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Holy moly it’s slow.

An implement step for a simple delete entity endpoint in my rails app took 30 minutes. Nothing crazy but it had a couple checks it needed to do first. Very simple stuff like checking what the scheduled time is for something and checking the current status of a state machine.

I’m tempted to switch back to Opus 4.6 and have it try again for reference because holy moly it legit felt way slower than normal for these kinds of simple tasks that it would oneshot pretty effortlessly.

Also used up nearly half of my session quota just for this one task. Waaaaay more token usage than before.


Slow is good thought, that's when you know it'll get it right.

Actually more useful than Bitcoin. Brilliant idea.

Natural Selection might as well be called Natural Eugenics.

I have people in my family with Downs. It made the early pregnancies for every one of my children a terrifying ordeal. Luckily my children were all born perfectly healthy.

I love my family members with it, but their lives have been so much more difficult than they needed to be. It’s not just massively difficult for the disabled, it financially ruined their parents and their care is also a massive tax burden on the community.

If we can eliminate a crippling disease by “just” turning off a gene we should absolutely do it. The alternative is aborting them as soon as it is detected, and even then it isn’t always caught in-utero.

I have worked with people will all sorts of disabilities my entire life. I can confidently say that if I asked any of my blind or deaf colleagues that if they could take a simple gene therapy so they could see/hear again that they would do it without hesitation. Why would Down Syndrome be any different?

I can’t think of a single valid argument against it other than “eugenics bad”. We aren’t talking about Nazi-era human experimentation here.


As I said in another comment, eugenics is state authoritarian control of reproduction and fertility (with the extreme version being genocide).

There are very few people with a disability who wouldn’t want it to have been prevented or cured. “A healthy man has many dreams. A sick man has only one.”


My company implements cooldowns by never updating anything ever. (Send help)

Not updating things is an underappreciated strategy and a core principle of production environments: "if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it".

There are nuances of course, and things that are broken should be fixed, and unfortunately, they often don't want you to just fix what needs to be fixed, like security vulnerabilities. That's how stuff break constantly, you just wanted a patch for a buffer overflow, and you get an AI chatbot and your keyboard shortcuts disappeared.

Sometimes, they let you get only the things you want (i.e. actual fixes), it is important for companies that do serious business like banks, production lines, etc... They know it and charge good money for the privilege.


Congratulations you reinvented spec-kit.

Why do companies keep working with Persona even though they have proven time and time again to be untrustworthy?

Persona is easy to implement, has all the compliance requirements, and is in line with market prices. ID verification will always be an afterthought, unfortunately.

Due to zero consequences of that untrustworthiness.

>untrustworthy

For the user, sure. But for companies and governments? I'm pretty sure Person is quite trustworthy.


I just laugh whenever I hear “ghost gun”.

> On January 13, 2014 a certain State Senator (no reason to name names) held a press conference where he held a modern rifle in his hands and stated, “This is a ghost gun. This right here has the ability with a .30-caliber clip to disperse with 30 bullets within half a second. Thirty magazine clip in half a second.”

Anyone that knows even a little bit about guns knows that this is utter nonsense, and it was appropriately memed into oblivion.

Most anti-gun activists and legislators seem to have no more knowledge than this - which is to say, none.


> Anyone that knows even a little bit about guns knows that this is utter nonsense

Most people in California who vote on these matters have not held a BB gun, let alone a semi automatic.

They have 0 idea that you just cannot buy actual guns from a grocery store in California anymore!

They think you can just buy a gun at Walmart like you can buy a can of Coke. I was able to pull up clips made in 2023 and 2025 that were literally claiming that. Hasn't been true since atleast 2009, likely even earlier.

A few years ago a local Walmart was clearing our their air gun and rifle selection after there had been a shooting on the east coast that was all over the news. Since ammo have become really expensive, I bought out the whole shelf of air rifles so I could continue to target practice with a focus on my breathing.

People called the cops on me. Multiple people verbally abused me as a gun nut and recorded me buying them on their phones. I had air guns - *children* *toys*. They thought it was the real deal!

