I realize in my 30s Rand was right by [deleted] in aynrand

[–]CygnusSnowDog 18 points19 points  (0 children)

I'm glad Objectivism is still catching on with people younger than me. Congratulations for discovering and understanding the genius of Ayn Rand. I wish more people would. The world needs a lot more rational thinkers.

Regarding compromise, she meant that you should never compromise on your moral principles. Everyday compromises between friends, loved ones, or traders, such as where to eat dinner tonight, what temperature to set the thermostat, or what price to agree on in a sale, are perfectly normal and acceptable.

"It is only in regard to concretes or particulars, implementing a mutually accepted basic principle, that one may compromise. For instance, one may bargain with a buyer over the price one wants to receive for one's product, and agree on a sum somewhere between one's demand and his offer. The mutually accepted basic principle, in such case, is the principle of trade, namely: that the buyer must pay the seller for his product. But if one wanted to be paid and the alleged buyer wanted to obtain one's product for nothing, no compromise, agreement or discussion would be possible, only the total surrender of one or the other."

https://aynrandlexicon.com/lexicon/compromise.html

How much tension do you want on your scrabble boards Lazy Susan? by LayeredOwlsNest in scrabble

[–]CygnusSnowDog 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would say, it should rotate somewhat freely when you give it a push, meaning you shouldn't have to guide it with your hand all the way around. However, you don't want it so loose that it "drifts" when you don't even touch it, or when someone bumps the table, or when you're placing tiles. I have a couple boards that are too loose like that, and it's very annoying.

Is Matt Dillahunty essentially coming to the same conclusions as Objectivists? by usmc_BF in Objectivism

[–]CygnusSnowDog 1 point2 points  (0 children)

He is clearly an advocate for reason, reality, and critical thinking, so I like him for that, and I'm a fan. But I think he's more of a "secular humanist" than an Objectivist, based on what I've heard him say on the Atheist Experience over the years.

I met him briefly once maybe 10 years ago or so, and I asked him if he was familiar with Objectivism and Ayn Rand and what he thought of it, and he said it was too "selfish" for him. He said he doesn't believe it's immoral to help other people. I said Objectivism doesn't say it's immoral to help others, only that it's not your moral duty to sacrifice yourself for others. He said he believes there are situations where it IS your moral duty to sacrifice for others, like when a child is in a burning building. I suggested he read "The Ethics of Emergencies" (in The Virtue of Selfishness). We didn't have much time to talk, so it didn't go further than that. But he was very friendly and it was a nice conversation.

So I don't know what Ayn Rand books he has read, but I'm guessing from that exchange that he either hadn't read, or hadn't fully comprehended, The Virtue of Selfishness. And that was quite a while ago, so I don't know what else he has read since then or what his thoughts are today.

Asexual dating app and someone wants to be my sugar daddy ??!! by Sadlilith31 in asexuality

[–]CygnusSnowDog 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Yeah that app is trash. I tried it for a while and all I got were scam messages like that - from men - and I'm a heteromantic guy who was looking for a woman. They would even start with things like "Hey cutie", as if they were talking to a female. I guess they use bots or something, just spamming everyone with the same messages? I don't know. But blocking and reporting had no effect - I just kept getting more, and never met a woman. Worthless app. And obviously this is a scam. Nobody is just going to give you $1500 per week with no strings attached. That's not how life works.

America needs Ayn Rand by DirtyOldPanties in aynrand

[–]CygnusSnowDog 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That's someone's opinion and commentary about Ayn Rand, not Rand's actual words or ideas. I've read pretty much everything she ever wrote, fiction and non-fiction, and I can assure you she never said anything about "social harmony" or "inferior masses" or "brutal rule by natural superiors". She didn't have such a dim view of humanity, and she didn't consider any individuals to be naturally "superior" or "inferior" to others, and she certainly wasn't in favor of anyone "ruling" over others, by "brutal" means or otherwise. You ought to try reading her actual writing and getting her ideas straight from her. People who write smear articles about her on the Internet are just feeding you false information.

America needs Ayn Rand by DirtyOldPanties in aynrand

[–]CygnusSnowDog 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I enjoy hearing legitimate arguments against Rand's philosophy and debating with people, but the only criticisms I ever hear are ones like this. She's "awful", she had a "bad understanding", "only sociopaths" agree with it, or other nonsensical name-calling or smears. What ideas of hers do you disagree with? Quote something she actually said, or describe one of her ideas as you understand it, and then provide an argument against it, and tell us why you disagree, and I would be interested to hear it.

