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Title should note that this is a 2015 post.

Then there are the realities of an enterprise context with multiple teams/programs of varying pedigree.

TFA is fine for a bounded context. Don't add another abstraction layer Just Because.

But past the nicely bounded context, hiding some detail could be really, really helpful.


Is this fair?

Linux is to *BSD as

VHS was to Betamax.


At one time this was an interesting comparison... but now Linux has gotten so much development that even if FreeBSD was Betamax and Linux VHS (in the past)... I would say that Linux is now DVD ... and FreeBSD still remains betamax.

Don't get me wrong, FreeBSD is simple, elegant, consistent and well manicured. It seems to have picked up some pace again. I'm rooting for it.


Indeed, there is no shame in being a dirt-simple system that Just Works.

Likely is has a good place at the low end.

In enterprise mode, you want something like an AWS to hide the pain of those large-scale details that Linux is bringing.


> “Although I firmly disagree with the Court’s holding today, the decision might not substantially constrain a President’s ability to order tariffs going forward,” Kavanaugh wrote, “because numerous other federal statutes authorize the President to impose tariffs and might justify most (if not all) of the tariffs at issue in this case—albeit perhaps with a few additional procedural steps that IEEPA, as an emergency statute, does not require.”

https://www.scotusblog.com/2026/02/supreme-court-strikes-dow...


Shakespeare is a definite barrier.

I normally don't use a "voice" in my head when reading, but doing so is invaluable when reading Shakspeare. If I can't "hear" what I'm reading, it's much harder to parse.

> Most of my past side projects would take me a few minutes or hours to build with Claude Code. Today, they’re not worth talking about.

What, were the vibe coded in COBOL?

That is: I don't understand why the use of Claude Code itself renders them unworthy of discussion.


Form follows function, friends.

"Climate Change" implies that some sort of "constant climate" is even attainable, irrespective of desirable.

It doesn't; that's kind of a first-glance reading of the phrase without really thinking about it.

Something can said to change from a certain standard even if it wasn't perfectly constant to begin with. For example, if I always kept my house at 65-75 degrees for the past year, and now it's 85 degrees inside, I could certainly say that the temperature in my house recently changed and gotten warmer. That might lead me to check whether my AC's working, rather than say "well I guess the temperature has never really been constant, and 85 is within the range of possible non-constant temperatures, so everything's perfectly normal and nothing has changed."


Your analogy doesnt work, becaue the earth has been warmer than it is now several times in the past. so the increased temperature is within the range of normal temperatures.

The problem is not that the earth is warming, it is that it is warming at an artificially increased rate.


The rate of warming is a problem (i.e.: it determines what generations of humans are going to see this), but the major problem is the warming itself, or rather the change.

We (humanity) have gotten comfortable with the way things are, and a change in that is going to mean that things are going to change for us, and we don't like change. Most of our biggest cities are all close to the coast and will be subject to massive flooding in the next 100 years (if not sooner). Much of those same large population centers are also fairly close to being too hot for general survival (without aggressive AC). Our agriculture is all setup for the temperatures we have now, and the rain patterns we are used to. So we are going to have to change both where we live, and how we grow our food (location and probably strains as well).

Global warming is (almost) definitely not going to destroy all life on earth, but many of the forecasts are in extinction-level for most of the large animals. So life in general will continue, and probably humanity (since we are so good at making environment for ourselves), but the (eventual) changes are going to make the world very different, in ways that we are not going to like.


The warming is definitely not the problem (for the earth itself), only for the human race of which I care very little for.

Many different groups of large animals have lived and died off over the ages. It will happen again many times after humans are gone.

I personally welcome nuclear war and anything else which will help wipe out the human race. In a few million years the earth will move on to its next rulers and we will be a distant memory.


> I personally welcome nuclear war and anything else which will help wipe out the human race

If you hate humanity, you hate yourself, and that is a miserable way to live. Reprogram your brain, by repetition, it works, and you can find joy.


I live in the least impactful way possible. I guarantee you my impact on the earth is less then 99.99999% of the population, and I live a very happy life. Im just not scared of it ending, becasue I know when humanity is gone then the earth will have a big future of succesful evolution.

Not everything has to be doom and gloom. Your life and the planet is what you make of it.


> and we don't like change

Oh, hogwash. It's not the change as such; rather, lack of control of the change, that causes the blowback.

Thus, the overarching question is: "Who drives the bus?"


It's not meant as a perfect analogy for global warming, but rather an illustration of how a constant state isn't necessary for something to be said to be "changing", which was OP's claim.

The goalposts are that way --->

Only with an excessively literal interpretation.

If I pick up your house and drop it two streets over, that could be accurately described as a "location change" of your house. This is still true despite the fact that your house naturally moves some centimeters per year due to tectonic plates shifting around.

Similarly, when global average temperatures saw long term trends of a fraction of a degree of change per millennium, then suddenly started changing at multiple degrees per century, it's pretty reasonable to call that "climate change" despite the fact that it was not completely constant before.


It implies change over a couple human lifetimes. Change faster than has ever occurred before, and due to human activity.

It doesnt really imply that though does it. It just means the climate is changing. IMO this is why there was a big pushback against it for a long time, the term used to describe it does not infer anything wrong.

> IMO this is why there was a big pushback

No the pushback is because of money. The words don't matter when so much money is at stake.


Im refering to pushback of regular people who deny climate change like they do any other conspiracy theory.

Why did regular people start thinking of climate change as a "conspiracy theory" in the first place? Money.

Lol, people who believe in conspiracy theories make them up about everything.

Aliens visiting and walking amongst us, building the pyramids etc? I guess the reason is just money /s


Do half the voters believe in aliens building pyramids?

And in any case, I assume that conspiracy theory was lucrative for whoever wrote the book or made the film about it.


And you're just like the deniers who pick apart irrelevant things, and then smugly smile.

In particular, anything more extensive than wrapping Maduro is going to be politically infeasible for Trump with the mid-terms looming.

> You don't get to claim you invented it

Re-inventing the wheel is completely in order, so long as one makes the wheel more round.


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