I'd like to see any evidence of openai concretely saying what chatgpt is for.
If I had the credibility to be on one of these shows I'd definitely give the editors a challenge.
Nice to hear you mention this warm spot, too
a deficiency of tractors in the training data
If Books Could Kill back with Hanania's piece of work https://pod.link/1651876897/episode/afe6b965e80359c1edbb86f78bde3997
opening line "This book's so fucking stupid, I regret choosing it"
Looking forward to giving it a read
it ignores her eyes THE WHOLE TIME!
it's like if all browser bugs were like IE6 bugs that only happened sometimes because you have a float after an inline element that contains the letter c, or sometims b, somewhere in the dom.
it's like little toy tugboats trying to steer the titanic around icebergs
i wonder if it has nudity
it's all so anti-precision
Is it absurd that the maker of a tech product controls it by writing it a list of plain language guidelines? or am I out of touch?
well this fucken sucks. I was rooting for the dude and his projects.
i'll put myself out there - here's a receipt from 06~07 https://web.archive.org/web/20070512035940cs_/http://www.toyota.com.au/toyota/main/css/elements.css
we were a team of 5 devs including me. We weren't tribed off into separate areas of concern, we all knew the whole project back to front, and (maybe not the most clever move) managed without version control by always being aware which part we were working on. Cos, ya know, communication is easy when you are 5 people sitting in a group.
Don't give me shit about the complexity of the UI in modern apps either. We were dealing with a huge collection of brochure style pages that had plenty of variations. We kept all that css under 500kb. We could achieve the bland flatness of modern uis under 100kb easily. No fucking doubt.
Modularity also allows for code reuse. It increases maintainability.
another thing to think about is how this was not invented by frontend frameworks. We did it fine pre-SPAs and pre-preprocessors. It was part of the architecture and strategy. The hard work that allowed us to essentially reskin entire, very complex, projects every couple of years
I know this sounds like old man shit, but I'll die on this hill. It's a significant fundamental attitude shift
I remember when we used to write our name in our css files because we wanted to, not because our ssh key enforced it for auditability
I love when someone argues against something that is arguing against everything they use in their argument
praise the circumstances that enable the scourge of b2b saas products imposed on employees at the collaboration factory