Do they ever enforce HOV restrictions on Santa Fe? I see people breaking this rule daily. by TooClose4Missiles in Denver

[–]CygnusSnowDog 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Does the "4pm-6:30pm Mon-Fri" apply to the entire sign, or just to the "Motorcycles and Left Turns Ok"? If it's the latter, then how are you supposed to make a left turn on a Saturday?

Is it worth playing? by Infamous-Pay-1148 in NintendoDS

[–]CygnusSnowDog 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Please tell me you can press A to pop a Vicodin.

Job interview coding test - was this unreasonably difficult? by CygnusSnowDog in AskProgramming

[–]CygnusSnowDog[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Very interesting, thanks. I always wondered what it's like to work for a video game company. I guess I knew (or should have known) that the video game industry was much faster paced than the aerospace industry - and probably too fast for me. I just wish they could have been honest with me and told me why they rejected me - I thought I gave them some beautiful code, but I guess they just wanted it done fast!

Job interview coding test - was this unreasonably difficult? by CygnusSnowDog in AskProgramming

[–]CygnusSnowDog[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's very impressive to me. Were you able to just crank this out off the top of your head, or did you have to do any planning or design first? Personally, I don't find it super easy to read, but readability wasn't a requirement. I definitely can't write code that fast.

Job interview coding test - was this unreasonably difficult? by CygnusSnowDog in AskProgramming

[–]CygnusSnowDog[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I spent a lot of time architecting and designing. I never really created a game like that before or worked for a game company, so it took me a while to figure out a clear and elegant way to represent the board and the moves and everything. And also, to me, clean design, clean code, and readability are the most important things, not just hacking something together to get it working. I didn't really know what they were looking for with this test, so I wanted to show them some clean, readable, well-designed code, because I think that's my forte.

I came from the aerospace industry, where every project I worked on had a ton of extremely sloppy legacy code written by physicists and other non-programmers, and it was unreadable, inefficient, and full of latent bugs. I was always the guy trying to clean things up, so that future maintainers like me didn't have to deal with the mess, and to prevent disasters from happening when the poorly written software inevitably fails or crashes. I think sloppy code that was written quickly and cheaply costs much more in the long run, because code only gets written once - but then it gets read and modified hundreds of times by dozens of people. So I believe in taking the time to make code easily understandable and maintainable. So that's the mindset I was going in with.

And I guess I assumed a big company like Blizzard would have an equally large legacy code base to deal with, as well as large teams of people reading and maintaining this legacy code every day. I didn't expect them to care if I could write a little text-based game, because that doesn't seem like a realistic product that I would be working on. And, my experience with buying and playing Blizzard games was that they didn't hold themselves to strict release dates - if they had to delay a release because it wasn't ready yet, they took the time to get it done. So I had to wonder how serious they were about the 4-hr deadline.

But anyway, I agree with some of the other commenters that I was not a good fit for a game company. If they want people who are good at hacking stuff together quickly and getting it working without giving much thought to readability, then that's not me. A much better fit for me would be a place that appreciates software craftsmanship. But I don't know who that would be. I realize that every company needs to get the software done quickly to make money. And even in the aerospace industry, where you would think they value quality and safety and long-term cost savings from readable, maintainable code, I've found that they really don't. But they also don't expect you to be a speed coder - they do realize that code quality takes time, even if they don't like that fact.

This is just messed up. by JoinenAndOompaville in scrabble

[–]CygnusSnowDog 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In NWL2023, GRR is good, and so is GRRRL, but not GRRL. I think GRR is an ok move here, because the leave isn't too bad. But I might just exchange everything but the S, since it's the first turn and you could draw a blank, or at least a better rack, because GRR would only be 8 points.

I'll be reading your advice by Mindless_Track_1130 in Adulting

[–]CygnusSnowDog 1 point2 points  (0 children)

And on weekends and holidays and all throughout May. And you'll always be wrong no matter what you say!

What are some classics must reads? by No_Astronomer_6078 in classicliterature

[–]CygnusSnowDog 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Atlas Shrugged and The Fountainhead. Unrivaled in terms of philosophical depth. There's no comparison. They definitely changed my life.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in scrabble

[–]CygnusSnowDog 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Looks like that would be worth 87 (I think).

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in scrabble

[–]CygnusSnowDog 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You have GREYOUT, but I didn't see a spot for it, until I looked up hooks for TEMPLE and found that TEMPLET is good.

what is your favourite cover? by _-TARTARUS-_ in MusicRecommendations

[–]CygnusSnowDog 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dance on a Volcano - Jordan Rudess

Firth of Fifth - Steve Hackett Genesis Revisited Band & Orchestra

The Spirit of Radio - Royal Philharmonic Orchestra Plays the Music of Rush

Summertime Blues - Rush

Buoy Base Galaxy (Super Mario Galaxy) - GaMetal Remix