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You are not the only one.

I have an ASUS ProArt Display 27” 5K. And I somewhat regret it.

I love the pixel density. But I don’t love the matte finish. Which is apparently a controversial take. But I really don’t. I like the crisp pop of typography you get with a glossy display. And, for UI design, the matte finish just doesn’t “feel” like the average end-user experience. I am constantly pushing Figma between my laptop display and my monitor to better simulate what a design will look like on an average glossy LCD or OLED display.


I've got that display, too, and quite like it. Matte finish is essential (IMO) if you're annoyed by reflections.

I still do a double-take when I see Pokémon trading card game vending machines at the grocery store.

I am an elder Millennial with no kids…I knew it was still a popular game, but seeing a great big Pokéball machine next to the shopping carts really drove it home.


Ha, I’d argue it starts right at Pekin.

That puts several university towns below the line. But little towns outside big towns in the Midwest have their own vibe.

Also, that should have been the backstory of the Matrix, and not the whole “living power source” nonsense.

I'm convinced that the studio forced the change to 'human batteries' out of concern over a conflict with Hyperion.

Probably the idea is broad enough to get away with borrowing it or putting their own spin on the general idea (I mean, it is expected that stores will influence each other and ideas will spread). I’d rather guess that a studio executive thought the battery idea would be more understandable to people (if that is the case though, I think they were dramatically wrong, the computing idea makes much more sense and I think all of us in the audience would have been fine with it).

Remember that all critiques of Hollywood require you to think like you’ve just consumed a massive line of cocaine. Because that is how they think and live. So, empathy reduced to zero, all your ideas are great, everything else is dumb, etc. Making decisions under the influence of strong narcotics is a recipe for idiocy.

Source: me, I had a huge cocaine problem and worked many years in the tech side of music and movies


I saw a YouTube video where they said this was more-or-less the original backstory but then they changed it. I think it said that the People In Charge thought the 'living power source' would be easier for the audience to understand?

I don't have the link handy, and don't trust everything I read on the Internet, etc, etc.

But yeah - this makes so much more sense than breeding, raising, and feeding humans just to harvest their body heat.


According to Reddit…so, grain of salt…that is an urban legend, related to a Neil Gaiman short story that appeared on the Matrix promo website.

https://www.reddit.com/r/movies/comments/1amree7/theres_a_wi...


I think we the urban legend really sticks around because the compute explanation just makes much more sense and we all want this beloved movies not to have a sill (albeit inconsequential) plot hole.

Oh, totally, it’s my head canon as well.

Mine is either that, or, the idea I mentioned in this post:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47185076

Machines trying to be benevolent, but overly controlling.


That's very good.

It exists and is a great read – https://matrix.fandom.com/wiki/Goliath

Check the archive.org link at the bottom!


I like to think the machines actually were using them for processing power, and the humans themselves just misunderstood (or oversimplified for Neo) what was actually going on.

Processing power is my second favorite explanation.

My first favorite would have been: they don’t use the humans for anything, the pods are just the most efficient way to store humans. The machines think they are being benevolent, just want peace and quiet and for humans to stop doing dramatic things like scorching the sky. But I don’t know where the plot would go from there.


There is backstory that the films could have gone into, though I don't know if it was written before or after the first film. The humans in the matrix were allied with the machines and they put them in the matrix to protect them from the war. They were being benevolent.

They benevolently feed the dead to the living

What the humans thought they knew came from the Zion archives mostly. And guess where the Zion archives came from…

I'm sure that one Star trek episode had the same premise, together with something from Lem. The connection human/machine brain is rather old and human brains being used for computation is so reused, it is practically public domain.

I like how the other story that has this premise is Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.

Hitchhiker's Guide had a slightly deeper philosophical implication though, in that the premise is that powerful computers already existed to solve complex problems. Earth was created to pose powerful questions.

don't forget Sirens of Titan!

I have a real soft spot for Summer of Night.

It obviously owes a lot to Stephen King’s IT. But it stands on its own merits…and I give it extra credit because it was set in my home town. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Summer_of_Night)


I am 42. I came out when I was 19. I’ve worked in tech for 15 years, though no in the Valley.

I have a snarky response, then a real response.

Snark: Oh like a bunch of gays are capable of that level of coordination without it breaking into vicious drama and infighting. We can barely hold together a volleyball team sometimes.

Real: Well, yes, a lot of gay guys do know each other, especially in dense urban cities like SF, NYC, and Chicago, because we are all in the same sports leagues, we go to the same bars, we go to the same circuit parties, and it’s natural to give someone you know an internal referral as a leg up, because it’s a lot easier to hire someone you know versus sifting through 1600 job applications from strangers.


Yes, exactly the same as fraternities — well, except that fraternities are more homoerotic.

Nope. It is still Electron, and it is not snappy. And I am on an M3 Max MacBook Pro.

I have transitioned off ChatGPT for home use (Google provides me slightly better value in my personal life, as I can pay for a plan that also accommodates my weird photo storage needs) and it’s all Anthropic at work, but I miss the ChatGPT Mac app. I can’t say for certain if it was Electron or not—I never dug into the internals, and it felt very, very fast and “native”.


I dare you to find any analytics, anywhere, that show any IE 11 usage.

It would be utterly negligent to still be running IE in a corporate environment. It’s a huge security risk.


0.02% as of January 2026: https://www.stetic.com/market-share/browser/

Results may also be skewed because IE mode in Edge will masquerade as IE.

> Internet Explorer mode in Microsoft Edge enables backward compatibility and will be supported through at least 2029.

https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/lifecycle/announcements/in...


Just recently I stumbled on some god forsaken pc hooked up to a projector in some conference room.

It had Windows 7 with guess what browser built-in. It had Chrome also, thank god (that’s how I know it is no longer updated by Google under 7).

But that’s not the point. The thing is 2015’s state of affairs is good enough for dare I say most UI.

Yeah, grid is not there, but there are very specific UIs that need what flex cannot provide.

PostCSS takes care for most other legacy things


OK, everyone is (rightly) bringing up that relatively small but really glaringly prominent AI boyfriend subreddit.

But I think a lot more people are using LLMs for relationship surrogates than that (pretty bonkers) subreddit would suggest. Character AI (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Character.ai) seems quite popular, as do the weird fake friend things in Meta products, and Grok’s various personality mode and very creepy AI girlfriends.

I find this utterly bizarre. LLMs are peer coders in a box for me. I care about Claude Code, and that’s about it. But I realize I am probably in the vast minority.


We're very echo-chambered here. That graph OpenAI released had coding at 4% or something.


I remembered it being higher, but you are correct. All “technical help” (coding + data analysis + math) is 7.5%, with coding only being 4.2% as of June 2025 [0]. Note that there is a separate (sub)category of seeking information -> specific information that’s at 18.3%, I presume this could include design and architecture questions that don’t involve code, but I could be wrong.

[0]: https://www.nber.org/system/files/working_papers/w34255/w342...


Have you tried the relatively recent Personalities feature? I wonder if that makes a difference.

(I have no idea. LLMs are infinite code monkeys on infinite typewriters for me, with occasional “how do I evolve this Pokémon’ utility. But worth a shot.)


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