Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | vevoe's commentslogin

Yup yup basically this. Being consistent is great but I'll be pedantic and say the key is actually following up and then also being right.

As far as how to do it confidently? The same way you say "that is a tree" when you're looking at a tree. You're 100% sure you don't know, just say it. The rest is probably in your head. That's been my experience at least.


Is there somewhere I can read more about your setup/experience with your streaming site? I currently run a (legal :) streaming site but have it hosted on AWS and have been exploring moving everything over to a big server. At this point it just seems like more work to move it than to just pay the cloud tax.


Do a search for HeheStreams on your favorite search engine.

The technical bits aren’t all there, though, and there’s a plethora of noise and misinformation. Happy to talk via email though.


Will do, thank you!


I'd love to see that script, do you have a link?



No I feel the same way too. I'm on the max plan and I swear it has good days and bad days.


I'm not saying that Next.js is good or bad but we deploy our Next.js app in a docker container and it's never been an issue. I'm curious what issues you had?


It's been a year since I was on the project and have since forgotten. I remember it being related to configuring security and middleware with the granularity required by a high-security client. There were other things too that were very hard to configure as soon as you stepped off the Dockerfile template provided by Next.js documentation.


tbf I think that's already been happening for a while now


That makes sense to me. There's another post on the front page right now talking about shortening the work week (I haven't read it yet tbf, so I could be wrong about it's content) because of AI. People have been talking about shorter work weeks for a long time now, it just doesn't happen. What does happen is we get more done and the GDP goes even higher.


“Shortening the workweek” sounds pretty bad… some people will suggest literally anything before higher wages.


I think that in countries with longer workweeks, that would be an incredible thing. There was recently a story about Denmark raising the retirement age to 70. If you graduate college at 22 and work the average number of hours until age 70 in Denmark, that's the same as working until 59 in the US and 52 in Mexico. Shorter workweeks will almost certainly translate into longer careers.

(https://www.oecd.org/en/data/indicators/hours-worked.html Mexico 2226 hours/week, US 1804, Denmark 1394)


Real wages are going up all the time.


You can already take a job with a shorter work week or move a region or country where shorter work weeks are common.



I also moved away from Notion a while ago for being crazy slow. For personal note taking I use Obsidian, big fan of it.

For my dev team I recently moved us to eraser.io. Still in the early stages with it but it's working well enough for us atm.


Not sure. We're currently using GitLab wikis a lot, oddly enough.

Obsidian is nice but start time on mobile is bad too.


I second the Obsidian recommendation.


I've come across this library a lot but never used it. I did inherit a project that uses chakra-ui though and have very much enjoyed using it. This seems similar, has anyone used both and have a preference for one or the other?


I've always been afraid to use Ant because it's Chinese: https://github.com/ant-design

Not necessarily just because of CCP shenanigans, but also US ones (like if an administration suddenly decides to impose software import restrictions).

MUI is international (founded in France & UK: https://mui.com/about/), and Chakra is Nigerian (https://v2.chakra-ui.com/)

It saddens me that this matters in this day and age, but if you're adopting a UI kit for long-term corporate usage, it is worth considering...


I ended up moving away from Ant on a project a few years back. It frustrated me that troubleshooting with specific code snippets would often bring me to Chinese-only Github issues / etc.


Conversely, I've always wondered how the Chinese (or any non-native English speaker) feels about that... must be really hard to be a dev if you can't easily read & write help requests =/


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: