@NotionDevs@NotionHQ Hey can you please check if sorting is working in your data sources API? I'm triggering the request below and not getting the most recently updated item at the top, or bottom, it's somewhere in the middle.
It's so bad that I feel if I openly keep advocating for it as the right tool for the job in certain cases my credibility in this space will be questioned
I'm one of the only pro-JavaScript engineers at my current company, and it's getting increasingly difficult to almost impossible to advocate for it when there are so many security vulnerabilities popping up in the npm ecosystem all the time
@sivalabs@ryanflorence seems to be building a new framework (Remix 3) with a lot of AI according to his tweets, so apparently it's doable? We'll see what happens over time
@AdamTornhill The hash table approach runs all branches of logic regardless of what key you need; the switch approach only runs the case needed.
That difference might be critical, I wouldn't advertise either as superior to the other, depends on the circumstances
@VividSeats I just purchased tickets to a show, I got the order confirmation email, money left my bank account, but the app and the website both show "No active orders". What happened? Is this normal?
@ThePrimeagen Why did this become so popular all the sudden this past few weeks? It's been around for a while but I've seen more content online about it lately specifically
@godofprompt The company I work for wouldn't consider even for a second giving AI this much power to our internal technical footprint, and we're nowhere close to the size or impact Amazon has on society.
Feels ironic to me, it should be the other way around
Don't get me wrong, AI is a huge productivity boost, but how about we let experienced engineers be the judge and decide when it is optimal to use vs when it is not?
Enforcing and pushing its usage this way is just a recipee for disaster.
🚨This is so much worse than you think.
> Amazon laid off 30,000 engineers. Then told the ones who survived that their bonuses depend on how much they use AI to write code. So engineers started using AI to push changes faster, because their paycheck literally depends on it.
> And then the site went down. Multiple times. Amazon's own shopping app broke because AI-generated code got pushed to production.
> So what did management do? Did they take responsibility for forcing engineers to use AI they weren't ready for? Did they admit they created the problem?
No. They called a mandatory meeting and blamed the engineers.
> AI is powerful enough to replace engineers, we've been saying that all day. But it's not powerful enough to replace quality control AND common sense all at once.
Amazon proved that executives who don't understand AI are more dangerous than the AI itself.
And every company rushing to do the same thing is watching this and learning absolutely nothing.
Okay, my journey with @EffectTS_ starts today. Will go through the docs sequentially and start building something incrementally, let's see how it goes.