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it could also be common sense.. you live in a noisy city and you are wondering what the noise is.... maybe it could be the city itself? how about sleep in a different smaller town and then ask yourself the same question, you'll probably get a different answer.

I'm not sure if things are really that simple, at least from my personal experience. I think the quality of noise and noise floor can make a difference

Facebook the web site reminds me of a really bad implementation of MySpace. MySpace was better, even in 2003. There are hundreds of usability bugs that exist on various parts of the platform that for over a decade remain unfixed. For a company that has 78,000 employees, you would think one of them might want to dig in and fix the web interface bugs. What's weird is in the age of Claude Code, it would probably take one software engineer a week to fix all of them, so its really pure incompetence. I think they spend more time on automation around restricting the usage of the platform that they forgot about the user interface bugs that plague it.

Also, avoid using Meta Pay aka Facebook Payments, where a user can send a payment to another user via the Messenger app. Someone sent me money a few weeks ago, and a two weeks alter they still have the payment marked as "Completed" on the sending side, and "Cancelled" on the receiving side. I told the sender to just do a chargeback with their bank because Facebook basically stole the money. Don't use Meta Pay for sending payments to anyone. Then when you try to open a "case" about it, you call a call center in Indonesia and the people have no access to see anything about the transaction, they just send it up the chain, only to have an automated response telling you to do something that the web site doesn't even offer as an option. I don't think there is any humans in the loop, besides the Indonesian call center that has no access to any of what you're calling about.


What come to the UI bugs, I don’t think the users was never really in their focus in the sense of usability. Users are there only to make profit.

in 2002 I worked at an AT&T major datacenter and watched the NSA install all the black boxes in every rack, complete with a black curtain and armed guards while they did the project (St Louis). Before that it was still going on, it just wasnt so embedded like they did in 2002.

You are overdue to speak with Cindy Cohn, then

its the same reason a pervert sniffs a girls panties


linux and unix before it has been a pretty consistent interface for decades, especially since the introduction of X windows in the 1980's..


the authors reference to LLM's as "bullshit machines" is more true the less parameters you have trained in your model....as we scale up to trillions of parameters, add Mixture of Experts (MoE) architecture, this no longer is an accurate statement. Proof in point was yesterdays announcemnt of Mythos 5 model (10T parameters + MoE [1]) by anthropic where it seems to be so good at finding/exploiting vulnerabilities in source code that have been there for decades and only recently uncovered needs to be used to fix these critical vilnerabilities first before it gets released to the public, they even have a project called Glasswing [2] dedicated to letting people fix the thousands of vulnerabilities already found by the model before they release this model to the public, because it's so good at what it does... I think we're a little bit past the point of calling these models "bullshit machines" at this point...

[1] https://www.aimagicx.com/blog/claude-mythos-5-trillion-param...

[2] https://www.anthropic.com/glasswing


Well, Anthropic should let Aphyr try Mythos 5 for his Jepsen business, then.


I thought Alan Cox fixed all the TCP IP bugs in the early 1990s lol


Did Alan Cox work on tcp? I thought he was working on memory and stuff.

That's what the wiki says anyway: [1], and a publication with his name is about huge pages [2]

[1] https://wiki.freebsd.org/AlanCox

[2] https://www.usenix.org/legacy/events/osdi02/tech/full_papers...


Alan Cox of course worked on the TCP/IP stack:

"His involvement with Linux began in the early 1990s when he was working on a project that required a stable networking solution. This led him to discover Linux, which was still in its infancy at the time.

Contributions to Linux Kernel

Cox's contributions to the Linux kernel are extensive and far-reaching. He is best known for his work on the Linux networking stack, which was critical in making Linux a viable option for server environments. Cox identified and addressed numerous issues in the kernel's TCP/IP implementation, enhancing its performance and reliability." [0]

"For those not familiar with the Linux kernel contributors, Alan Cox wrote large parts of the networking stack, was the maintainer of the 2.2 branch, and was commonly considered the "second in command" to Linus Torvalds at one point: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Cox" [1]

"Alan started working on Version 0. There were bugs and problems he could correct. He put Linux on a machine in the Swansea University computer network, which revealed many problems in networking which he sorted out; later he rewrote the networking software. [2]

[0] https://machaddr.substack.com/p/kernel-chronicles-insights-a...

[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=8548738

[2] https://web.archive.org/web/20200923003028/https://www.swans...


Wrong Alan Cox for a kernel with the FreeBSD tcp stack from ~ 2000.


So, you're implying that there is a second person named Alan Cox from Swansea, Wales who worked on FreeBSD, not Linux? Where is your source for that? lol


You asked about Alan Cox, I said no, and provided links. You moved the goal posts to Swansea.

Alan Cox relevant to Mac is Alan Cox, professor(+etc) at Rice and well known FreeBSD contributor; no connection to Swansea, Wales, AFAIK. https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=z28ApZkAAAAJ&hl=en

I do see some networking stuff on there, but much after Apple forked tcp. I don't know that Apple took much memory management from BSD either. Most likely, neither Alan Cox is relevant to Mac.


The search filters and the user interface in general on YouTube is garbage. you guys need to go back to the drawing board. it really is almost impossible to find a video, you have to sort through hundreds of AI slop clickbait videos in order to get to the one that you're actually interested in finding.


whether people want to admit it or not, agent encoding is kind of the norm right now and I think the fear is the stories coming out of places like Block, Inc where they announced they fired 4,000 engineers a couple days ago because of what's the obvious truth today versus 6 months ago.... one expert software engineer can do the work of 20-40 people, so why do we need so many people? it's a hard pill to swallow, it's easier to claim that agentic coding doesn't work or that the code is sloppy and it doesn't work when in reality most companies are currently using it everyday, especially the large ones.


No fear. No claim that AI assisted programming is inherently bad.

The indications are that this instance of AI assisted programming is bad because of the launch post, the name, and the history of Claudeflare doing this before.


I agree with you, if you're already a competent engineer, your productivity only is improved by orders of magnitude by using coding agents that are at this point producing very good code as long as you give it the right prompts and you test your code and remove any bugs... if the code tests and all the bugs are removed, what you've got is a working product that is hard to argue that it doesn't work especially if there's been a lot of QA done on it and there's no bugs....


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