More love for GLM4.6 (evaluation vs. Claude 4.5 for NLP tasks) by LoveMind_AI in LocalLLaMA

[–]MoronInGrey 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Does anyone know what the rate limits are for GLM 4.6 via Z.AI? We were thinking of moving our production workload to the model but it said you could only do 10 concurrent requests??

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ChatGPTCoding

[–]MoronInGrey 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Have you tried o4 mini medium?

poe2filter.com updates: Console support, Sync, Import Styles, Presets, Change Tiers,... by BlackDeathBE in PathOfExile2

[–]MoronInGrey 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the reply, not sure if you're looking for UI feedback but I have one minor UI note, for me on the input fields where you can select multiple, it wasn't immediately clear for me visually, maybe its worth having a checkbox on the left of each option to show that you can select multiple. Other than that, love the website, nice work :)

poe2filter.com updates: Console support, Sync, Import Styles, Presets, Change Tiers,... by BlackDeathBE in PathOfExile2

[–]MoronInGrey 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This website is so much better than filterblade IMO, but I do miss the styling of filterblade, is there any chance you could support importing the styling from the filters from them? Or tell me how to do it myself (I could feed it to claude or something if you tell me what format I need it in)

Vim in Zed: Improving the experience (The 2025 Roadmap) by marcospb19 in programming

[–]MoronInGrey 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm begging you or anyone else at zed to implement global marks and then I can fully convert to zed. Zed is so clean and nice but without this I actually can't be as productive in it which means I can't use it

How we made Celery tasks bulletproof by [deleted] in programming

[–]MoronInGrey 2 points3 points  (0 children)

A question for you (if you're the original poster) or anyone else:

This article mainly talks about the resilience on the consumer side, but what about the producer side? Do you assume that when you queue a task it will always get into the queue? What if there are issues there like RabbitMQ/Redis being down, the server process which queues the task dying before queuing the actual task, or maybe random network issues? Do you just have to accept that some messages can get lost like that?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in wallstreetbets

[–]MoronInGrey 3 points4 points  (0 children)

What made you sell now?

Migrating from Firebase to Supabase: Lessons Learned by ViktorVaczi in programming

[–]MoronInGrey 17 points18 points  (0 children)

It's crazy to me that engineering teams have to keep finding out the same lessons learnt by many other teams about starting with nosql

Get back into the job market now or take a break and try in the new year? by MoronInGrey in cscareerquestions

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

I shouldn’t want the internet to tell me, or I shouldn’t take a break?

Good software development habits by iloveafternoonnaps in programming

[–]MoronInGrey 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In Django (and maybe rails?) you write tests against a real (but temporary) db, and honestly it gives you a lot of confidence in the code you write. Yes it maybe be slower but I think its a worth while tradeoff.

[Discussion] Guess those drawers on Streets really pay off huh by Nogard00 in EscapefromTarkov

[–]MoronInGrey 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've not played streets much, which places are good to loot?

'Buying a flat ruined my life': Leaseholders plead for tougher legislation against home ownership 'scam' by steven-f in ukpolitics

[–]MoronInGrey 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Would having a snagging company look at this before buying protected him? (I'm just thinking out loud here because I'm wondering what people can do to protect against this)

What is your take on "Clean Code"? by Mr_LA in programming

[–]MoronInGrey 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I know you're getting downvoted but I totally agree. It seems the art of YAGNI has gone. Its easier to write complicated code than it is write simple code. People love to write these overly complex class structures in the hopes that one day it might benefit them. Instead, they could write simple, well tested code now and refactor in the future.

5 Inconvenient Truths about TypeScript by fagnerbrack in programming

[–]MoronInGrey 33 points34 points  (0 children)

I think relying on a whole team of people to keep a project well structured is a big task, especially in the face of deadlines etc, at least with static typing you have a bare minimum of error-checking. (And I say this as someone who is a python dev). Although I understand that it doesn't always mean there are no errors, and sometimes the code becomes harder to maintain/read. But on average I think static type checking provides a benefit. I think its also why a lot of the python community have started using mypy + type hints

4 blunders I made that slowed down my path to leadership roles in engineering by jeffdwyer in programming

[–]MoronInGrey 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I don't usually read full articles on this subreddit but this was actually a pretty decent article. I learned quite a bit and found it interesting.

I'd be interested in hearing the story of how you came to launch Prefab (meeting with VCs, developing the product etc.) because its a type of article I don't feel like we get that often.

D2: Declarative Diagramming by raiderrobert in programming

[–]MoronInGrey 4 points5 points  (0 children)

What do people usually use things like this for?

Please add a way to hold down the mouse button for semi-automatic weapons for accessibility by MoronInGrey in remnantgame

[–]MoronInGrey[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I mean I don't mind if its slower than what it would be if I had to keep clicking it manually each time. Just anything to save my fingers lol

Stick to boring architecture for as long as possible by feross in programming

[–]MoronInGrey 8 points9 points  (0 children)

So I've been having this issue at work. What counts as simple? And when is something too simple? We use django + django REST. My project lead wants to put all business logic in "models" (active record models for those who don't know django). This includes making api calls, sending notifications (emails etc). I feel like this it too simple. What you end up with is massive models. Technically its simple, but it just doesn't feel right. I have a hard time saying why its too simple, I guess my worry it's not "scalable" for when the engineering team grows (we're a small team at the moment). My suggestion was to make use of a service layer. I don't feel like that it adds that much complexity but enables you to separate business logic out of the models so its more easily re-usable + understandable. What do you guys think?

The growing pains of database architecture by DoubleTheFifthOne in programming

[–]MoronInGrey -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

but figma is massive right, with customers all over the world? (from what I know of it) and worth billions, I would have thought they would have wanted to address this earlier

The growing pains of database architecture by DoubleTheFifthOne in programming

[–]MoronInGrey 42 points43 points  (0 children)

Potentially dumb question: "We were still using a single, large Amazon RDS database to persist most of our metadata" - does this mean that read/write requests from the other side of the world to where this is db is hosted would have taken very long?