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> "I'm only at 53 tools at the moment."

Sorry if this sounds overly critical, but what do you mean "only at 53 tools?" Was there a memo I missed about a competition to host LLM-built tools?


Maybe you’re ignoring the context that he’s replying to the author and saying “only” because he’s comparing his 53 with the author’s 150+

I read the article, and I saw Simon's note about the 150+ HTML apps, I just don't get it.

There’s nothing to really get. There’s no deep meaning to the numbers or the comparison

Same. I was on academic probation freshman year. Managed to recover and graduate. But I didn’t get diagnosed with ADHD/ASD until I was 38.


I really enjoyed how your words made me _feel._ They encouraged me to "keep fighting the good fight" when it comes to avoiding social media, et. al.

I do Vibe Code occasionally, Claude did a decent job with Terraform and SaltStack recently, but the words ring true in my head about how AI weakens my thinking, especially when it comes to Python or any programming language. Tread carefully indeed. And reading a book does help - I've been tearing through the Dune books after putting them off too long at my brother's recommendation. Very interesting reflections in those books on power/human nature that may apply in some ways to our current predicament.

At any rate, thank you for the thoughtful & eloquent words of caution.


Doesn't Python weaken your thinking about how computers actually work?


You could make the same argument for any language. It still requires you to think and implement the solution yourself, just at a certain level of abstraction.


It may - but it doesn't weaken your ability to think computationally


you mean by calling arrays "lists"?


Curious what age you started letting them ride the tube on their own? I’m in London as well and we’re starting to have the “walk to school” conversation but it is still early days and a 15 minute jaunt so not nothing.


for travel to school was 10, but was direct no changes and only a short walk the other end. then for social etc from around 12, by 13 travelling all over london on trains, buses, tubes, albeit always with friends, then alone probably 14


Mysterious AND important.


Have you looked at AMD’s financials? They are fine. Intel is massively fucking up in the CPU space and they’re benefiting from that in a big way. Yes, they’re late to GPUs, but every percentage of market share they do make inroads on is raising the boat. They’re not sinking by any means and there are more revenue streams for AMD than just CPUs/GPUs.


> Disoriented by the speed of modern times, Europeans and Americans suffered from record-high rates of anxiety and a sense that our inventions had destroyed our humanity.

Were they wrong?


If they're right, our humanity was destroyed long before any of us were born.

So... how would we know?


Maybe "destroyed" is too strong a word. I would say "suppressed" is better, at least for some people.

Spend 3 days in deep nature, or meditate etc, and you can uncover your humanity....


Yeah our lives are mostly noise, we flip between working and "chilling" with virtually no inbetween idleness anymore.

Go look at the clouds, or better the stars, for some time. But don't do it tool long because you might start wondering why the fuck you're wasting so much time and energy fulfilling other people's TODO lists


> Go look at the clouds, or better the stars, for some time. But don't do it tool long because you might start wondering why the fuck you're wasting so much time and energy fulfilling other people's TODO lists

I tend to agree. I’d like to live a different lifestyle than the one I have today, but that would require rolling back the clock about 20 years at least and learning 1,000 lessons I have now that I wish I’d known back then. Don’t marry the wrong person. Figure out how to marry the right person. Have kids with the right person. But also you don’t HAVE to have kids. Avoid divorce. Avoid debt. Know myself, truly.

Now I’m on the “hedonic treadmill” and struggling to get off. I’m reading The Happiness Trap, it is good so far. But there are bills to pay, mouths to feed, and so it goes. The TODO list keeps growing, and I can only keep doing the job in front of me.

And yet, it is hard not to read this article and feel a bit, what’s the word, perhaps melancholic, about the direction we’re heading as a species. I’ll raise my son the best I can, and be the best person that I can be. And maybe build some stuff to leave the world a little better than I found it. None of us asked to be here. But given that we’re here it makes sense to try and do what we can to make things better. For now that means commenting on HackerNews about the current state of affairs and lamenting the direction humanity is going in. We’re burning the planet, pursing instant gratification, and “late-stage capitalism” is the status quo we live with. All we can do is what we can do. It is easy to think “if you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em,” but I’ll keep hoping for a better world where we take advantage of each other less and do a bit more to help each other though this thing called life.


