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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 26th, 2023

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  • You are making it sound like it’s a fault of managers and coworkers that they don’t want some cowboy coder to replace everything that’s not on a stack they consider cool anymore with their version of “better”, which is probably some half baked idea that takes 4x longer than estimated to finish, missing 75% of the business cases, has a bunch of bugs and UX problems, has had little thought to testing, deployment, rollout or user training, and will have a huge opportunity cost on actual customer demands, but hey… “it works on my machine”. Cause all that is what I think of every time some junior dev starts complaining that everything sucks.










  • I read about their name change and wondered what it was. I had a similar experience. Really bad UX. When you click join it asks you if you want to create a new server or join an existing server. I picked “join existing” but the first button on the page is to “submit your server”.

    I clicked the “verified” server which was down (and is still down… who goes down for days for a domain change?)

    I clicked another server and hit Explore and it showed me a list of pinned users that supposedly had many posts each, however I clicked on various elements such as the post count trying to view them and couldn’t. At that point I just closed my browser tab.

    I assume this thing is some sort of Mastodon-like social network but coming in blind it’s hard to tell.


  • I tried Kagi, but the results just seem like Google being re-sold, and there’s no way I could get away with anything other than the unlimited plan which is $25/month. Also I’m pretty sure it’s a company of one guy - I’m not sure if this is anything other than a pet project or how they would actually improve the results or become independent of google. Also not sure how I could trust their privacy claims as you literally need to be signed in to search. It’s frustrating though because I want to love their business model, and the presentation is very clean.



  • Not really, IMO. I maintained a large open source project for a few years and the amount of time suck and mental drain is hard to overstate. Most employers seemed to barely look at it even though they could have clearly seen how I programmed, interacted with users, etc. And, if you decide to stop maintaining it, all those happy users are going to be unhappy users. Given that even bad developers have not much trouble getting steady work, and that all that time could have been invested in a project that earned or had the potential to earn money, it’s sort of hard to justify outside of personal passion. Just my experience, anyway…