ruffsl

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
 

cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/1894165

Looks like @phiresky@lemmy.world is looking for reviews on their latest optimizations to the Lemmy backend. Figured folks here might be interested in taking a look.

 

Looks like @phiresky@lemmy.world is looking for reviews on their latest optimizations to the Lemmy backend. Figured folks here might be interested in taking a look.

 

So, a recent skit about agile development from Striped Giraffe reminded me of this silly parody that my CSE PhD colleagues did back at UCSD in 2016 for the holidays. The solo in the middle hits hard, so check the subtitles for the lyrics if you can't catch the jokes as they fly by so fast.

Related:

[–] ruffsl@programming.dev 2 points 2 years ago

Hello world!
~ from S4L!

[–] ruffsl@programming.dev 7 points 2 years ago (2 children)

This was a funny talk wasn't it! Any others of his you'd recommend?


Think I posted this with the short code, so Limmy didn't match the cross post, but here are a couple more old comments here too:

I should open a ticket about fuzzy domain matching for cross posts on Lemmy. Should be useful for other things like stack overflow or other social media links.

[–] ruffsl@programming.dev 17 points 2 years ago

Could go the other way though. Ask them nicely if they'd be willing to free up their heap of inventory, and if they return you a cart overflow, you know you've stumbled upon the ultimate zero day coupon.

[–] ruffsl@programming.dev 2 points 2 years ago

Fair enough. I just wanted to point out why you may see others, or news outlets, refer to tech giants, such as Microsoft, as FANGs or FAANGs given the historical context, regardless of how one may prefer to grammatically re-phrase such nonsensical statements. E.g:

So, who are the FAANGs?

[–] ruffsl@programming.dev 2 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Ah, the first post on the new community lead me to think it was just about capture the flag events or memes about coding challenges. Perhaps a calendar or event list in the side bar may help subscribers?

[–] ruffsl@programming.dev 2 points 2 years ago (2 children)

Language is inherently messy, localized, and ephemeral, so it could be unwise to expect that kind of conformity on the global internet. It can be jarring, for example tech folk here in the EU seem to use corporate slang a lot differently than when I was working near SFO or DFW, we're I'd suspect the greater non-homogeneity of native speakers, as compared to the US, had a lot to do with it.

That aside, I think we merely disagree on the colloquial use of FAANG in 2023, as (from my anecdotal perspective) it seems to have semantically shifted into a categorical noun in common vernacular, rather than a once precise acronym from a decade ago, given most of the conglomerates behind the initial spelling have either re-branded, fallen in stock valuation, declined in labor desirability, or whatever else that had originally garnered acclaim and publicity. In that respect, pluralization of such a noun seems mundane, if not a little odd looking for typographical formatting.

Perhaps this could be coined as another stage of acronymization, or "acronym drift"; the process by which an acronym's original expansion and meaning become less relevant or obscured over time, and the acronym itself is treated and used as a regular word, independent of its original expansion. This can happen when the original meaning of the acronym is no longer relevant, but the acronym continues to be used and recognized based on its familiarity. An example that comes to mind is Google's original acronym for the QUIC protocol, which is no longer used to mean "Quick UDP Internet Connections", as was initially proposed.

[–] ruffsl@programming.dev 1 points 2 years ago (3 children)

Could a community description be added? Is it just about certain meme template or genre of humor? Not sure I ever knew of the subreddit.

[–] ruffsl@programming.dev 2 points 2 years ago

Ex. An NBA or Sports instance containing /c/NBA /c/NFL /c/NHL and all the related teams.

[–] ruffsl@programming.dev 2 points 2 years ago (4 children)

My phone keyboard spelling aside, when the acronym was first coined, correct, but it seems to have sence devolved into more of a colloquialism for large scale tech related corporations, outliving the precise corporate restructuring that once comprised the old acronym. At least that's what I've experienced in my workplaces, as well as the comments here:

Was there a equivalent house hold colloquialism for IBM, HP, Xerox, Bell System, etc. back in the day?

[–] ruffsl@programming.dev 5 points 2 years ago

I think if the local and remote instances are federated - for posts submitted to remote communities that have subscribers from the local instance - posts to the local instance can be annotated with cross-posted to: links, whenever the local instance is aware of other federated posts that have a matching URL in other OP posts.

A single OP can manually cross post to other communities using the cross-post button next to the title of a post, although that will auto populate the body text of the new post with quoted text from the original, as well as an embedded hyperlink to the original.

So coss-posts can be both auto detected by Lemmy, or manually created by OP(s).

[–] ruffsl@programming.dev 6 points 2 years ago

They can try and reinvent themselves all they'd like, but I can't be bothered to keep up with their rebrandings if they can't be bothered to commit and sell off the domain name. Something something sacrifice, something, law of Equivalent exchange. /s

[–] ruffsl@programming.dev 47 points 2 years ago (20 children)

scrambling to lock their doors

From a consumer perspective, it seems like all the FANG conglomerates are trying to shut the stable door after the AI horse has bolted, but perhaps from an industry perspective, their just trying to pull up the ladder behind themselves to curb competition, or stall any emerging upstarts, just like most FANGs where themselves only decades ago.

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