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Even if you fix the law today, the law can change tomorrow. As Bruce Schneier put it: "it's not enough to protect ourselves with laws. We must also protect ourselves with mathematics".

Also, the president of United States and his ICE Czar do not seem to care what law says. And no one seems to care to enforce the opposite.

I'm having some house painting done and the painter asked me what line of work I was in. When I said computer programming he said, "ooh, bet you're worried about AI! At least painters are safe!"

He "might" be but not any of his kids going into the business. The home maintenance bots will invade slowly, then all at once.

The media landscape we have is something I couldn't have even imagined when I was young in the 80's. However, I can go back and watch, for free, essentially every movie ever made. I've gone back and watched dozens (maybe hundreds) of movies that I remember coming out when I was a kid, wanting to see, but never getting to because I was too young, or I couldn't find them at video stores, etc.

There were a _lot_ of _really_ bad movies and TV shows that came out when I was young, including movies and TV shows that I loved at the time. They were awful - we just watched them because there was literally nothing else to do. We're bombarded with entertainment choices now and our standards have gone up.


I was in my 20's at the time. I saw all of those guys as being inferior GnR, Motley Crue or Metallica wannabes.

Metallica's St. Anger it's a grunge wannabe disc.

The 80's died but not with Cobain, but with The Pixies and R.E.M.

And in late 90's the industrial rock/metal basically made 80's glam rock cringey and obsolete.


You're making his point for him.

Yeah I'm not sure if that was a troll actually

> The 90s were incredible

I was born in 1974 and I remember being vaguely annoyed in my 20's at how the 90's "ruined" the 80's - I remember things being way better in the 80's and society starting to go downhill around 1991.

I will say, though, the poster's lament that he's nostalgic for a time he never knew is one I've heard a _lot_. My kids watch "Stranger Things" and ask if it was really like that when I was a kid ("did you really just get on your bike and go over to your friends houses?") and wish they had experienced the 80's (and even the inferior 90's). I _never_ felt that way about my parents generation - the 60's were interesting from a historical perspective but I never wanted to be there.


> the poster's lament that he's nostalgic for a time he never knew is one I've heard a _lot_

For sure; the 2011 film Midnight in Paris is a great comedic exploration of this feeling as its central theme. (well, if you can set aside any well-justified reservations about writer/director Woody Allen.)


Part of the nomenclature problem here is that there's no other way to refer to an HTTP-based API. REST was originally an alternative to the horrible SOAP. I'd be fine with calling it something else (because the author is right, nobody's following Fielding's vision), but there's nothing else to call it.

"JSON-over-HTTP(S)" is a bit verbose, but accurate.

The author suggests RESTless.

HTTP API?

Agile definitely means the opposite of agile.

Sadly, this will continue until we collectively stand up against it, but I don't hold much hope that we ever will.

but how? That can't really be illegal, else we would have to make illegal applying "online" altogether, so how exactly can it be fought?

By refusing to participate, but it only works if we all do it. As soon as an AI comes online during the interview process, disconnect. If _everybody_ did, they'd get the hint

(Actually, my great-grandfather was a coal miner in Tennessee. They also found ways to make the labor process humane)


It's noble but I highly doubt the average mommy that is in serious financial difficulty would participate.

It's a lawsuit waiting to happen anyway. It will use inflammatory language or ask invasive questions. Only a matter of time.

Unfortunately for us software types, somebody with an EE degree can go into software and then pivot back into RF engineering. I doubt that somebody with a CS degree could (as in, I think they'd be intellectually capable of it, but they'd never get hired).


As someone with a EE degree followed by 12 years of SWE work, that pivot is quite daunting. A degree is just a piece of paper to get you an entry level job to do some real learning IMO


i have done firmware development, pcb design and light ee work and basic rf and antenna design professionally with zero degrees. like anything else it’s a matter of getting your foot in the door first, then outperforming the academic nerds with zero experience


Why are people who don't have degrees always so weird about it?

A history of being forced to overcompensate to assert themselves in spaces where they otherwise aren't taking seriously.

People that have multiple degrees are usually pretty weird about it too.


yea, so so weird about sharing how they’re optional.

That might be what you intended but saying "outperforming the academic nerds with zero experience" comes across as bitter and arrogant.

With the exception of firmware development those are all designer tasks that have never required a degree.


i have never seen any listings for any of these jobs not stipulate a degree being required.

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