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That’s a solid point. Even if it looks great (most of the time not). I try to build small predictable parts, refactoring, … Even with all precaution, I find tech debt hidden somewhere weeks and months later.
I use LLMs extensively for work as people think we are faster now but try to avoid letting LLMs write anything for personal projects.
Money has definitely something to do with it, but when my job had nothing to do with computers I programmed way better. I kinda want to be back to that one day, the dream is to open/join a car repair shop and program, not for money, like the good old times.
idriss@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•SSH Pilot is now a feature-rich server management toolbox!
1·1 month agodeleted by creator
idriss@lemmy.mlto
Programming@programming.dev•AI Is still making code worse: A new CMU study confirms
18·2 months agoMy brief experience is similar, even if conditions are perfect (you treat it like an editor, like this exactly the change you should make, flow exactly this naming and testing styles, run the tests so it’s clear you didn’t screw anything) it will still screw things up here and there.
Definitely. The only problem is when things start being breaking for X11, it will a forced less pleasant upgrade.
Just like everyone can use Win XP, but none of latest software like browsers support XP. So do it at own paste now or be forced to upgrade later.
Fair
but this is more of the NoMachine not doing the upgrade than Wayland having issues. I guess the closes thing in Wayland is now https://manpages.ubuntu.com/manpages/jammy/man1/waypipe.1.html over ssh or simply go nuclear with full screen sharing / control with RustDesk.
X11 is already dead IMO, if you didn’t move yet (still on i3wmfor example), it’s time to upgrade.
idriss@lemmy.mlto
Programming@programming.dev•What's the best way to monitor an API for breaking changes?
1·2 months agodeleted by creator






Pay me so I don’t call it slop