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Could you give examples of the modern frameworks that you have in mind?

Why would you need LibreOffice to write in Markdown? That would be, like, one of the slowest Markdown editors out there.

Are you sure ? It would be faster than most electron based editors

Open .docx file, save as Markdown to nicely preserve things like headings, bold, etc. I moderately frequently have reason to want to go .docx to .md because I have a lot of ediing/rewriting to do and I'd rather work in Emacs than LibreOffice Writer.

How about opening Word documents and being able to save them to Markdown in one click? That's super useful to me.

To copy/paste LLM outputs with maintaining format.

> Why is this an international movement? Suddenly, simultaneously, all over the Western world?

Sometimes kids hurt themselves through the use of the internet. And their parents lash out to blame someone [0]. And mainstream media pick up these stories. And the worry spreads. And more and more adults of voting age say that yeah, it's only reasonable to protect the kids from that internet monster, because kids are trusting and vulnerable, and won't somebody please think of the children. And they do not push back against age restriction campaigns. And so it goes...

As for the Western world, it generally moves in lockstep, doesn't it?

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0024x58


So where are those big protests and public calls for online age verification? It all seems to be coming from the very top. I have not heard of anyone that actually want any of this. The fact that politicians are to be excluded from European regulations is only a proof that it's all a scheme to kill what remains of privacy and freedom of speech online.

First, this isn't age verification. At least the California one isn't.

Second, where are the protests to keep kids out of bars?


Is it a style like his that LLMs have been copying lately?

"It was cold out, but none of us were cold."

"In that moment, there was nothing to do. Nothing to improve. Nothing to fix. It was perfect."

"We’ve all seen it. Clear as day, you can see the goal post at the top: self-actualization. LFG! It’s time to journal and 80/20 myself! Pass me a shaman and some modafinil. That’s the mission. That’s the point. Right? But hold on."

"Because at the end of the day—and at the end of a Montana night—the point was never yourself. It was never the pyramid. It was never the optimization. It was the people around the fire."


First impression is that's really his writing. He's a professional writer. Thing is it's like trying to be a professional writer.

very different from actually good writing, as in literature. art.

Nothing against Mr. Ferris, just very clearly happen to come across these "i'm trying really hard at good writing" styles in influencer type blogs.


> First impression is that's really his writing. He's a professional writer. Thing is it's like trying to be a professional writer.

I am not suggesting that this isn't his writing.

What I was wondering was whether these are the elements of style that LLMs have picked up.


Doubtful that any one dude could influence the model to that extent, unless deliberately weighted. Then again i don't know what the hell i'm talking about.

From what i gather, openAi particular flavor of response is from reinforcement learning, these PMs are intentionally gamifying it. just today literally every reply was followed with "… want me to show you the one trick you can implement to avoid…"

was gross.


He’s been writing for decades now so that should be easy to verify. I’m sure LLMs are optimized for engaging online writing that’s easy to digest

When my head-voice read "But hold on", I literally heard in my head the "record scratch" associated with comedy movie trailers from the 1990s and 2000s.

> it is a lot nicer and I am honestly wondering if Scrum is even necessary when you're only with 4-5 devs.

Scrum is so woefully misunderstood.

It makes sense for small teams (yes, those 4-5 devs), if — and that's a big if — they work together on a single product. It is intended for developers to coordinate with each other, and also provides feedback loops for reality checks and for improvement of collaboration.

If those 4-5 developers work independently from one another, don't have to coordinate, don't need business to tell them what, out of various options, is the most important thing to work on right now, and don't need feedback from users to correct them along the way, then of course they don't need scrum.


Yeah, it's basically just formalized rules for communication, and I've been on teams where it worked great

I think it's awful when people follow it slavishly -- you chuck out anything that doesn't fit your team. And yeah, in the example you gave, it's a terrible fit lol

I have some stakeholders that do not know what they want and can't define it, so in desperation I dragged them thorough making fucking user stories -- user stories --and oh my god they loved it lol

They immediately started trying to apply it to everything too. I have regrets.


> So I built a real website. That was two weeks ago.

Is Google supposed to have drastic updates to its index over 2 weeks?


The whole project is a month old, and two weeks were more than enough for Google to rank the fake site first, so yes?

There is significant first-mover advantage in the index, especially when the public is finding the initial result to be good enough to satisfy their questions.

Google doesn't care more about authoritative answers than the public does; the public is one of Google's signals for good-quality results.


Back when they were good at being a web search, yes.

It usually takes one or two days for them to start ranking new pages. They're fast!

Not these days in my experience. Maybe 5-10 years ago. I imagine Google is so indundated with so much spam, and AI slop they are being more discrimantory on what to crawl and index

Yes, computers are pretty fast. But also don't ignore history, the website shouldn't have been ranked higher than the github repo in the first place

Uh? Yes?

