feel that being likable is table stakes and not something you would optimize for that much.
- Maybe it's too polarizing as GP phrased it, but my anecdotal experience with two of the items you mentioned is wait and see, and having some early investment to not miss anything. C++ is still the safer bet, esp if you factor in the long term non-technical aspects like reliably finding talent, onboarding, and so on.
My 2c: rust productivity seems to be behind that of C++ atm (which is not surprising given the different maturity).
- As an example: https://ibb.co/Wynn5Tg Subjectively(!) Firefox is cluttered and takes much more space than Chrome for itself. Unfocused tabs are hard for me to make out on Firefox.
I think that personally I'm a lost cause. Either give me Firefox in a Chrome's pelt or I stay with Chrome. And maybe that's good this way: Firefox should just focus on new users and make the best browser for "them".
- I find that condescending but I'm sure you didn't mean it that way and had good intentions asking that.
The problems I experienced that can be fixed in Firefox itself probably already got fixed.
My (personal) problem with Firefox is that functionally it's not Chrome and doesn't look/feel like it. The claimed non-functional improvements (privacy, freedom, ...) DON'T make up for the difference for me personally.
If Firefox looked and felt more or less exactly like Chrome for the functional parts then I would not have any problem switching for good. It's not at the moment, so this is what stops me from adoption.
I don't propose to change anything (you did). I was merely stating why I'm not on Firefox yet as a data point.
Can i run multiple PDSes with my own single identity to not give one provider exclusive power over access to "my" data?