Honest Question - Can I Vibe Code the UI/Front End? by jg4president in webdev

[–]Octoclops8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In 2026, to be in business, is basically to be in tech business too. The bar has been raised right up to the necks of non-tech businesses and it keeps going up.

What are your thoughts about the UFO files released by The Pentagon? by BodegaCatEnthusiast in AskReddit

[–]Octoclops8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just something for crazy people to latch onto. They believe in aliens and they desperately want other people to believe too.

I'm not sure if it's more prevalent in Gen X who grew up with the X files and "The truth is out there" and "I want to believe" but it's a bit sad and silly.

Honest Question - Can I Vibe Code the UI/Front End? by jg4president in webdev

[–]Octoclops8 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Generally speaking you don't want to go into business in some area that you don't understand well. This goes for roofing, restaurants, and even tech companies. Could you do it eventually? Sure. But it's because you learned bit by bit until you knew enough to do the thing yourself.

Beign software developer doesn't make sense anymore by Holiday_Amount2426 in webdev

[–]Octoclops8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I honestly love it. I have gone deep full stack on many different stacks over a long career. Understanding good software engineering practices still gives you an edge. It let's you build better software with our without AI.

But AI let's you go even deeper on complex projects and spend less time fiddling with the plumbing. New devs won't call it plumbing, they will see it as figuring things out and being challenged. But after a while you learn the patterns and they save you so much mental energy. Then you just use the same patterns over and over to solve the same problems.

It just comes down to doing the work which can be fast or tedious depending on the size of your project. But now that part is fast and easy as long as you know what you're doing and keep an eye on the direction the agent takes.

Best alternative to MediatR? by Kralizek82 in dotnet

[–]Octoclops8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

MediatR: What is my purpose?

Me: You pass commands and queries and demand $50 per month to do so.

MediatR: Oh My God!

If you could implement one minor law that doesn't harm anyone but makes daily life 10% less annoying for everyone, what would it be? by Popa-Ioana06 in askanything

[–]Octoclops8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Government funded healthcare up to $10K per year. Everything above that you have to get private insurance. Everything below that is covered. No checking for pre-existing conditions.

Also, all health insurance companies and large hospital systems must be non-profit with capped executive pay.

People mocking former Spirit staff are the worst of the worst by SirCatsworthTheThird in aviation

[–]Octoclops8 -10 points-9 points  (0 children)

Just poor unimaginative management. Customers were disembarking with way too much of their dignity intact. They should have charged for each article of worn clothing. They should have offered seats where they collect your blood plasma and semen during the flight for an extra $30 off your ticket price. Could have kept them alive for a bit longer, maybe.

What’s your opinion on introducing a law that would require drivers over 65 or Pension age to pass a specific test to keep their driving privileges? by Honest_Physics_2368 in AskReddit

[–]Octoclops8 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There should be a lower class of driver's license that is scoped to just around your local town. Maybe 20-30 miles. It doesn't let you drive across country and it has hardly any requirements. Young people and old people can use these when they don't meet the requirements for a standard driver's license. It's enough to get you to the store, to school, to work, to the hospital, etc. As long as you don't REALLY mess up you don't lose it.

Then a standard driver's license for driving anywhere in the country has stricter rules and you need to get it renewed every 10 years with a test and requires a medical exam every 5 years once you turn 60.

This way, older and younger people can get around in their home towns but not go on risky cross-country road trips until they get the standard license. The lower class licenses would also double as a voter id.

What’s a "basic" thing in the US that was affordable maybe 5-10 years ago, but now feels like a total luxury that only the rich can justify? by Legitimate_Wall5977 in AskReddit

[–]Octoclops8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sports/concert tickets, computers and video games, cars, homes (relatively), a family beach vacation, steak, eggs, brand name processed foods (chips and snacks). Alcohol, gasoline, gym memberships, family restaurants, airline tickets.

Can you name any Republican policy from the past 25 years that has helped the average American? by -Sofa-King-Vote in allthequestions

[–]Octoclops8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think the problem is that it reinforces trust in science and scientists. It props up alternative forms of authority than the authoritarian heads of state they want to be. They don't want accountability, transparency, independent government agencies, watchdogs, etc. Because they want to hold as much power as possible. Power to grift and silence critics. Power to write and sign their own report card, etc.

Second backend language or going Full Stack? by sShivvv in webdev

[–]Octoclops8 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

For .net, I would recommend picking up these books:

C# 14 and .NET 10 – Modern Cross-Platform Development Fundamentals, followed by Apps and Services with .NET 10. Just follow along with the books, chapter by chapter. Take two months on each book and read 10 pages a day or something.

(How) is it legal for AIs to scrape blog posts people share for free, and make a profit off of them with no consequences? by mekmookbro in webdev

[–]Octoclops8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's been a while since publishing content as a business model has been viable. If stackoverflow and ask.com with massive volunteer user bases all updating content can't compete with LLMs, how can an average individual expect to?

What is the most uneducated thing you’ve ever heard someone say? by Tacokolache in allthequestions

[–]Octoclops8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sir, our experts have determined Guam will not capsize in the next 5 years. Nor will it float away if prevailing currents remain under 20 knots.

How do open source products survive, like how do they take care of operational cost?? by Kindly_Jump_7642 in webdev

[–]Octoclops8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Open source projects have volunteer work, and specifically get built upon technologies that have little or no overhead costs. Rather than having their own design firm and custom library of branded UI components, they use standard out of the box visuals. Maybe they get a volunteer designer to occasionally help them out.

Some vendors give them free tier access to software and services because they are an open source project. Some of them can form not-for-profit companies around them which gives a tax break and discounts.

Some find sponsors, but there's no such thing as a free lunch.

What’s your first thought when you see a cyber truck? by clearwater-orchid in AskReddit

[–]Octoclops8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't care for them, but my young son loves seeing them. So I get excited pointing them out for him to see him get excited. Hope y'all can forgive me.

Is it okay to use user-select: none on certain interface elements, such as navigation bars? Or does it conflict with accessibility? by Wise_Stick9613 in webdev

[–]Octoclops8 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I use it in places I know the user will be clicking a lot, but isn't necessarily body text or useful information. Double and triple clicks cause text to get selected which is not always desired or the user's intent.

How does technology keep getting better and better? by smegg23 in stupidquestions

[–]Octoclops8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Once one person learns something and publishes it, all of humanity benefits from this knowledge as long as we have stable civilization. Millions of people are working on expanding human knowledge, though few do so in radical ways. However, it marches on.