What was it specifically about the style that stood out as incongruous, or that hindered comprehension? What was it that made you stumble and start paying close attention to the style rather than to the message? I am looking at the two examples, and I can't see anything wrong with them, especially in the context of the article. They both employ the same rhetorical technique of antithesis, a juxtaposition of contrasting ideas. Surely people wrote like this before? Surely no-one complained?

The problem is less with the style itself and more that it's strongly associated with low-effort content which is going to waste the readers time. It would be nice to be able to give everything the benefit of the doubt, but humans have finite time and LLMs have infinite capacity for producing trite or inaccurate drivel, so readers end up reflexively using LLM tells as a litmus test for (lack of) quality in order to cut through the noise.

You might say well, it's on the Cloudflare blog so it must have some merit, but after the Matrix incident...


I find it more amusing that the benchmarks claim 530 GB/s throughput on an M1 Pro which has a 200GB/s memory bandwidth. The 275 GB/s figure for chained transforms has the same problem.

I suspect the benchmarks, if not most of this project, was completely vibecoded. There are a number of code smells, including links to deleted files, such as https://github.com/jasnell/new-streams/blob/ddc8f8d8dda31b4b... an inexistent REFACTOR-TODO.md

The presence of COMPLETENESS-ANALYSIS.md (https://github.com/jasnell/new-streams/blob/main/COMPLETENES...) isn't reassuring either, as it suggests the "author" of this proposal doesn't sufficiently understand the completeness of his own "work."


These AI signals will die out soon. The models are overusing actual human writing patterns, the humans are noticing and changing how they write, the models are updated, new patterns emerge, etc, etc. The best signal for the quality of writing will always be the source, even if they are "just" prompting the model. I think we can let one incident slide, but they are on notice.

> You might say well, it's on the Cloudflare blog so it must have some merit

I would instead say that it is written by James Snell, who is one of the central figures in the Node community; and therefore it must have some merit.


Never heard of them either. But the link in the title is to Jack Dorsey's tweet. Now him I have heard of. Didn't know he was involved in that company too.

Here's what opening that site without an ad blocker feels like:

https://images2.imgbox.com/cc/f9/gX6o2Jfu_o.png

Must be very conducive to reading


That is both a comical and sad state of affairs.

Perhaps you would like the archived page instead if you don't have an adblocker, though I recommend installing one.

https://archive.ph/WeRN4


For some reason these archive.something websites through me into an endless captcha loop on all of my devices. Doesn't happen with any other website.


I have had ad blockers for so long that I forgot how the unfiltered web looks like. I don’t know how people do it.


Those people pay for our web.


It's kind of like how people who buy lottery tickets help pay for our schools.

I appreciate their sacrifice

I think complaining about ads on a website is reasonable if you're paying to access the website.

If one day it becomes possible to host a website for free, it would also be reasonable to complain about ads on it.


I think it's okay to complain about the design and presentation of the ads even on a free service. It's unreasonable to expect sites not to have some form of monetization of users that are not going to pay for the content, but that monetization should be reasonable and thoughtful. Of course, we can simply avoid that site altogether.


It is always fair game to complain about shit web design on sites you others are expected to use or read. The ads presented are part of that.

> but grammar privilege? That's certainly a first.

Here is what I don't understand, and what is not addressed in the post.

After you get a response from your boss that reads, "K let circle back nxt week bout it . thnks", doesn't this free you up to relax your style to your comfort level? If you see that your addressee doesn't seem to care for meticulous style, is there much point in stressing over it (and thus, in continuing with the privilege narrative)?


Unfortunately there is a double standard at play. When people see a sloppy email from a powerful person, they think “they must be so busy that they don’t have time to check grammar”. But when it comes from a low-level employee they think “oh they must be careless or uneducated”.


100%. "Needs more attention to detail."


except it's sort of true and a reasonable assumption to make? Just as when a master painter makes something that looks "sloppy" to the layman, one immediately assumes there is some deep artistry behind it as opposed to poor technique, whereas when a child does it, one does not extend the same charitable attitude.


Sure I think there's some truth the that. You've gotta learn the rules first to know when it's ok break the rules. Somebody with a lot of experience should be able to judge how their message will be received, and what amount of effort is "good enough". Whereas someone with less workspace experience may lack such judgement, and is probably better off erring on the side of "too good" rather than "not good enough".

But it's definitely also very much tied to status, power, and privilege. The same people who have no qualms about firing off a sloppy email to their subordinates often spend a lot more effort on emails to their bosses. But even this discrepancy is justified, I think, given that a manager represents their subordinates to the higher ups. And the potential consequences of a bad impression or misunderstanding are more severe when communicating up the chain of command.


No, I read that they know they have the power so they don't care, and I'm not powerful enough to not. It's like listening to your boss's boss talking about his heli-skiing adventures.


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