Yeah I think people might be downplaying the fact that some different choices on automobiles could have led to drastically different outcomes with respect to the health of cities, suburbs, and communities

I mean sure, people still had babies, and the babies (us) adapted to the new environment, viewing it as "inevitable"

But that doesn't mean we can't make better choices around governance and technology going forward, or that we're not making bad choices right now


Just to add a small example of what I mean, I stumbled across this video yesterday:

How New Jersey Turned Into A Giant Suburb

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zKgK7Z-yu-4

Talking about how NJ is one of the wealthiest states in the nation, but also has striking poverty

I'm not sure what exactly could have changed, and of course plans are different than outcomes. But to me it's clear there is huge leverage around certain choices, especially regarding automobiles, and they are worth being thoughtful about

---

There's also the question of why public transportation from Manhattan to the 3 neighboring airports is surprisingly thin ... I'm pretty sure that a large part of the answer is lobbying by taxi companies that stood to profit


It started before cars. But cars have devastating effect on how we built our environment, which has negative impact on social life, health and climate change.


I would never wish to live like the average human 100 years+ ago. Most people lived in squalor, died easily, toiled their entire lives.

We live in absolute luxury and comfort today compared to pretty much any point in history.

It gets very tiresome hearing people complain about how hard they have it these days, which is just factually untrue. What I actually think the problem is, is apathy. People are looking to blame anything else for how they feel in life, rather than take ownership.

I see so many times people complaining about how fast modern life is, and yet they have a very real choice to go and live mostly off grid. There are communities all around the world where pro-active people have had the same thoughts and feelings, and actually had the guts to do something about it. This is all available to you right now, with the added benefit that it isn't even permanent if you don't like it (unlike 100+ years ago when there was no choice).

(waits for the downvotes)


Maybe.

Or maybe everything is cause and effect, there is no free will, and what people feel or do is completely predetermined and outside their ability to change.

Flip a coin.


Humanity had its inherent problems well before any technology was invented.


Yes but technology exacerbated them. The great wars of the 20th century killed 10s of millions of people, 10x more per year than any other conflict.


Maybe, but what about per capita? More people participating equals more people killed, but at the same time i dont think you need high technology to engage in a mass slaughter, swords work just as well.


A sword can kill one person at a time. A gun can kill 10 people at a time. A bomb can kill a hundred people. A nuclear bomb can kill thousands.

You can certainly commit mass slaughter with less technology. But then you need either a) more people to do the slaughtering, or b) more time. Technology makes it possible for a few people to slaughter many people in very little time.


Even ancient wars wiped out whole peoples. Like the Carthaginians.


We could kill the same number of people today with a single conventional air strike.


Percentage of population-wise, I presume we are killing far fewer people.


I don't presume that and I also don't see what difference it makes.


Man-made climate change is also new experience for humanity.


> The whole point of college* is to get a desk job and to avoid manual labor.

* most colleges


This is a microcosm for enshittification writ large. If no one cares about your individual complaint you’re fucked. Only in numbers do consumers wield any power. The 48 Laws of Power says, “what is unseen counts for nothing.” So make it seen. Make bullshit like this visible. And vote with your dollars. Better yet sue the smoke detector company. Make them demonstrate their flawless false positive rate in court. Bullshit, grifting companies keep getting away with stuff like this because there are no consequences. Make them feel it where it hurts the most: their bank account.


I have a startup idea for you my friend…


"enshittification writ large."

Good grief! We are actually going to have a shit list now:

Hertz, Hyatt are the first two entries in this historic development..


Paging DoNotPay.com bots..


“Heavy sigh.”


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