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Cake day: February 19th, 2024

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  • we’ll probably get a win 12 that is less good than win 10, but better than win 11,

    I wouldn’t count on it. MS is moving away from selling desktop-stuff and towards selling cloud stuff (think azure and office356) and consulting. That’s why they changed their attitude towards linux (think wsl and c# for linux) and open-source (think github). MS wants companies to use open-source tools (preferably written in c#) and deploy them to azure with the help of MS-consultants.

    Enshittifying windows is a step in that direction. For example: The more people have a MS-Account, the easier it is to sell office356. That’s why they pressure windows-user into making MS-Accounts.

    MS knows that desktop is dying.








  • ============ Top 5: =============== HasThisTypePatternTriedToSneakInSomeGenericOrParameterizedTypePatternMatchingStuffAnywhereVisitor: 97
    AbstractAnnotationConfigDispatcherServletInitializer: 52
    AbstractInterruptibleBatchPreparedStatementSetter: 49
    AbstractInterceptorDrivenBeanDefinitionDecorator: 48
    GenericInterfaceDrivenDependencyInjectionAspect: 47

    ============ Factories: ===============
    DefaultListableBeanFactory$DependencyObjectFactory
    ObjectFactoryCreatingFactoryBean
    SimpleBeanFactoryAwareAspectInstanceFactory
    SingletonBeanFactoryLocator$BeanFactoryGroup
    ConnectionFactoryUtils$ResourceFactory
    DefaultListableBeanFactory$DependencyProviderFactory
    ObjectFactoryCreatingFactoryBean$TargetBeanObjectFactory
    JndiObjectFactoryBean$JndiObjectProxyFactory
    DefaultListableBeanFactory$SerializedBeanFactoryReference
    AbstractEntityManagerFactoryBean$SerializedEntityManagerFactoryBeanReference
    BeanFactoryAspectInstanceFactory
    SingletonBeanFactoryLocator$CountingBeanFactoryReference
    TransactionAwarePersistenceManagerFactoryProxy$PersistenceManagerFactoryInvocationHandler
    AbstractEntityManagerFactoryBean$ManagedEntityManagerFactoryInvocationHandler

    https://gist.github.com/thom-nic/2c74ed4075569da0f80b


  • the fact that a system eventually becomes complex and flawed is not due to engineering failures - it is inherent in the nature of changing systems

    it is not. It’s just that there will be some point, where you need significant effort to keep the systems structure up to the new demands {1}. I find the debt-metaphor is quite apt [2]: In your scenario the debt accumulates until it’s easier to start fresh. But you can also manage your debt and keep going indefinitily. But in contrast to financial debt, paying of technical debt is much less obvious. First of all it is pretty much impossible to put any kind of exact number on it. On the other hand, it’s very hard to tell what you actually should do to pay it off. (tangent: This is why experienced engineers are worth so much: (among other things) they have seen how debt evolves over time, and may see the early signs).

    [1] https://tidyfirst.substack.com/p/the-openclosedopen-principle

    [2] https://blog.pragmaticengineer.com/tech-debt/



  • bort@sopuli.xyztoComics@lemmy.ml*Permanently Deleted*
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    3 months ago

    yes.

    also employees don’t need to have a shitty job to survive.

    Now people have to decide between “doing a shitty job” and “starving”. With UBI people can choose between “doing a shitty job” and “chilling at home”. So if employers want their shitty job to be done, they will actually have to make it worth it (either by increasinge wages, or by making the job less shitty).

    in other words: good jobs will get subsidized by UBI. Shitty jobs will compete with UBI