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Well there's always predictive policing, fully automated facial recognition, chat control surveillance systems, nation-scale fingerprinting, and location tracking via inference of arbitrary signals.


> since ChatGPT first dropped.

That'd be in November of 2022.

https://openai.com/index/chatgpt/


Where can I learn more?


Nothing to learn about, really.

We've got army block, FSB block, technocrats, bureaucrats and oligarchs. The usual (more or less) story.

The real problem is - we don't have system that scales horizontally. So when Putin goes people will have to deal with the vertical system he created for himself.

The problem here is this "for himself" part.

For this system to work you will have to be a new Putin (at least for some time) and for this you will have to enforce your decisions and shape your new system. Top to bottom.

Best thing that can happen to Russian (realistically) is that the power will be given to technocrats.

They are not neccesarily more liberal, but they have real education, they do understand a thing or to about economics, open borders, sharing of knowledge etc.

They won't be able to quickly change Russia, but given some time they can reshape it step by step.

Alas - we have FSB and Army blocks, high level of corruption and millions of people who see people like Putin as the best choice. They don't need progress and responsibility. They need their empire back even if they are just peasants with serfdom included.



> Ruliology [...] examines how simple computational rules can generate complex behaviors.


Sounds like emergence.


Kleppman[1] calls it schema-on-read (json, xml) and schema-on-write (typed columns in an RDB). I like it over structured/unstructured, it's a bit more specific.

[1] https://martin.kleppmann.com/2017/03/27/designing-data-inten...


Yes, I agree with that preference. I don't love the verbiage of "structured" / "unstructured" in either usage (the article's or that which I shared).


I have an ipad pro from 2015, an apple pencil 1, and a screen protector that gives it a bit more friction. It's pretty good for the most part, but since it's my only apple product, it doesn't integrate well with anything else I use. OneNote seems to work on multiple platforms but I never got into it. I mostly use goodnotes, and they seem to have released apps for web and non-apple stuff (finally). When I used it the most, the only export I had was as PDFs to Dropbox, which was fine enough but removed any possibility of editing outside of the ipad.


OneNote is great when you use Windows in 2010.


lol we get those pamphlets sent out every now and then. Of course it's related to the increase tension, but it's not the huge call sign you make it out to be. "be ready for war" means "be ready in case something happens", not "be ready for what's about to happen."


> GIMP (or Glimpse, if you want a more modern UI) or Krita can definitely do pretty much anything Acorn can.

I'm fairly certain that anyone who recommends GIMP hasn't really used GIMP.


> anyone who recommends GIMP hasn't really used GIMP.

Or they only ever used GIMP but never Acorn/Pixelmator/PS and thus don't understand how they run circles around GIMP.

Same about OmniGraffle vs the supposed horde of Linux diagramming tools.

Or Logic (or even GarageBand) vs Ardour or - deity forbid - Audacity (which is at best a glorified wav editor, but a far cry from a DAW)

They're just not in the same league.


Gimp and Libreoffice both seem to go out of their way to do everything their own way and ignore what has been demonstrated to work well and has essentially been established as a standard, this is one of the major issues with OSS for me along with trying to offer more than is reasonable and put in time on niche features (MORE MORE MORE) instead of working out the issues with what is already implemented. LibreCAD is a prime example example of doing it their own way, cutting off their nose in spite of their face, there was no reason to change most every command and require us to hit return after every single command. The free version of QCAD is still superior to LibreCAD and it is difficult to justify suffering through all of LibreCAD's failings when QCAD only costs $45 with a year of updates, even if you don't renew that outdated QCAD it is still more capable and usable than LibreCAD.

I have used nothing but linux for over two decades now but it is getting harder and harder to justify using linux, too much of the software is so fixated on competing that they have lost all perspective. For awhile now I have seriously considered switching to Haiku and developing the software I want for Haiku with its API that will not run on anything else, but I have not quite been irritated enough to go that far. Getting there and it might happen once Haiku irons out those last few wrinkles.

Edit: Should add, been a few years since I last used LibreOffice, they may have gotten their act together. I suffer gimp far too often.


> Gimp and Libreoffice both seem to go out of their way to do everything their own way and ignore what has been demonstrated to work well and has essentially been established as a standard, this is one of the major issues with OSS for me along with trying to offer more than is reasonable and put in time on niche features (MORE MORE MORE) instead of working out the issues with what is already implemented.

I haven't tried GIMP or LibreOffice for years now, but I speculate this is one outcome of ego-driven development instead of market-driven development, and possibly also because UX people aren't contributing as much to open source as developers are.


> I have used nothing but linux for over two decades now but it is getting harder and harder to justify using linux

At least in the context of windows vs Linux, Microsoft is making it incredibly easy. Once again pushing MS recall, integrated ads, and user hostile updates made me finally switch to Linux again. I absolutely hated having a computer that seemed to have a mind of its own. I had a dual boot setup that defaulted to Linux, and very frequently I would be doing something in Windows, leave the computer on with programs or games running, and come back to find that it had rebooted into Linux.


Can confirm. GIMP after Photoshop is a true BDSM experience. And no, it's not about "doing things differently." It's a torture.


That is just basic resistance to change.

People keep recommending Krita or photopea against Gimp but I am using both (Krita for digital painting, gimp for other stuff) and have made back to back test with all 3 software and the UI is almost identica[1] so that is just ignorance talking.

[1] just a handful of menus in a different order woaaaaa torture indeed!!!


I have only ever used GIMP and I will admit that the UI looks like hell. I also rarely do anything very advanced in it anymore so I can’t say whether it has feature parity with PS.


I can, it doesn’t.


I have been using gimp for almost a decade now.

Granted, I am not a professional in that field, but why would I not recommend it ?

It does everything I want to, and more.


>why would I not recommend it ?

You're free to recommend it, but if you tell somebody coming from a Mac that GIMP is an alterantive to tools like like Affinity Photo, Pixelmator, Acorn, or even Photoshop, you're doing them a disservice, because it's not.

I'm glad that GIMP works for you. That's good. And technically, it probably does a lot (or even everthing) that most people do in other applications. And maybe you can even argue that it doesn't do those things worse, it just does them differently.

But the reality is that if you're used to a tool like Acorn on the Mac, which puts a huge priority on providing a good, efficient user experience, you're just never going to switch to GIMP.

Same applies to a tool like OmniGraffle. I've looked everywhere, there's nothing like OmniGraffle on Linux. By that, I don't mean that there aren't any tools that allow you to create diagrams and mockups, I mean there aren't any tools that are as nice, simple, and quick to use as OmniGraffle.


> It does everything I want to, and more.

So does ms paint for a large part of computer users. Not sure that's a good enough argument.


I've been using GIMP for 20 years now, but the UI is atrocious; you can tell it's been designed by engineers who know nothing about UX.

Even the most basic UI elements, such as the slider bars, are horrible and unusable.


I didn't recommend it, I offered three options (one specifically created to fix the exact issue you're probably complaining about - GIMP's horrendous UI)


The problem is, you imply the alternative solutions are somehow just a stand-in replacement, which is not true, and not just with Gimp in the programs you listed. Software matters, and when software you need is not available, it is a significant compromise.


Up until the last paragraph, where he freely admits all the options are basically shit in comparison.

The idea that having to relearn all software and deal with idiosyncrasies for a professional is laughable.


Also, Glimpse has been abandoned since 2020.


GIMP 3.0 is going to be released soon. That might interest you.


Ousted the front door, coming back by the backdoor:

- “Maybe you’re using it wrong”

- “It has greatly improved since Gimp 2.0”,

- “It’s just doing things differently”

- “It has 90% of the features of MS Office”

seem to be the top arguments for trying Linux over Mac, again for the 20th time in 20 years, each time awfully bad. As Steve Jobs once said about Microsoft: “The problem is these people have no taste.” It’s correct that when you have no need for something to be beautiful or no need to be productive between two recompilations of the kernel, then Linux is the OS of choice.


My backups work though. As a Linux user, it's exhausting watching people complain about macOS and Windows every single day on this site, because there's nothing you can do about. You're a captive prisoner on their platform.

For some of us, dealing with GIMP's warts is more tolerable than the alternatives.


> then fixing the types

man I wish my coworkers did this step


Having CI hard fail definitely helps. I won’t pretend I’d be so judicious without it.


Sorry this is probably a stupid question - how do you make your CI hard fail if you don't have types? This sounds like the missing piece for me, someone who also prefers just to crack on without types and then add them later.


You can add `mypy` to your CI pipeline https://mypy.readthedocs.io/en/stable/running_mypy.html. Pyright is an alternative, and there are more.


I was referring more specifically to fixing the types. It looks like it's possible to enforce type-hinting with config files to mypy (but I've not tried it): https://stackoverflow.com/questions/55944201/python-type-hin...


CI generally has a pipeline, no? Or even at worse a shell script that you built? Just add the equivalent of “exit()” when mypy (or whatever typing linter you’re using fails), and then the dev gets notified he broke the build for everyone. That’ll get them to fixing and checking their code before it goes in to the main branch. Peer pressure is underestimated these days I think.


Run mypy in strict mode and make that check required.


Under the Extend mode, it says it requires dual-graphics card. What does that mean? Guessing it's an odd translation.


I think it just means if you want to kvm with two monitors over DP you need two DP ports on each computer.


yeap, this is how my setup is. Two DP ports are occupied.


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