The local sherrif's department received nearly a 100 calls that hour when we spoke. When I asked them why they even bothered to turn up because they know no Walmart in a 300 mile radius have ever sold a rifle in the last 20 years as was described to them over the phone, they just shrugged and said "politics".


Hence "assault weapons" which are not a particular type of gun but a list of scary characteristics associated with military weapons—bayonet lugs, folding stocks, and the like—used by legislators to FUD their way into being seen as "doing something" about guns.

In the United States we even have a word for an assault weapon on four legs—pitbulls. Most breed-specific legislation, where it exists, targets pitbulls which are not a single breed nor group of related breeds, but basically any large muscular dog with a short snout and blocky head. The American Pit Bull Terrier is one such breed but far from the only one targeted by BSL.

I think it was Toyotomi Hideyoshi who said something like, the law is not obligated to logic, but it still must be followed.


In Canada a gun might be banned as an “assault” weapon when a slightly different version of the same gun is still legal with the only difference being that one of the guns is painted black, and the other (still legal) has a wood coloured stock. One looks like a “military” gun while the other one is a “hunting” rifle when in reality they are exactly the same weapon and the only difference is cosmetic.

I am all for sensible gun regulations but that is almost never the case in practice.


There’s a million of these per day and I would never even think about using a single one of them near production data.

Show HN style posts have become completely worthless to me, everything now is just vibe coded cloud chasing slop.


There is no “real world” use case because it’s vibe coded slop.

My 6 year old likes to make basic obstacle course games and I help him with the coding.

There is ZERO chance I’m doing ID verification or paying a subscription. The entire reason we liked this platform was there was barely any friction.

I will be checking out S&box by the creator of Garry’s mod as an alternative: https://sbox.game/


The thing that made Roblox actually work for kids wasn't the editor, it was that a kid could send a link and their friend would be playing 10 seconds later. S&box, Hytale, Luanti are all fun but they're all installs, which kills the sharing loop the moment you have one friend on an unsupported platform or a school laptop.

The closest thing to the Roblox distribution model is browser games. I work on browser-based game stuff and the hard part is never authoring, it's the last mile: corporate networks, WebSocket proxies, "my friend has a Chromebook," etc. Godot has a web export now that's genuinely usable for small multiplayer stuff, and it's free. Not as polished as Roblox Studio but the zero-install property is the whole ballgame for kids sharing with friends.


Similar story here with Minecraft.

Luanti + Mineclonia is absolutely excellent open source software.

I get a great sense of peace knowing that my incentives are aligned with the people who made it.


Huge fan of luanti (minetest) as well. My kids never picked it up though because the client controls were not very polished and they got frustrated. Has that improved in the years?

Well, that's configurable. On full games, you just download them from the manager and start a new world with that game in the main menu. For instance, "Glitch" has nothing to do with "NodeCore", nor Mineclonia or Citadel.

TFA:

> Publish for personal use - Anyone on Roblox can continue to publish games for personal use.

I know it is not great... but .. is that sufficient for your kid?


In order to able to be trusted by anyone, the user has to also verify their age. Also not every country has this feature yet, I never estimated my age by Roblox so i am also not trustable or can trust others.

We’ve been getting into doing basic multiplayer stuff (I do the coding), so unfortunately no.

Hytale also a good option, very modding friendly.

I have been checking it out. My kid already loves Minecraft so this would be a good option probably.

But do you let them play games where you have way to verify who published them? Can you at least see why some parents may not want to do this?

I personally vet every single game he plays.

I don’t let him chat with other players (text OR voice) even though I let him play multiplayer games.

We constantly talk about the dangers of online strangers and he is fully aware of “perverts” on Roblox (though he doesn’t know what tha word really means, he understands it as bad guys that want to hurt kids).

I don’t look kindly on parents that won’t do the bare minimum to protect their kids online but want to use the force of the gun on me.


It is extremely hard to fully vet a game made by a bad actor; they can deliberately make the first x-minutes innocent etc. If you tie it to real IDs you have many more tools to keep people acting honestly so you can more effectively vet them.

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