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...and the moon.

You'll understand if I don't think the tradeoffs were necessary, or worthwhile.

Ambition does really weird things to people.

But I'm sure in this case when they achieve some kind of dominant position and Microsoft offers to re-absorb them they will do the honorable thing.


When has that ever happened in the entire human history?

People do the honorable thing all the time.

These people don't, but people you've never heard of are always doing honorable things.

Might be some sort of connection there.


That's a stretch.

Their voter base - and not the rest of us.

There will be a reckoning - and it may originate from the most unexpected place.


When and where from?

The other side of the voters has happily expanded the power of the executive for decades while demonizing those who would put in some restraint. Both sides do this and here we are. The people voting against Trump still gave him power, just not while he was in office.

ReactOS has entered the chat.

Yes that project unfortunately just doesn't seem to get there, or is terrible at marketing itself.

Oh man. That would be awesome. However they are already struggling to catch up with Vista-era APIs.

Welcome to 2003, not really.

Tax the ammo. Such chronic stupidity at play.


Windows may not steal your keyboard focus, but it will block the very thing you're trying to do with useless dialogue boxes.

Notifications should be non-blocking. ALWAYS.


Domain-specific knowledge, having no relation to software engineering per se, is a necessary skill set.

The best analogy I can find, if not a tired one, is the equivalence of software engineering to tool-and-die making.

In prior generations where manufacturing was king, it was a necessary operational skill set in order to produce things at scale, yet is much less (if no longer) relevant in the age of additive or subtractive manufacturing, where quantities can be varied according to immediate requirements.

Along the same lines, a skill set in traditional software engineering is less enamored in the age of AI agents that can better regurgitate boilerplate code.

The corresponding next-level-up analogy is the tool-and-die maker that learns 3D modeling + additive manufacturing, with FE analysis and CNC skills as a fallback. For software engineers, it's AI agent prompt engineering and data modeling, according to use cases defined by business needs.

You need to put on your entrepreneurial hat and figure out how to do things faster, with greater accuracy, relevant to business needs - not navel-gazing at package management and build automation exclusively.

This is, of course, an extremely naïve view of the state of things, though I cannot imagine, as a generalist, how one could survive with increasingly niche skills that, a decade ago, would have commanded six-figure salaries.

Good luck!


I'd think the opposite though, with nowadays "AI"/LLMs - retrieving a domain/specialist knowledge became easier, while general software development is still unsolved. E.g. you can use LLMs for generating many well-known/documented/specified particular image processing algorithms, but creating a high-quality Photoshop-like software still needs a good generalist developer.


I would say you can take opposite route as well. Become even more of a T-shaped engineer than you were before. For me that meant transitioning to vertical roles (i.e., performance engineering) rather than backend engineering. Sure, an AI can understand every level of the stack but reasoning up and down at every level of abstraction still has a human element to it (at least for now).


Quality still matters sometimes. You can make a lot of things by AI, but you can't make them good. The same is true of 3D printing.

Also 3D printing is good at making unique objects, but if you want to make ten thousand of the same object, you definitely need someone who knows the "old" ways. They're not irrelevant at all. And you can even use a 3D printer to help make your tools and dies.


I have successfully explored AI & prompt engineering. I already feel I'm "augmented" vs when I didn't had access to these tools.

I do 100% agree with you, thanks for the good wishes


> Domain-specific knowledge, having no relation to software engineering per se, is a necessary skill set.

In other words, you wasted time and energy becoming a programmer/software developer/whatever.

Should have done something else.


This is only true if you weren't paid for your work all those years (which, then, it was just a hobby).

But more importantly, this is only relevant for vomiting boilerplate code. I don't know about you but I always did a lot more than that.


Problem is, display profile support for Wayland has been, at best, spotty until recently - and, there should be multiple accurate targets available on any good display panel.

My factory-seconds F13 (using 11th-gen Intel, still the best in terms of power savings) shipped with the older glossy display, which had a known, disclosed-as-cheaper LUT issue at lower brightness settings. After a couple of calibration rounds, it is spot-on and my go-to PC laptop.

Decent keyboard, too.

Of course, things are often more expensive in Europe (compared to the US) for zero good reason, so the F16 will always be at a proportional disadvantage compared to the F13. You may find that a much better fit.


Wouldn't that violate GDPR regulations?


AI could, on the other hand, replace lobbyists.


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