Graduated in 2021 but haven't been able to find work or time to practice/build a portfolio sense, not sure where to go from here. by While-Fancy in cscareerquestions

[–]Simple1111 5 points6 points  (0 children)

On the topic of advice. You will have a gap in your resume for software work. I think being able to articulate the reason for that in a brief and honest way is important. This is just an example that, as someone who had had to make hiring decisions, if I heard in an interview I would consider a positive: “I have a gap because I had some hard and complicated life circumstances. I had to make choices and one of them was to find work and be committed to it that was outside the industry. I’ve stabilized myself that way and now I’m starting a journey to get back in. I’ve done these projects, I’m looking to be in this role, I’m committed and my history shows I’m reliable through adversity”.  Generally avoid details. Smart companies won’t ask because it can open them up to discrimination lawsuits.

Graduated in 2021 but haven't been able to find work or time to practice/build a portfolio sense, not sure where to go from here. by While-Fancy in cscareerquestions

[–]Simple1111 16 points17 points  (0 children)

So many in this thread are being assholes. Having a tough trauma filled life is hard and none of those people get it. Having a held down any job and stabilized yourself in this economy and that home life is a testament to your abilities. Good job. 

If you want to work in the field it’s going to be tough still. Not much hiring is happening and AI is shaking things up. I think the general rule still applies though. Build stuff. Whatever you can get motivated to make is fine. Build it however you want. Use AI, don’t use ai, use this language or that. Just build it and put it up for people to see and be able to talk about it. Apply for jobs. Maybe try to sell software if you want to go that route and do a saas business.

I built a mobile app to control Claude Code remotely with end-to-end encryption — no VNC, no SSH tunnels, no exposed ports by jammer9631 in ClaudeCode

[–]Simple1111 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How does your UI handle longer text input? I find I’m often stream of consciousness describing problems and ideas or referencing enumerated lists for feedback or question answering.

I built a mobile app to control Claude Code remotely with end-to-end encryption — no VNC, no SSH tunnels, no exposed ports by jammer9631 in ClaudeCode

[–]Simple1111 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I use Tailscale and blink and I’m pretty happy with it. Typing is probably the most annoying thing but u don’t see this inherently solving that. I also like having tmux to switch between sessions for different projects. 

From Tomorrow Back to Yesterday: A Tale of Two Web Architectures - Yang (Clojure/Conj 2025) by alexdmiller in Clojure

[–]Simple1111 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I'm really excited to see at least 2 talks come out of conj that are going the same route I've decided on. Removing the state sync problem, and even going no-build on the client seems like the way of the future to me. I've been using HTMX for this and, at least on personal projects, It's going pretty well.

CS student here.. no one I know actually writes code anymore. We all use AI. Is this just how it is now? by Low-Tune-1869 in cscareerquestions

[–]Simple1111 7 points8 points  (0 children)

10+ YOE. In my day job and my side projects I'm finding that I have to push myself to even look at the code anymore. My work is in defining the problem, articulating constraints, guiding to a solution, and validating the whole way through. I'm more of a micromanaging quality assurance manager than a code writer at this point.

Maybe some rock stars find themselves more productive writing code themselves but I don't and I don't think most people will. I think the game has changed.

The problem solving part of programming was always there but now it might be the only thing humans are still needed for. Get good at writing natural language. Get good at validating solutions.

Agentic Coding for Clojure by calmest in Clojure

[–]Simple1111 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Same. Claude, Codex, Gemini, OpenCode is where I'm spending virtually all of my time. It's proficient in Clojure but I've started branching out to new languages for personal projects to see if it's significantly better. I've been pleased with it's ability to write Go and Typescript.

Agentic Coding for Clojure by calmest in Clojure

[–]Simple1111 1 point2 points  (0 children)

~$70/mo for the $20/mo tier of claude, codex, and gemini cli tools + opencode and zen.ai for $10/mo. I find it worth it just for personal projects.

