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I just wanted to visualize a waveform, randomly searched for "audacity like online", not expecting much... and by god, they did it. The maniacs.

wavacity.com/

If you missed my talk but still want to see it, the video is already available for PyCon Online and in-person attendees!

This also explains a bunch of "technical debt".

A pattern that repeats throughout my almost 20 year career (I old) is an engineer finds a bug that requires a non-trivial effort to fix systemically.

They make a local change to avoid (not fix) the bug.

Why? Because they don't have time. They can't take time. They don't feel like they can justify it to their manager. Maybe they're worried they won't hit an OKR.

This happens a lot with less experienced engineers but I find myself doing it.

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I think a significant amount of organizational dysfunction (like the reading time in meetings thing) is easily explainable by people being overworked.

People aren't prepping for the meeting ahead of time so you move the prep into the meeting.

Why aren't people prepping? A totally reasonable explanation is that they've got 5 of these meetings this week plus a sprint full of coding work plus they're on call.

@pganssle I’m at $2.25m. That’s about what $100 a month can buy out of the options I found.

@jerub RFC 3339 is stricter than the subset of ISO 8601 that most people talk about, because it is only a datetime format and requires a time zone.

As far as I can tell there is no standard that describes the subset of ISO8601 that people actually care about.

Did you know that ISO 8601 is a very large standard that describes more than a single date and time format?

It describes periods, repetitions, many different syntax of describing years, week-of-year, day-of-year, seasons, quarters, semesters, trimesters.

It's mostly unknown because the standards are paywalled: you can't just read ISO 8601 without paying ISO money.

Most of the time, when people refer to ISO 8601, they mean the subset that is described in RFC 3339.

I realize it's very evocative but I kind of hate the term "hallucinate" when talking about AI. When humans hallucinate, it's cognitive apparatus coming unmoored from sensory input. Something different is happening in the brain and in the sense organs when hallucinations are occurring than when one is accurately apprehending the world. But LLMs _only_ hallucinate. They do not have sense organs. The lies they generate are not, in their internal mechanisms, any different from the truths.

Oh wow, is it finally gonna happen? A public(ish), ubiquitous instant payment system? Here?? federalreserve.gov/newsevents/

Is how every go app is versioned, I call it GoVer because go mod fucked everything up.

I know necromancy was banned by the Mages Guild... but it's just so much fun!

#Python #html5lib

In a move that should hopefully surprise no one, the next version of glom will be 3-only. Thoughts? Feel free to open an issue or comment on the (now-merged) PR: github.com/mahmoud/glom/pull/2

@AlSweigart I lowkey have 2 episodes of this already recorded and cut from a few years ago! (If only hosting podcasts had been my forte 😅)

Still love the concept though. For most PEPs in a final state, it's almost 100% evergreen content, and it simultaneously covers practical soft skills as well as CS/PL fundamentals, while still having natural units: the PEPs themselves.

Anyways, we called it The PEPCast, but PEP Talks is good, too. Lmk if you'd like to take a listen/see notes/etc.!

So I read this

infrequently.org/2023/02/the-m

and then I read this

nytimes.com/2023/02/04/us/poli

and they are the same article. Modern front-end framework development is military contracting is every other prestige industry where complexity : sophistication :: expense : value and outcomes are assumed because testing is disincentivized.

Banning free API use blocks anyone who's inclined to abide by the rules but does nothing to stop anyone who's already using the official app API keys to look like a human

@hynek yeah that was my main misgiving, straddling those use cases made me nervous. I do need to update the library workflows at some point. I'll keep an eye on it.

@hynek PDM has also caught my wandering eye. Seems like you're using it for an application/tool, as opposed to a PyPI-published library?

@pganssle management fiction is/should be a genre unto itself. I think it started with "The Goal" but I first ran into it with "The Phoenix Project". Probably "out there" incarnation is the Moshidora anime, where an unlikely baseball manager successfully fixes a baseball team using Drucker.

Business people love to set up their idealized selves to perfectly solve their strawman scenarios. :P

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