Shitposter while I tend to two babies. Maybe when I have my life back, I’ll help us get a few more niche communities back?

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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: July 8th, 2023

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  • When I needed to pick up on some basics, it actually did help but ultimately not as much as actual guides and tutorials written online. This image of a chimera certainly matches the kind of Frankenstein code I was getting.

    That said, when I was having some very interesting ideas about making automated code in R, it did make for a good sounding board. You don’t need to Google when everything in R has documentation but you do when you’re combining libraries in unique ways to automate 98% of the stupid shit you do at your data researcher job (e.g. can you look up in our database how many students pick their nose during philosophy class on a Friday?)









  • taiyang@lemmy.worldtoProgrammer Humor@lemmy.mlTo DRY or not to DRY
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    5 months ago

    It’s not really that hard to implement AI as far as I can tell, even if it does produce garbage results. Any CEO that thinks otherwise is getting bamboozled.

    Not that I’m defending AI, boilerplate is still boilerplate and a crappier product is a crappier product. But they’ll take that trade off anyway which is why heads need to roll, lol






  • I do both, but the reposts and karmafarming make Reddits Popular or All options terrible while Lemmy’s is just… weird but interesting. Plus, I like Linux, Star Trek and D&D. Hell, even the random porn, why not. Nobody’s looking.

    Granted, I’m also the kind of guy who despises wholesome crap, and would take random fringe tankie posts over wholesome (really orphan crushing machine) posts any day. No karmafarm1988, your repost about the dog that was rescued did not make my day. I’d much rather hear for the twentieth time how the dog was only homeless because of capitalism, lol.

    It’s also no longer personal when even in my less popular communities there’s like 4000 comments, almost all of which are karma farming. No reason to chime in most the time. On Lemmy I’ve encountered jerks, main characters, and holier than thou type users, but it’s less often. That’s a feature of humanity, not a bug.

    But, I do still have some subreddits I’ll lurk, via Infinity (no ads, no data mining). I haven’t seen a good alternative to r/comics or r/idiotsincars, unfortunately. Can’t replicate the former since it’s up to the artists, and can’t replicate the latter because it benefits from a huge userbase. There’s always someone who lives near an accident and can give solid context, even if it’s bumfuck nowhere.


  • Well, it was closer I guess? I mean, compared to the income disparity we are today.

    Of course whenever there is anyone who makes money simply by owning a company, I’d agree they aren’t really worth anything except maybe the effort to found said company (which isn’t really the case with investors, share holders, corporations, etc). There is some value in taking the initiative and risk, just not like… hundreds times more than the employee.


  • Can you imagine if HR actually addressed the reasons for leaving? It’s often the money, sometimes the management but usually the money.

    Take my wife’s example, she changed jobs twice in a year and each jump was a 10k raise (she isn’t very good at negotiating, too). My brother changed jobs like 10 times in 5 years (programmer, several were start ups that ended) and he ended up going from 80k to 180k. Most of the jumps had anything to do with work environment, and in tech most of these companies have crazy good work environments.

    So do they counter offer? Do they do competitive raises? Actually yes, but our worth is usually so high that doing those just raises the competing offer. If we ever were paid our worth, we’d stay. That hasn’t been the case since the 50s-- or so I’m told, anyway.