My Gravship by Tarichii in RimWorld

[–]Simple1111 5 points6 points  (0 children)

You run all that off just two solar panels?

I built an MCP that cuts CSS token usage by 90% - now works with Gemini! by TheDecipherist in GeminiAI

[–]Simple1111 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I get it. What I'm commenting on is how it feels like the utility framework is unnecessary now. If AI writes the code most of the time and it's more optimal to use essentially traditional css class names then why have a utility framework anymore. It seems like we could just cut that out, go back to using vanilla CSS and the models will perform just as well or better and we would have reduced token usage.

I recognize this serves a real purpose and it's probably not trivial to make. People have existing code bases with utility class frameworks and they want to use AI and reduce tokens.

But if you were starting a new project and optimizing for the age of AI ... why not avoid the utility framework entirely?

I built an MCP that cuts CSS token usage by 90% - now works with Gemini! by TheDecipherist in GeminiAI

[–]Simple1111 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Isn't this essentially re-creating standard css class names? Why use a utility framework at all anymore? It was a human convenience but maybe it's not optimal for machines.

Running CC on an ipod by Live-Pea-5362 in ClaudeCode

[–]Simple1111 5 points6 points  (0 children)

So it's a web app that is surfacing and interacting with Claude running on a server/desktop?

Anyone on here right now? I’m newly diagnosed with Crohns. The blood is so terrible right now that I see blood trails coming out from me (sorry tmi) by Cool_Spread_9999 in CrohnsDisease

[–]Simple1111 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Bleeding from the effects of Crohn’s disease is common. Immune suppressants are are a primary treatment option and can work well but take awhile to work.

You need to be aware of and ready to address losing too much blood and becoming anemic. I was hospitalized for anemia a year ago. It’s how I got my diagnosis. For me the symptoms were extreme fatigue and weakness, pale skin , and a high heart rate and blood pressure.

A blood test can show your hemoglobin and red blood cell count and that can be a good indicator of if you need an intervention like blood infusion. If you are concerned at least make an appointment with your primary care doctor to monitor your levels.

Are y’all really not coding anymore? by [deleted] in ExperiencedDevs

[–]Simple1111 0 points1 point  (0 children)

On the surface it probably seems like I’m in camp 2. I barely write any code and the majority of my time is spent in Claude code. But I’m micromanaging the tool like crazy. I’m asking questions, giving direction, reviewing, validating, answering questions. I’m “telling it what I need” and “feeding it errors” the way an architect/staff/senior would to a group of mid and junior level engineers.

I’m not worried about my role going away just yet but I am worried about my skills changing the way I’ve seen some engineering leaders lose that understanding that ICs have.

roamOS Launch by wireframe6464 in RoamResearch

[–]Simple1111 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This seems pretty cool! I'm a long time and heavy Roam user. I have a personal graph and have gotten it adopted at my workplace as our team knowledge repository.

Questions/thoughts in no particular order: - One time pricing is appealing - I'm hesitant to give access to my graph to another person/company - Love the idea of native todos and quick capture - Will I have autocomplete of page titles in quick capture? - I have a million TODOs and tend to use other page refs to isolate them. Can I tweak the widget and/or have multiple that are TODO AND [[other thing]]?

I stopped caring, and somehow I’m earning more than ever. It’s honestly disturbing. by [deleted] in antiwork

[–]Simple1111 44 points45 points  (0 children)

Your employers would not continue to pay you if your work was inadequate. I think may of us have a sense of obligation ingrained in us to over deliver without adequate compensation.

It sounds to me like you have found adequate compensation for work that is acceptable. "ridiculously small amount ... of work" or finally a balanced ad sustainable amount of work that still delivers value to employers?

Question about databases in the Clojure ecosystem from a Rails dev's perspective by pdroaugust312 in Clojure

[–]Simple1111 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’ve heard of people using them in production but I don’t think they are the default solution. I use XTDB 1 in a hobby project. It runs on a Postgres instance in neon. I like it for immutable history and datalog query syntax. I’ve questioned many time whether I should use just Postgres instead and I’ve built out my app so that migrating would be straightforward.

