Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | lapcat's commentslogin

> More generally, Luria completely ignores a key psychological dynamic that's in play as he tries to quiz these villagers: they're going to be suspicious of why he's even doing all this in the first place. What is he up to? And of course he was up to something: he was a agent of a horribly oppressive government that was trying to totally change the villagers' lives.

This doesn't explain the difference between the collective farm workers, who were actually forced by the government to change their lives, and the villagers who were not forced to change their lives. Why wouldn't the farm workers be even more suspicious, having already been victimized?


> the villagers who were not forced to change their lives

They were--they just hadn't been yet when Luria ran his experiments.

> Why wouldn't the farm workers be even more suspicious, having already been victimized?

They might have been, but they also knew from experience that "do whatever this party apparatchik asks you to do, no matter how pointless it seems" was a better strategy for staying alive.

Note that I am not arguing that the cognitive differences Luria observed were not real.


> I recommend reading up on his 80/90's antics. All he cared about was money

Incorrect. Read the David Pogue Apple book. For example, after the iMac was released, the Apple board of directors offered Jobs a million shares and six million options if he switched from interim to permanent CEO. Jobs continued to refuse. “This is not about money. I have more money than I’ve ever wanted in my life.”

Most of Steve's wealth came from Pixar, which he ultimately sold to Disney, rather than from Apple.


> I feel bad for the guy and all the Apple users constantly sharing stories of being mistreated and abused. Stop giving these companies your money and consent.

Here's a challenge: walk into a store and attempt to buy a smartphone that is not iPhone or Android.

This is the situation that consumers face. Some alternatives exist, but most consumers are completely unaware of them, because the alternatives have no advertising budget or retail presence.

I think it's quite similar to the political duopoly. Third parties exist, but they have no advertising budget, and moreover, in a Catch-22 situation, they get little or no news coverage, precisely because they have no advertising budget, and thus the news media considers them "not viable." That's a self-fulfilling prophesy. Actually the same situation exists in tech: Apple and Google get huge amounts of free news coverage in addition to their paid advertising. The media appears to feel no obligation to help people escape from duopolies; guess who pays for their advertising...


Yes, the phone market is bad. But, you know you don't have to do everything in a phone, right?

Want to take pictures? Use a camera. If it somehow auto updates your photos are still on an SD card.

I get convenience has led everyone to expect their phone to do everything for them, but it's not working. When you're in a pinch you will go to a 7-Eleven and grab food, but everyone would agree that buying everything there instead of real groceries is a terrible strategy. Just because something is convenient doesn't mean it's good.


> I get convenience has led everyone to expect their phone to do everything for them, but it's not working.

It's mostly working, though. For every story of someone experencing a severe problem, there are millions of non-stories of people not experiencing the problem.

Inconveniencing yourself every day just to avoid the rare situation is not necessarily a great life strategy. Furthermore, most consumers are not as aware of these problem cases as we are. They don't expect the worst until it's too late.

Admittedly, failing to back up is just dumb, and everyone should know that by now. On the other hand, nobody should be expecting that a software update will kill their passcode.


> Did no one of the likely-somewhat-large team who did that think "wait, this could lock out our users who may have used that character"?

I don't think we can assume the team is large.


While user base is well into billions. There are bound to be niche exceptions like this.

> Perhaps the most serious mistake that the AI industry made after creating a technology that will transversally disrupt the entire white-collar workforce before ensuring a safe transition

This was not an oversight. To the contrary, it was the goal. Technological feudalism, with people like Altman and Musk becoming the Lords of the world.

> Most layoffs are not caused by AI, but it’s the perfect excuse to do something that’s otherwise socially reprehensible.

This illustrates my previous point. What they're doing is not a mistake.

> For what it’s worth, the New Yorker piece I’m referring to, which Altman also referred to in his blog post, made me see him more as a flawed human rather than a sociopathic strategist. My sympathy for him will probably never be very high, but it grew after reading it.

It feels like we read two different articles.


> We’ll be fine, it’s not our first rodeo.

Because World War I was fine, World War II finer....


Well sure, the conflicts were resolved.

> This should be hurting the reputation of Chrome Web Store more than it is hurting the reputation of Open Source browser extensions.

Does the Chrome Web Store have any reputation left at this point? I don't know how much lower its reputation can go.


> I’m not saying that everyone is perfect all the time but like this is barely an issue if you’re sitting at your desk?

It's a laptop computer.


Yes. I keep mine on my lap. My regimen is that I wake up at 3am and lie on the couch for several hours with coffee and write code (or these days, ask "someone else" to). It is highly productive and enjoyable and breaks all the rules and no I do not have RSI. Long ago I started sandpapering the edges because yeah otherwise it hurts my wrists.

It's a good move. I have a case on my MBP that helps with this because it means the edges are plastic for me, and not quite so sharp.

If you want to break more rules, you might consider chickenwing-ing your arms a bit. Deviate from the homerow and learn to feel your way around at other angles. Then you can hold the laptop closer to you without putting your wrists at a weird angle (though you may have to use a non-thumb finger for spacebar, as I do).

As I type this, my laptop is partly on my belly and partly on my chest, and my wrists are so far out to the sides that they completely miss the front edge of the laptop altogether. The angle is pretty favorable, too: my palms rest on the laptop on either side of the trackpad, and my wrists rest over the left and right sides of the bottom case but have little to no pressure on them.

No RSI here, either. Just make sure you're loose and comfortable and not forcing anything! That seems to help a lot.


I do not in fact keep my desktop computer on my desk


> It turns out there’s only 84 thousand Firefox extensions.

On addons.mozilla.org, but you can distribute Firefox extensions without posting on addons.mozilla.org. I do.


I'm pretty sure that there were much more XUL and XPCOM extensions back then +10 years ago before mozilla pulled out the plug for that platform and moved to WebExtensions

Other examples I recall when looking into this: Zotero browser connector for Firefox, Chrome Remote Desktop for Firefox (I think it adds a few features for connections to remote desktops)

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: