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It’s rather saddening to watch the death of the global internet. China was really ahead of the game I suppose.


china has shown a model that looks good to the increasingly authoritarian gov'ts in the west.

And as netizens, we need to be fighting back while there's still power vested in us. Cannot wait until the hammer falls (or the curtain drops or what have you).


I love the concept (and was going to hack something for myself).

I can’t get through onboarding. The main omnara command just exits complaining of a missing session id and doing “serve” asks you to set up sessions on a page that doesn’t exist?

Nit: why is pipx required if you’re using uv?


the missing session id might occur if you're not using a recent version of claude code! can you try updating your version of claude code and running "omnara" again?


This is nice but I really wish they’d just let me fork the damn thing already.


> It was hurtful to hear Google thought our site was of “little value” to the web.

I read some of the guides. Google is right that there’s little unique content here.

Perhaps this is the right tone for a letter to the FTC. I find it hard to sympathize with the author with this style (even though they are likely right that Google is killing the web)


“We advise on technology”

proceeds to overengineer a hello world example while providing no demonstration of advantage over curl


The deep irony is that some of the original contributors to Birdwatch were working on this stuff at Facebook before being blocked for various reasons and leaving to work at Twitter.

To steelman this a bit, early versions of Birdwatch had problems with unsourced notes and speed of note display. There’s a bunch of research that shows that 1st impressions of info tend to dominate, so speed matters a lot.

In practice FB’s program was poorly resourced and overly complex so I’m not sure it ever achieved its theoretically lower latency.


I’m very sad that this service is basically on life support and got moved into PHP with everything else.


Haha I was checking the comments precisely to see if this was the case. This happens nearly everywhere a language that isn't Java, Python, Ruby, Go, PHP, or JavaScript is used. IMO it has more to do with tech labor arbitrage[1] than anything technical. Even if a system is punching above its weight, over time, the Weird Language Choice spooks people enough that they get the rewrite bug.

Bleacher Report is a funny example: it used to be a darling example of Elixir, where a migration from Ruby -> Elixir claimed a move from "150 Ruby servers to 5 (probably overprovisioned) Elixir servers."[2] But then management and politics got scared, moved it all to more conventional tech, and the whole system suffered (see this legendary post[3]).

Fred Hebert describes a similar thing happening with a migration from Erlang deployments to Go/Docker/immutable, where you lose some pretty valuable capabilities by migrating to more conventional tech.[4]

I don't see this changing anytime soon -- we came of age when it was viable to attract investment with the promise of tech innovation. These days, those are liabilities because managers misunderstood the "Use Boring Technology" post the way consultants bartardized "Agile" (taking decent advice and misunderstanding it into something wholly different and horrifying). The result is you've got companies with customers in the 1000s using k8s, calling it "simple" and "Boring," whereas that same company would be called amateur if they did things like stateful deploys on-prem.[5]

At least we'll always have WhatsApp.

[1]: https://www.baldurbjarnason.com/2024/react-electron-llms-lab... [2]: https://web.archive.org/web/20170204160005/http://www.techwo... [3]: https://www.reddit.com/r/erlang/comments/18f3kl3/comment/kct... [4]: https://ferd.ca/a-pipeline-made-of-airbags.html [5]: https://morepablo.com/2023/05/where-have-all-the-hackers-gon...


Love your take on it. From a fellow prog languages enthusiast that matured, I can safely say that you are right.

I've coded in so many languages in my life, but the job market pull from Ruby always drags me back, with time, I began to really love and appreciate what Ruby is.

I still find Ruby a bit niche than other mainstream languages like Java and Python, I bet that if I had >5 years of Java, the Java market pull would be higher than Ruby and I'd be doing Java.


Ben Thompson tried to make this case in various places when Amazon was sued by the FTC. Roughly “businesses should be able to make a case for why you should still be a subscriber”.

I disagree. Fuck subscriptions, they’re predatory.


TBF it looks like it’s intended as a “before” image but yes suspect the “after” isn’t much better


Is it? I thought that was the draft, as a result of the dialogue in the sidebar. If I am wrong then OK!


From the full screen cookie dialog preventing me from reading this article:

We and our 71 vendors process data for the following purposes:

Use precise geolocation data. Actively scan device characteristics for identification. Store and/or access information on a device. Personalised advertising and content, advertising and content measurement, audience research and services development.


No no, don't look at what I'm doing when I'm complaining about someone else doing the same thing. THEY are doing much worse, so that means I'm not bad as long as someone else is worse.


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