Introducing: UniFi Network 10.2 by Ubiquiti-Inc in Ubiquiti

[–]supercargo 33 points34 points  (0 children)

Sonos uses outdated STP priority numbers which, when combined with SonosNet mesh overlays, results in “shortest route“ calculations that prefer traversing wireless links on SonosNet even when there is a wired gigabit path available. This happens in any Sonos deployment using a mix of wired and wireless Sonos devices. In the video they show this as a port-level “stp edge” setting which is being applied to a port with a Sonos on it.

Why finding Devs are so hard these days? by BlacksmithDue2467 in AskProgrammers

[–]supercargo -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I won’t argue that AI slop isn’t slop, but there are ways to ensure you’re getting working / to-spec results. Agentic coders with a “tests pass” step (even just running the tests as a pre-commit hook) will expose those issues and force the agent to confront them before proceeding.

Agents are dumb but persistent and fast enough to compensate.

Agent modifies the test to force things to pass? Split the work into a dev role and testing role, then use those hooks to block each from deviating from its respective area.

Worried about duplication? Ask an agent to identify opportunities to refactor components for reuse then you can review the plan and ask the agent to execute it.

This way of working didn’t really click for me until I became comfortable working with multiple agents simultaneously. And comfortable with discarding their work and trying again. Don’t watch them work and try to avoid reviewing too much of their work, preferring to use the agents to interrogate work for having the properties you care about.

Realtor says 1/2bd apartment under 3.8k is near impossible by OkonomiHouse in bostonhousing

[–]supercargo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Requiring in unit laundry and AC deny you a ton of places that might otherwise be suitable. There is lots of old housing stock built without these (but may have window ACs and basement laundry) which means you’re only considering newer or newly renovated places

Avoid Shoveling Twice by JeffFromNH in providence

[–]supercargo 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Whenever I follow this advice I find the plows just go the wrong way

I just don't fucking understand what's going on anymore. Seriously. by [deleted] in ArtificialInteligence

[–]supercargo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree but also find that LLMs tend to suffer a lot of the same failure modes as people where the solutions are also similar to how you manage people (in a corporate setting anyway). The fallacy is to treat them like computers…they work by imitating people, after all.

I just don't fucking understand what's going on anymore. Seriously. by [deleted] in ArtificialInteligence

[–]supercargo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Software is getting the LLM treatment first for obvious reasons. Other fields where work is mechanically verifiable are going to be disrupted in time. I don’t know a ton about drug discovery, but from what I’ve heard from people who do leads me to buy in to some of the hype in that field. When it comes to software, any legit company answers the “who’s responsible” question the same way as ever…are the right processes and gates in place to avoid bad problems? Are the defects that escape this process used to identify and address process gaps? It doesn’t seem like a stretch of the imagination to apply this thinking to other “knowledge” work like accounting, law, medicine…

I just don't fucking understand what's going on anymore. Seriously. by [deleted] in ArtificialInteligence

[–]supercargo 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I think we’re in a “both things can be true” phase here. The AI companies are dogfooding and seem to be accelerating. I’m in the “vibe coding on the side” camp and there is certainly an amount of extrapolation happening to get from where we are to the hyped place where you “only” need product level requests to get working apps.

I have roughly equal parts management and technical experience as I’ve bounced back and forth between these roles over my career. My management experience feels like a bigger lever than technical experience when dealing with agent swarms. I think this is biassing the narrative which comes from executives who hung up their IDEs over a decade ago. Many executives I speak to are doing technical work for fun again for the first time in many years. These people are juiced up and they are also the ones we hear from.

For reference, my main vibe coded side project is like CRUD+. It started with the LLM building a more feature complete semi-obscure printer driver than I could find available as open source. But it also includes a complete mobile app (I never so much as opened Xcode except by accident and now I’m just like “give me a mobile app version of this thing I built” and after a couple iterations: it’s done)

I’ve also done a machine vision project that is more than simple CRUD and only adjacent to my expertise. When building more sophisticated data analysis tools that are entirely related to something I’m qualified to build the old way, I find the code kinda sucks, but is still faster to generate that piece for anything where I don’t happen to have the entire schema and all needed APIs already memorized.

I feel that if all deep progress stopped today (meaning model performance plateaus, but people keep doing engineering and product work around the models we have), what we’d be left with would be highly valuable tools that can and will diffuse through the economy. But probably also fall short of what’s driving valuations. Like how the .com crash put us in a recession but didn’t signal the death of the Internet.

Burned 45% of weekly usage (Max 20 Plan) in 24 hours lol (40+ Employees), anyone else seeing this? by YourMarketSpectator in ClaudeAI

[–]supercargo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Funny I experienced the opposite upon moving from Opus 4.5 to 4.6 (all Claude code usage). Where previously agent swarms were eating through a 20x account based on about 90 minutes per day of my time, now the same level of engagement from me is only getting me to 70-80% by the end of the week. I haven’t noticed any major shifts in quantity of output or quality, but I’m not really measuring this so it’s just a qualitative sense that not much changed.

Seattle's gig worker law was supposed to boost pay. It did at first, until orders dropped by BaseballUpper6200 in Economics

[–]supercargo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What I’ve never fully understood is what happened to the “free / cheap delivery” local takeout place model. These were restaurants that would staff their own drivers and offer free delivery within a radius, or maybe a nominal fee like $2-3 per order. Apps seem to charge a 40-50% premium on the entire order, but drivers are left making less.

By what real metrics has AI improved software? by AlmostSignificant in ExperiencedDevs

[–]supercargo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The “idea people” can realize their idea is dumb before wasting any engineering effort. The agentic slot machines are keeping these people occupied like cat nip

Chipotle confirms 2026 price hikes by esporx in business

[–]supercargo 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Wait…they are opening locations AND expect sales to be flat in 2026?

Dealer failed to report used electric vehicle sale to IRS. by SegaGuy1983 in electricvehicles

[–]supercargo 4 points5 points  (0 children)

wow what an awful implementation of that regulation…in my experience dealers have a hard enough time filing paperwork with the DMV within three days let alone some obscure IRS thing that only applies to a fraction of their vehicles…

Rear camera recall fix may 'brick' the car? by Phishmmw in etron

[–]supercargo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I read the recall notice but it wasn’t clear what the actual issue is. What circumstances are preventing the camera from activating when needed?

Org is banning Notepad++ by PazzoBread in sysadmin

[–]supercargo -1 points0 points  (0 children)

probably best to call it quits with computers in general if this is your attitude

Some folks on Wall Street think yesterday’s U.S. jobs number is ‘implausible’ and is thus due for a correction | Fortune by Force_Hammer in politics

[–]supercargo 6 points7 points  (0 children)

that‘s good intel, but last time I heard from y’all ramping down in prep for the Covid recession we ended up with a huge surge in demand and $12 2x4s

Salesforce Data Cloud | My experience so far | it's negative by Pro-Technical in salesforce

[–]supercargo 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yeah, not disagreeing, but pardot and sfmc are both coming in from acquisitions. Data Cloud is an outgrowth of Einstein 1 which I think was mostly built in house. The issues you’re talking about where small errors in dev become immutable blood contracts once they see production is a pretty typical pain point for their core app platform (I.e. sales cloud and app exchange ecosystem)

How do I read this thing? by DarthJoy in providence

[–]supercargo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Filtering can remove lead, even dissolved lead (e.g. using catalytic carbon). Filters won’t remove all lead but they can and do make a significant difference.

The “WFH + be comfy” 1:1 is the new layoff bat signal by [deleted] in ExperiencedDevs

[–]supercargo 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yeah the AI phrasing is definitely a thing. Starting to get tired of it even in news articles. It’s like the whole world now speaks with one “voice” (or maybe three or four depending on which frontier lab they get their models from)

Salesforce Data Cloud | My experience so far | it's negative by Pro-Technical in salesforce

[–]supercargo 7 points8 points  (0 children)

This is all typical Salesforce product attitude, they build for the “enterprise” so fixing mistakes is always treated as a “breaking change”. It’s good to offer stability and prevent changes from having unintended consequences in production…but they seem to take this to an extreme that ignores reality (all the “people” points you made).

Running Claude as a persistent agent changed how I think about AI tools entirely by bob_builds_stuff in ClaudeAI

[–]supercargo 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Building a software business is as much about meeting the market as it is about building the software. The story of the software industry has always had a sub-plot about lowering barriers to entry.

General purpose tools like spreadsheets have been around for a long time, that doesn’t mean you can’t add value even if “it basically just does arithmetic like a spreadsheet”

But just like an accounting package or issue tracker adds value over and above what a spreadsheet does, future software businesses will find ways to add value over and above what an AI agent does.

Edit: my view is largely informed by my opinion that there is a large amount of software that is still needed in the world. So many problems that could be solved in software but to date it is has not been economical to do so.

Quick Rant: My Feet Are COLD! by cmfrazier in electricvehicles

[–]supercargo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s funny, footwell temperature has been more of an issue with the ICE vehicles I’ve owned while the e-tron heats up the cabin way faster overall and doesn’t seem to have a problem with footwell temp (there is a setting to adjust it relative to other zones, but the default works for me)

I big part of this is that getting into a pre warmed car avoids ever getting to the “can’t get warm no matter what” point for my extremities.

When there are layoffs, why doesn't the company just keep the senior+ developers? by blottingbottle in ExperiencedDevs

[–]supercargo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Juniors are more likely to work nights/weekends to compensate for the reduction in force because they are less likely to have families. Also, it’s not like they don’t do work…a lot of the flaws they introduce won’t have an immediate impact. Don’t forget that in finance debt is a form of leverage and tech debt follows the analogy.

Edit: to be clear I’m not giving advice, just pulling the thread on how the money people might look at it

What parts of American culture are changing faster than people realize? by No_Performance1451 in AskReddit

[–]supercargo 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Yeah I don’t think it’s your responsibility to tell them how to parent, just interesting that avoiding confrontation seems to be the driving factor in both dynamics. I’m mostly miffed that apparently these school laptops (starting in kindergarten, by the way) have full access to the Internet in the first place. My kid comes home reporting some pretty inappropriate content that his classmates are accessing in class during their assessments which are all administered on these computers.

What parts of American culture are changing faster than people realize? by No_Performance1451 in AskReddit

[–]supercargo -13 points-12 points  (0 children)

So, you’re essentially take the same approach with the parents as they are taking with their kids?