Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | ehutch79's commentslogin

How's the metaverse doing? It was the next big thing and how we're all going to be working inside it in... was it like 3 months ago?

Maybe they need to mine more libra coin first? or is it diem now? is that even still part of meta?

I'm sure this new AI is super intelligent and super awesome and will be writing all the code, making all the blog posts, and generating all our youtube shorts in 6 months.


what's with the negativity?

yeah, the metaverse got abandoned. Also: Meta was the only one to try the concept for the past X-umpteen years even though everyone in the industry ga-gas over virtual reality worlds and workplaces at every opportunity. It's literally Meta and Linden Labs (which has been on life support for 10+ years.)

The alternative is : no one does it and nothing gets abandoned, which the industry has shown itself to be exceedingly good at w.r.t VR for the past 40+ years.

To be clear: I have no faith in meta as a company; my problem lies in kicking an entity because they attempted something different.. I don't think that's productive, and it produces stuff like the past AI winters because groups get afraid of touching experimental concepts ever again lest they incur the wrath of the shareholder.


It's not the failure here or there, it's a pattern. It's not even the failing, it's the excessive hype cycle.

We keep seeing things being overhyped, with not much thought behind it. Meta is particularly bad about it. They changed their name for the hype of their VR product, when VR was still niche and had a long way to go, and still does. They couldn't even figure out legs for launch.

Now they have a 'superintellegence'? Yeah, that sounds like just the latest in a line of bullshit. Why would this be different.


> Please don't post shallow dismissals, especially of other people's work. A good critical comment teaches us something.

https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html


Establishing a pattern of over hyping of projects that then disappear isn't a shallow dismissal.

Libra/Diem got sold to the bank they were partnering with (Silvergate) for $200M, which then filed for Bankruptcy.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diem_(digital_currency)


Just include 'make it secure' in the prompt. Duh.

/s


If my high school English is worth anything, that quote has nothing to do with being careless, or the privileges accorded to wealth, but is in fact a metaphor for the external struggle of chicken farmers against predators.

/s


Your experience is not everyone s experience. Are you one of their colleagues. No? Then they weren’t talking about you.

They don't have to be one of my colleagues to share their own perspective and experience. We're a rather large band of computer using people here, and it's good to share experiences and viewpoints.

vibe coding implies a complete lack of process. The definition is basically YOLO....

https://x.com/karpathy/status/1886192184808149383


My process is just getting claude code to generate a plan file and then rinsing it through codex until it has no more advice left.

I'd consider it vibe-coding if you never read the code/plan.

For example, you could package this up in a bash alias `vibecode "my prompt"` instead of `claude -p "my prompt"` and it surely is still vibe-coding so long as you remain arms length from the plan/code itself.


> I wasn't aware that migrating projects off Cobol has become cheap and it would only take a Claude subscription.

It's like you never even saw u/bumlazer42069's seminal post that 'itd only take 3 prompts and a weekend for me to port all that cobol to typescript'


Noise cancellation was made worse due to patent troll lawsuits.


Right? also, where's the thunderbolt ports? and it needs about another inch? maybe half inch on the screen. And really, 16gb is the new minimum. There's a whole bunch of acceleration and co processing features in the m series missing from the a series, so they really should put an m5 in there instead...

Seriously though. Every feature someone says is missing and should have been added would be another $100 on the cost. This is already likely a low margin product meant of someone who's only using a browser and maybe a few apps.


Depends what you're developing. You could build a pretty powerful webapp as long as you don't fall into 'i need my blog running in kubernetes' trap.

For a couple months I was on an 8gb m1 air, it was perfectly fine, even with docker containers. As long as i didn't launch teams....


This largely shows how far standards have fallen - it’s not that long ago that 8 gigabytes of RAM was unthinkable in a desktop class machine - much less one that cost nothing once inflation was taken into account. It required buying an E10K style machine for tens to hundreds of thousands to get 64GB. And all of those hardware gains have been squandered by the electron people.

That said, we are where we are - I wouldn’t buy a machine with only 8GB for any purpose at this point.


> the electron people

“If you see anybody [building electron apps] in a restaurant, at a department store, at a gasoline station, you get out and you create a crowd. And you push back on them, and you tell them they're not welcome anymore, anywhere!” - a reasonable person, probably

How anyone could think their chat app or text editor should be able to bring a 32GB 8-core machine to a crawl is beyond me. I can have about 200 browser tabs open, but one discord chat open in the background and I’m stuttering. It’s offensive.


If you know what a user agent is, let alone how to change it, CORS is not meant for you.

Its guide rails to help the tech illiterate not get hacked. It raises the bar on what gets through. It’s not going to stop a determined attacker, but will catch enough to make a dent. Defense in depth and all that.


CORS (or rather the same origin policy, of which CORS is an explicit server-side opt-out) is not a generic security improvement, it solves a very specific problem: (Code on) website A being able to make requests to website B with the cookies of B (often implying user login state/authentication at B) and read the response.

In a (possibly better) parallel universe, cross-site requests just don't send cookies or other ambient authentication state like that by default, and we wouldn't need CORS.


It sounds like you need to go back to school because you’re entirely


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

Search: