But I like your and OP's analogy. Also, the productivity claims are coming from the guys in main memory or even disk, far removed from where the crunching is taking place. At those latency magnitudes, even riding a turtle would appear like a huge productivity gain.
It's a so-called hot-button topic and unfortunately HN isn't quite the paragon of pragmatic technical discussion that it was in the past. C'est la vie.
Soon the only way to assure your readers that your writing is human is by calling them a motherfucker in the opening sentence.
But then, you'd only be sure that the first sentence was legitimate and not the rest of the article. That is why I constantly reassure my readers that they're some goddamn motherfuckers throughout my writing. And you, too, are one, my friend.
The arrogance of calling it a "simple misspelling". We get it; you have commands from above to deploy AI and you're too pathetic to morally question the directive, but at least let's not pretend that LLMs make typos now. "Oh, oopsie, it was just a typo."
You're being unfair and need to get off your high horse or your wheelchair. I'm sure the accessibility can be iterated upon the basics of UI, not have to rewrite the whole thing from scratch; this tutorial only covers the basics, can't blame OP for that.
Rather, why don't you make your comment constructive and tell us about accessibility? I am sure there is an "accessibility for noobs" tutorial out there that the rest of us haven't discovered. I, for one, just recently learned about colour blindness in games and was absolutely mad when I saw what the example game in the book looks like to a colour-blind person. Not that I'm much of a designer, but I'll be sure to choose a universally-good colour palette next time I do any UI. So teach us instead of yelling at us.
But I like your and OP's analogy. Also, the productivity claims are coming from the guys in main memory or even disk, far removed from where the crunching is taking place. At those latency magnitudes, even riding a turtle would appear like a huge productivity gain.
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