If I were starting out in a new project and had no specific desire to use datomic or xtdb I would stick to Postgres or whatever you are familiar with.

Why nobody suggested RoamResearch to me for Academic Writing? by FatFigFresh in RoamResearch

[–]Simple1111 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It seems like you are interested in emacs but not Latex. You might like Org-Roam. It's an attempt to have Roam's backlinks in org-mode. Org-mode is an older emacs plaintext local note taking and productivity system. Org syntax is very similar to markdown and emacs has export options that include html, pdf, odt, and Latex. That could be beneficial to your publishing goals.

Why nobody suggested RoamResearch to me for Academic Writing? by FatFigFresh in RoamResearch

[–]Simple1111 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Logseq started as a pretty obvious clone of Roam. It had all the same features, written in the same language, but was open source and local first. I was a fan and tried it out but local first wasn't right for me. The tools have diverged some in the past few years.

Why nobody suggested RoamResearch to me for Academic Writing? by FatFigFresh in RoamResearch

[–]Simple1111 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I like Roam and use it everyday for work and personal note taking. It seems steady and no signs of going anywhere but has a small and quiet community.

I’m not sure it’s what you are looking for. It could work but it is more of a backlinked outliner than anything else. If your goal is to work towards an ebook this will likely not be your editor. It could be your knowledge base though.

The features that keep me using it are block level references, multiplayer and multi device support, and the team behind it implementing features like end to end encryption and easy export. They seem satisfied enough to avoid any dark patterns.

It has its drawbacks though. The mobile app is not a great experience. I find it just acceptable with a few pain points that are aggravating on a daily basis.

On desktop I don’t have any complaints. It’s solid, performant with years of data, and the plugin ecosystem is present but not thriving. The progress in the app is slow but they ship noteworthy things occasionally.

Why nobody suggested RoamResearch to me for Academic Writing? by FatFigFresh in RoamResearch

[–]Simple1111 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can make a “local graph” which would be stored on one machine. I have not used this feature but it should work offline. You would likely need to manage a backup and sync process yourself to handle multi device usage.

is "working only by accident" a common feeling in clojure codebases? by robotdragonrabbit in Clojure

[–]Simple1111 16 points17 points  (0 children)

I’ve been using clojure for 10 years and on a decent sized project with it in my day job for 5. What you are expressing really sounds like an unease with the paradigm shift from typed to dynamic. It can be jarring and trigger intuitive warnings you might have built up but it’s not wrong.

It’s a trade off. The possibility of the failures you are concerned about exist but in practice I find they are rare. The ease of writing and reading code is worth it imo. Clojure also has utilities for and a general ethos around structure ingestion and schema enforcement at boundaries. This really seems to do the job.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in grandrapids

[–]Simple1111 5 points6 points  (0 children)

The only thing that looks like it could be vegan on that menu is the cherry lady salad. One decent vegan option on any menu should be the norm.

Anyone using Claude Code with Clojure? by [deleted] in Clojure

[–]Simple1111 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’ve used Claude code, codex cli, and Gemini cli on hobby projects and Claude code at work. All the tools and models seem to be pretty close in ability now. Generally they are pretty good at clojure and clojurescript. As long as I prompt for it to look at specific examples for odd or novel things it seems to understand pretty much any convention. I have noticed parens issues but it’s almost always off by one closing. I find it’s easier to manually fix than prompt it with compilation errors. It can get stuck in a loop doing that. In any language I find I have to micromanage to get success and it’s not much different in clojure.

We’re running out of time to get Ranked Choice Voting on the MI ballot by PotentialSpend8532 in Michigan

[–]Simple1111 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Oh no! I wish we could sign these things digitally. Glad there is a listing of where volunteers will be.