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software development, politics adjacent, long 

Potentially controversial opinion: I think that "making software more efficient" is the wrong thing to focus on right now.

There's a significant kernel of truth to the idea that "it's easy to make good code performant, but it's hard to make performant code good" - and so before going all-in on optimizing code as the primary objective, we should make sure that we're optimizing the right thing.

And right now, we're not. We're very much not.

There are significant problems to be solved in how we address software development, and the power dynamics embedded into it - the most obvious example would be the still-widespread fear of dependencies, which actively interferes with making software work better for people, and results in an endless treadmill of broken shit.

And guess what, there *are* significant efficiency benefits to be gained here - everybody using the same well-optimized implementation is going to be much better than everybody using their own homegrown half-optimized "clever" implementation.

But by putting all the focus on software efficiency and performance as the #1 priority, we risk removing all the oxygen in the room for figuring out better ways to deal with dependencies and many of the other industry-wide problems I haven't even mentioned here yet, and ending up in a *worse* place (even efficiency-wise!) than where we *could* be if we started with other problems first.

TL;DR: software efficiency and performance is important, but if you treat it as a goal to chase directly, you will end up with broken and faux-simple software that isn't even as efficient as it could be. Fix the big problems with software first, *then* think about how to optimize the remainder.

@joepie91 yeah their build system is ridiculous.. Suspense seems part of a larger overhaul to be more async/streaming compatible

photos I took turned out quite well, the Rollei 135mm f/2.8 was a great choice even if I had to stand a mile away

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going to take a bunch of portrait photos for a friend and their sibling. will be cool i think but I'm always nervous photographing people

i was like, what's up with me still hearing game sounds after I switched away, is this some kinda tetris effect trying to parse it from the music??

i didn't close the game

>>>>> “If autism isn’t caused by environmental factors and is natural why didn’t we ever see it in the past?”

>>>>> We did, except it wasn’t called autism [ . . . ]

>>>> [ . . . ] “little Jonathan doesn’t talk but does a good job herding the sheep, contributes to the community in his own way, and is, all around, a decent guy.” [ . . . ]

>>> [ . . . ] The Myth of the Changeling child, a human baby apparently replaced at a young age by a toddler who “suddenly” acts “strange and fey” is an almost *textbook* depiction of autistic children. [ . . . ]

>> I think it’s worth noting that many like me, who are diagnosed with ASD now, would probably have been seen as just a bit odd in centuries past. [ . . . ]

>> [ . . . ] If I went back in time and lived on a farm somewhere, would anyone even notice there was anything odd about me? No police sirens, no crowded streets that go on for miles and miles, no flickery electric lights. Working on a farm has a clear routine. I’d be a badass at spinning cloth or churning butter because I find endless repetition soothing rather than boring.

>> [ . . . ] What I’m saying is that disability exists in the context of the environment. Our environment isn’t making people autistic in the sense of some chemical causing brain damage. But we have created a modern environment which is hostile to autistic people in many ways, which effectively makes us more disabled. [ . . . ]

> “How come nobody ever heard of ‘dyslexia’ until widespread literacy became a thing?”

hazeldomain.tumblr.com/post/18…

@mousebot hmm that might currently be the case, but all that data is stored indefinitely, and that policy could definitely change in the future (again)

@mousebot it's a vc-backed corporation so will never have the user's best interest in mind, combined with full access to everything you do on their platform , and iirc a privacy policy that states they can use all that data for advertising and what not

It's not much different from slack/telegram/many others fwiw

WhatsApp / Signal are still centralized but have e2e encryption so they can only access (various levels) of metadata

Matrix (and XMPP) offer e2e, and a decentralized model similar to how Mastodon has many different instances, that still communicate with eachother

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