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I learned to read English the same way I learned to understand it spoken: exposure. As a young child a relative would put me in their lap and a book I liked in my lap and read to me. After awhile I was reading fluently without effort. Most schools teach reading as a conscious intellectual decoding task which leaves little brain power left to engage with the material - the same way most schools teach "foreign" languages. Engage the brain's language centers and language skills will be fluent.

I started with Fortran 2 which has subroutines which don't behave as black boxes. It took me months of frustrated study to understand procedure calls in decent languages as delegation. That opened up the world of high-level computing. Later I would teach this using problems that were a good fit for "recursion". Recursion is not a feature, it's just an obvious pattern of the more general and important nature of delegation. While recursion is occasionally a useful technique, it's tremendously valuable as a tool for learning how to think about procedures as black boxes!


Everything I run on servers I also run on my laptop. Occasionally I get crashes or corruption because of the lack of ECC memory. I'd also like to be able to swap parts between a modular laptop and a home/small-office server, but again - I want ECC. If framework had a model with ECC I'd be all in!


Couldn’t you just… get a framework without RAM and buy ECC memory separately?


No, ECC requires additional signal lines and processor + chipset support.


Ah, yea, I had gotten myself confused with on-die ECC and actual real ECC. Very frustrating.


ECC is a requirement for me as well.

I'll have to pass this time, because no ECC.


Regulatory systems need omsbuds within the government who can ask for help and explanations from all the agencies regulating a project yet are (primarily) accountable for helping projects succeed as soon as possible and (secondarily) responsible for providing transparent feedback to those agencies and the public where regulation is malfunctioning.


This technology is completely amazing - for large fleet vehicles like buses, trucks, ferries, etc. Also airplanes! Getting this so compact and refined is a technological miracle. Now put it where it fits!


Buses are already largely electric (with the US as a notable exception), and trucks are quickly getting there:

https://www.electrive.com/2026/01/23/year-end-surge-electric...

Meanwhile, hydrogen trucks are nowhere to be found...


A huge tank of hydrogen is a bomb. This isn’t like gasoline that takes a lot to ignite.


Do what Linus does: Focus on code quality!


Culture is huge nested networks of memes[1] which reinforce themselves and evolve via natural selection. Their substrate is our brains. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memetics


Are those terms substantially different from the article's claims?

THe wikipedia definition of meme is "memes: ideas, behaviors, beliefs, and expressions." The author discusses frames and mental models as a topic [0]. "[A] framing is a choice of boundaries" and "A model is an analogy. It is a simplified simulation of something else." These seem to map to meme-concepts ideas and beliefs respectively and loosely. ("Frame" is probably a meta-meme or ontology that expands or contracts what memes can exist at all or what can be discerned at all.)

0. https://aethermug.com/posts/a-framing-and-model-about-framin...


Only train when the Sun shines.


Realistic Hard SF has to deal with Accelerating Change making technology vastly powerful yet still limited. The hardest thing to write about is cognitively enhanced humans or any other entities (AI, aliens, etc.) exceeding human cognitive limits. JW Campbell famously said it couldn't be done, but without that depictions of the future or wider universe fall flat. Vernor Vinge became the master of such SF and showed several ways to do it. I recommend everything he wrote! Good Hard SF requires an author who has a good grasp of science without that stifling their imagination. It's easy if you cheat but Science Fantasy is unreadable by the science literate folks who frequent HN. Good Hard SF is out there, with and without spaceships, but you'll have to hunt for it - and thanks for all the recommendations here!


Speaking of hard SF with imagination, Hal Clement's "Mission of Gravity" is a good example.



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