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Flat at 60% of pre-covid hiring while the number of graduates continue to increase and there's still a backlog of people who were laid off. That's not a particularly optimism inducing hiring market.

Do not with a straight face act like pre-COVID hiring levels were a Good Thing. They weren’t. They were a symptom of a broken economy that you personally happened to pretty directly benefit from.

I think it's much better for society for companies to overhire than underhire, especially when they can easily afford it.

This is an idealistic view and makes hiring seem like charity.

There will always be steep corrections when they overhire driven by economic cycles or otherwise (and we're living through an otherwise).


At societal scale hiring people is self-interest, not charity. Otherwise you'll get to exactly where the US is heading now: large parts of the consumer market are mostly dead because people have no discretionary spending power left, and the only way to make money as a business is to become a monopolist.

Thing is, the companies doing these layoffs rarely actually end up losing money from overhiring. They’re still profitable. Just not profitable enough for the people on top.

That’s a bit perverse. In democracies, corporations ultimately exist to serve society, not shareholders.


The plutocracy is forgetting that a working and productive populace - with fair wages and representation - is their end of the deal for disproportionally benefitting from the fruits of labor from others; and directly prevents violence against the status quo. See: The top articles in the last 3 days.

Sure, but all they have to do is not hold up their end of the bargain. Who enforces that? These are just norms from 60 years ago that the rich decided they no longer have to follow.

They’ve started treating incorporation like a modern day papal indulgence, something that absolves whatever they do in the name of profit. It doesn’t. Limited liability buys you forgiveness in court but it doesn’t buy you forgiveness in the court of public opinion. Doing harm for a company is still doing harm.

I think you are correct in asserting the mercy-disciple of market forces.

I also think that counter points on the inhumanity of firms, misses that economies are an objective way to structure incentives to achieve subjective ends.

If you want more money to travel to other parts of the pyramid, or you want to disincentivize certain behavior, then economic incentives can be set up to achieve those goals.

Expecting firms to do charity is pointless. Expecting firms to optimize under constraints is not.


That's the problem, they can't afford it

They can afford it. They just want to make even more profit.

Each commit can be merged independently as they're reviewed.

I don't think this is it. The main driver is that several operations in GH are scoped around a PR, not a commit. So the reason you need stacked PRs is that the layer of tooling above `git` is designed to work on logical groups of commits called a PR.

Right, the argument against: "how is this any different than splitting into single commits?" is simply: In general you want just one level above a commit which is the PR

One of the advertised features of this is being able to merge all the PRs at once. Which would also be the case for multiple commits in a single PR.

That's possible but not mandatory. In the current UX you can only approve/submit all or none.

My reaction would be to report spam with a vengeance

On the seasons front, traditionally in Ireland winter starts on Halloween (at sunset if you want to be really specific), and so you get winter is November till January, spring is February to April, summer is May to July and autumn is August to October.

That said being an English speaking country and absorbing a lot of media from other English speaking countries, there’s been a slow drift towards the American system making its way in, so younger generations are more likely to use American seasons and older people more likely to use traditional seasons, though you’ll find people of all age groups using either. Certainly they taught the traditional seasons in school when I was a kid, I wonder which they teach now.

(Of course, you could make yet another system based on the weather where summer is approximately two weeks in July, winter is a thing that happens every few years and the rest is a sequence of mild weather with occasional wind and scattered showers)


I find the "solstices/equinoxes mark starts of seasons" a bit foreign too, but… weather-wise, annual top and bottom temperatures are of course offset from the solstices due to thermal inertia.

In Finland the traditional division is that winter is Dec-Feb, spring is Mar-May, summer is Jun-Aug, and autumn is Sep-Nov. Historically it has made perfect sense, weather and climate wise – particularly from the point of view of agriculture, which is of course the reason people used to think about seasons in the first place!

February in particular is 100% winter in Finland with no signs of spring besides the days starting to get very noticeably longer by then. It's often the coldest month of the year and when schools usually have a week-long winter break. Similarly, August is very definitely a summer month except in the far north where spring comes late and autumn early. The academic year in schools and universities typically starts at the end of August, so that's a clear and important dividing line in many people's lifes. In Southern Finland, December is these days rather autumny more often than not, and there's often no lasting snow until January (if even then). June is a crapshoot, it can be nice and warm or surprisingly cold.

I guess Jan-Feb are definitely winter, Apr-May definitely spring, Jul-Aug definitely summer, and Oct-Nov definitely autumn. The rest are kind of transitional and their weather unpredictable. Of course, the climate change isn't helping things, either.


It's also funny how Finland has a concept of "thermic spring", which is defined by the temperature no longer dipping below 0° C, and the term doesn't exist in English because the definition wouldn't work in the climate of most of the English-speaking world.

This a common thing shared with the Nordics. The English term would be “meteorological spring”.

https://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/V%C3%A5r_i_Sverige

The definition would certainly work in English countries, seeing it is just 0 to 10 degrees Celsius average over the course of a week (and after 15th of February).


On holidays, in the US, Thanksgiving is Fall-themed so we wouldn't want to start winter until after the 4th Thursday of November (which because of how it shifts around, pretty much means December).

Alternatively they asked copilot to scan for crypto projects and ban them

You think it would succeed at that? Come on. Copilot is for entertainment purposes only!

Watching Microsoft try to dogfood Copilot is entertaining to me, in a way.

https://techcrunch.com/2026/04/05/copilot-is-for-entertainme...

At least it reached its goal if it entertained you


Is the _very big_ company Amazon, I wonder.

(OP here) Nope! For all their faults, Amazon don't seem to have leaked anything of mine. Yet.

> For all their faults, Amazon don't seem to have leaked anything of mine.

Selling email lists is business. Not selling email lists is, in some cases, much smarter, much more hard-nosed business, and is exactly what you would expect from Amazon.

When your only product is email addresses, you will sell them to anybody trying to sell other shit.

When you sell all the possible kinds of shit in the world, why on earth would you enable your competitors by giving them any form of access to your customer list?


I would expect that a llm based scraper is going to be better at parsing an email address from your instructions than some of the more inattentive people who's emails you might want to receive. So I think some of the dumber mitigation measures that still block the simple regex bots from this topic are probably a better bet now.

I have a wildcard address at my domain. The most common email addresses for spam are:

- git@mydomain.com

Presumably harvested from GitHub or gitlab

- contact@mydomain.com / admin@mydomain.com

Not actually an email address ever used, presumably people just guessing these exist from convention.

- <first name>@mydomain.com

I mean, if you know my name you can probably guess this but also this has been my primary email address for outbound email and so has ended up in marketing lists etc.

- ap@mydomain.com, finance@mydomain.com

This is a very recent trend but I've been getting emails to made up addresses like these ones quoting forged emails from myself (with various titles like CEO or CFO attached) claiming to authorize payments to other parties, usually backdated, and then asking that I process their invoice ASAP because look how long ago the CEO said it should be paid. I guess my website has ended up in some list of businesses despite being a personal site.

Ironically, the address that was in plain text in my HN profile for like 15 years gets very minimal spam.


I find articles like this a good counter to the idea that typical software used to be better in the past (usually with an appeal to an idea that people were “real programmers” in those days and anything other than C as used in the 90s is a modern extravagance)

AI can produce code that is about 70% as good as median quality code found on the internet.

I would not describe median quality C code as free from these issues


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