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@cosas
Everything about this post is factually incorrect.

For starters wealth is not equivelant to planetary resources nor is the quantity of all resources fixed. For example if i buy a farm and breed cows im increasing the number of cows and therefore creating wealth/resources that didnt exist before. Further i might be a seller of farm tech and invented and sold some technology that enables a person to support more cows on less land. Wealth creation is not and has never been directly dictated by the quantity of resources as if it were a fixed value

Second the idea that most of the rich come from affluent backgrounds is factually false. The majority of the rich, in fact, come from poor and middle class homes, ive cited several sources on my page proving this in the past.

The reason the rich dont destroy world poverty is several reasons, one is that wealth can be destroyed just as it can be created. So if they truly dumped all their monry into the poor, since these people are for the most part people with bad monry habits, it would destroy most of the worlds wealth and put us all in poverty. Second, there wouldnt be even close to enough money to solve the problem long term anyway, at best it would fix the problem for a short time. The only way to fix the problem is to get the poor to have good money habits so thry become wealth generators rather than wealth destroyers, this is a complex problem to fix.

Updating a previous post. Things I've learned awkwardly late: display connections (like HDMI) take considerable power to operate the connection (not even the device), and arandr is an extremely easy and useful tool over raw xrandr. orys.us/t-

RT @MichaelOChurch
I don't see why people are so thrilled about "web3". The average human body produces a pound and a half of web3 per day.

developing, editing dirty HTML produced by a Word Perfect export, is so much better with hiccup and structural editing. This is a powerful, easy, much less repetitive solution. As someone who has done his fair share of HTML editing (even with good tooling!) I can definitively say, this is how HTML was meant to be.

- syntax far cleaner. `[:div.someclass ,,,]` instead of `<div class='someclass'> ,,, </div>`
- Clojure comment syntax, #_ for commenting out an entire branch of the dom, or just an arg of an HTML element
- Lisp structural editing: lisp syntax is ideal for manipulating trees like the DOM. Add, remove, translate DOM sections, easily moving a complex many-branched element to/from within another many-branched element, never worrying about missing a tag closing or misplacing an opening.
- Reagent bonus: have React.js' help informing you about problematic structures
- Reagent + Figwheel/Shadow bonus: watch your html changes instantly shown in your other browser an the side

RT @the_lazy_folder
I'm not going to do a year-in-review blog post. I'm just going to say.

changed my life.
It was the one of the best decisions I made in my life.

My only regret is that I didn't learn it sooner.

RT @enigma2a
has been life changing for me too. I’ve been on the Clojure path for 6 years and counting. The benefits of immutability run far deeper than I would have guessed when I first started. It changes how you solve problems, and that affects all aspects of development! twitter.com/the_lazy_folder/st

@veer66 @aeveltstra @yogthos@mastodon.social So, are functional languages the only ones that have immutability? I'm not sure...

@PsychoCod3r Yes, but Twitter does all kinds of occult stuff to factor those in to algorithms that determine which stuff is prioritized on your feed, with the end result that things retweeted by people are more likely to be seen by others, even discounting friend status

@yogthos@mastodon.social oh yes. The only difference is that the commented code still needs to be valid, which may not be the case depending on your type of work

Does boosting cause the boosted post to become more visible on streams as liking does on Twitter?

It isn't mentioned much, but Clojure's form comment syntax is absolutely fantastic. With a `#_` you can comment out a sexps which are valid syntax, but no good for some other reason. It makes regexp find-replace great for removing things breaking my reagent (reactjs) manufactured code.

Yesterday, I criticized the term "html developer." Today, I am most certainly an HTML developer. Fixing a Word Perfect HTML export, implementing semantic elements, re-engineering the file/resource structure, un-nesting triple-nested [span] and removing redundant inline styles.

Although github.com/tristanstraub/garde is inspired by use with Tailwind, I just used it to easily, rapidly import an arbitrary CSS file into my Garden files. Beautiful!

Also, it was my first project in which I've used deps.edn instead of Leiningen. Cider started it notably quickly. Success on two fronts!

Issue trackers are a godsend. If I couldn't write up the various ideas I have while working on other things, I'd never get anything done. Either I'd be flitting around to lower-prio tasks or I'd be constantly tripping over issues that I happened upon earlier or I'd straight up forget to do things.

TODO lists help, but I've never managed to consistently review and clear my TODO lists. That's more often where tasks go to die.

RT @MrAhmadAwais
My father once told me: "Never run after money; it's generally not worth it. Run after problems; solve them — and everything else (fame, money, appreciation, awards) will follow."

This stuck with me & has been the source of intrinsic motivation to create open-source & teach. 🧠

RT @Endless_WebDev
@lisperati This is a beautiful observation . It has been one of the truths that informs me on the minds vs computers comparison, and is actually a key component of episodic memory in some cognitive architectures. Forgetting is a feature, not a bug.

RT @Endless_WebDev
@Eng_khairallah1 Having said this , a few hours later I found myself on a project rendering and parsing raw HTML from something that used to be an application in rich PDFs. Today I was an HTML developer.

Heres something to think about. I don't have much patience for artificial scarcity , but believe that immutability is usually a good thing
---
RT @raganwald
Hackers, 1981:

"We are building a post-scarcity world with open source. Just watch us!"

Hackers, 2021:

"We are restoring scarcity with immutable ledgers. Just watch us!"
twitter.com/raganwald/status/1

I am gradually making a registry of great and horrible web apps. Slack makes a case in point: I use their desktop webapp in browser practically all day every day. On mobile, though, they literally don't even try to make a web app mobile-friendly: it actively redirects you to the app store at every attempt. Unacceptable, @slack!

Disney has a long history of being an enemy of content freedom, most notably how they twisted and manipulated copyright law to something distincly NOT in public interest, for their own pocketbooks. Disney+ is the climax of that same ignoble mission so far. defectivebydesign.org/blog/ida

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