A lot of complexity in software exists because someone didn't understand the problem correctly, built the wrong thing, and by the time anyone noticed, it was too entrenched to roll back. So it stayed. Then more got built on top of it. And now all of software is like that layers of accidental decisions calcified into "how things work."
Once an old man said,
"If your users need a 30-minute onboarding video, you've already lost."
We don't know who the old man was.
But he's probably right.
I have a genuine question. What if we go back in the time and we just observe the past? Will it change the past because if we observe a photon , it changes the state right?
i disagree on this
I think the flaw in this argument is treating autonomy as binary , The existence of a principal do not eliminate autonomy. more interesting is how much decision-making happens between the objective and the outcome
The real question is not if AI agent has a human principal. It is how much of the planning, reasoning, adaptation, and execution can be delegated.
i think autonomy is gradient not a 0 or 1 game
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@capital_3x@Inflectionin enables any product to ship voice agents, making digital experiences accessible to elderly and dyslexic users through natural voice interactions.
I use plain HTML, CSS, and JavaScript.
Every landing page I've built over the last 3 weeks has been shipped with this stack, hosted on Cloudflare Workers, and honestly, I'm pretty happy with the results.
@Bassmaster187@swpnldubey My question is around grep is easy available tool even after re directing multiple times it canβt figure out all of the changes
It's kind of tricky to build a Git replacement.
The hard part isn't storing changesβit's the ecosystem around it. Where do you host repositories? How do other developers collaborate? How do you handle remotes, permissions, branching, and integrations?
Most providers like GitHub and GitLab only speak Git. If you want compatibility, you end up mapping your system back to the Git interface anyway.
At that point, what's the advantage of building a new version control system?
A lean team moves faster and adapts quicker to new ideas because there's less noise in the room.
Most of the time, that noise doesn't even matter.
Nobody knows anything for certain, yet everyone wants to say something.