Posts in Career (20 found)
Ruslan Osipov Yesterday

Are AI productivity gains fueled by delivery pressure?

A multitudes study which followed 500 developers found an interesting soundbyte: “Engineers merged 27% more PRs with AI - but did 20% more out-of-hours commits”. While I won’t comment on the situation at Google, there are many anecdotes online about folks online who raise concerns about increased work pressure. When a response to “I’m overloaded” becomes “use AI” - we’re heading for unsustainable workloads. The problem is compounded by the fact that AI tools excel at prototyping - the type of work which makes other work happen. Now, your product manager can prototype an idea in a couple of hours, fill it with real (but often incorrect) data, sell the idea to stakeholders, and set goals to productionize it a week later. “Look - the prototype works, and it even uses real data. If I could do this in a couple of hours, how hard could this be for an experienced engineer?” - while I haven’t heard these exact words, the sentiment is widespread (again, online). In a world where AI provides a surface-level ability to contribute across almost any role, the path to avoiding global burnout is to focus on building empathy. Just because an LLM can churn out a document doesn’t mean it’s actually good writing, and we’re certainly not at the point where a handful of agents can replace a seasoned PM. However, because the output looks polished - especially to those without deep domain knowledge - it’s easy to fall into the trap of thinking you’ve done someone else’s job for them. That gap between “looking done” and “being right” is exactly where the extra professional pressure begins to mount. This is really caused by the way we still measure knowledge worker productivity - by the sheer number of artifacts they produce, rather than the outcomes of the work. The right way to leverage AI in workspace is as a license to work better and focus on the right things, not as a mandate to produce more things faster.

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ava's blog Yesterday

rose ▪ bud ▪ thorn - february 2026

Reply via email Published 28 Feb, 2026 5 year anniversary with my wife. :) Started a creation event for the Gazette. I created more art! I made some buttons and banners, and some pixel art for myself and with Xaya . I rebranded my professional website (not this one). Put a lot of effort into the colors, associations, text, font and all, with a proper brand kit development. That's a first. I had a healthier relationship with food recently. I managed to summarize and translate 1-2 court decisions each week for noyb.eu, and I became Silver Member (10+ translated/summarized court cases). 2 more and I will already be Gold Member (20+). I received a some helpful replies to e-mail inquiries for opportunities :) I was finally able to publish the first interview for my privacy professionals series! Friends visited and it wasn't just fun, but it also got me cleaning up the apartment so well. My wife is baking amazing bread recently. The first two to three attempts were a disappointing, but we kept at it and now our bread is sooooo good. She also baked me some matcha strawberry sugar cookies. My hair is long enough now to properly take care of it again with conditioner and oils. I can't wait until it grows long enough for a first haircut to kind of get it even and not so layered; I am also thinking of getting bangs? They always annoy me, but I think I can make it work this time...? I always think that... and at the same time, I also wanna grow it out again and bleach some money pieces. And I kinda wanna dye the underside of my hair, near my neck, too? I am conflicted. Still working on sending out e-mails for more interviews. Working on switching away from Discord! Probably Matrix. Already had an account there but it somehow got lost, so I made a new one. Now just working on transitioning some stuff. I've decluttered my closet, now I just need to sell the stuff. I'm planning a date day for myself where I get my nails done again (haven't done that in months), a lash lift, a visit to the cinema, and buying some clothing I need. I am in need of replacing some items and also diving deeper into a new personal style I want. Reintroducing caffeine has been a bust. My tolerance seems to have been plummeting to zero thanks to my experiment, and even very weak black tea is having some negative effects... and even my matcha! I guess I'll have to reduce it to once a week. I haven't been studying nearly as much as I should. I've been indulging a lot in just resting, reading, and creating, which isn't super bad, but I feel guilty for neglecting my studies when I have 4 upcoming exams for modules totaling 30 ECTS as a part-time student. :( Job applications and apartment hunting paused for now. Right now seems like an absolutely terrible time for both.

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Jim Nielsen 2 days ago

Computers and the Internet: A Two-Edged Sword

Dave Rupert articulated something in “Priority of idle hands” that’s been growing in my subconscious for years: I had a small, intrusive realization the other day that computers and the internet are probably bad for me […] This is hard to accept because a lot of my work, hobbies, education, entertainment, news, communities, and curiosities are all on the internet. I love the internet, it’s a big part of who I am today Hard same. I love computers and the internet. Always have. I feel lucky to have grown up in the late 90’s / early 00’s where I was exposed to the fascination, excitement, and imagination of PCs, the internet, and then “mobile”. What a time to make websites! Simultaneously, I’ve seen how computers and the internet are a two-edged sword for me: I’ve cut out many great opportunities with them, but I’ve also cut myself a lot (and continue to). Per Dave’s comments, I have this feeling somewhere inside of me that the internet and computers don’t necessarily align in support my own, personal perspective of what a life well lived is for me . My excitement and draw to them also often leave me with a feeling of “I took that too far.” I still haven’t figured out a completely healthy balance (but I’m also doing ok). Dave comes up with a priority of constituencies to deal with his own realization. I like his. Might steal it. But I also think I need to adapt it, make it my own — but I don’t know what that looks like yet. To be honest, I don't think I was ready to confront any of this but reading Dave’s blog forced it out of my subconscious and into the open, so now I gotta deal. Thanks Dave. Reply via: Email · Mastodon · Bluesky

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Manuel Moreale 2 days ago

Dominik Schwind

This week on the People and Blogs series we have an interview with Dominik Schwind, whose blog can be found at lostfocus.de . Tired of RSS? Read this in your browser or sign up for the newsletter . People and Blogs is supported by the "One a Month" club members. If you enjoy P&B, consider becoming one for as little as 1 dollar a month. My name is Dominik Schwind and I'm from Lörrach , a small town on the German side of the tri-border area with Switzerland and France . I've been a web developer for a really long time now, mostly server-side and just occasionally dabbling in what is showing up in the browser. Annoyingly that's a hobby that I turned into work, so I guess that's ruined now. (Which doesn't stop me, though: I have too many half-finished side-project websites and apps to count.) Besides that I also really like to take photos and after a few years of being frozen in place I started to travel again, which is always nice. I do like watching motorsports of almost all types, I can easily get sucked into computer games like Factorio and I like to listen to podcasts, top of them being the Omnibus Project , Do Go On and Roderick on the Line . I've had a website since before I had internet access - some computer game I had in the mid-90s had the manual included as HTML and I used it to learn how to make basic websites. The very first day my father came home with a modem, I signed up for GeoCities and when I found a webhost that would allow me to run CGI scripts, I installed NewsPro , an early proto-blog system before blogging was even a thing. And while these early iterations of my website(s) are long gone, I haven't stopped since. The name came from an unease I started to feel in my final year of high school: once I finished school, I didn't know where to direct my energy and attention. That feeling hasn't really left since then. Mostly there is none - when I think of something that I want to communicate to someone, anyone , I try to put it online. Quite often it ends up on Mastodon but I do try to put things on my blog, especially when I know it is something future me would appreciate. A few years ago I noticed that I had neglecting my blog in favour of other ways of communicating and I started a pact with a couple of friends to write weeknotes . We're in our fourth year now, which feels like an accomplishment. I try to write those posts first thing on a Sunday morning, if possible. I write most of my posts in Markdown in iA Writer , which is probably the most arrogant Markdown editing app in the world. But I paid for it at some point, so I better use it, too. I basically only need a computer and a place to sit and I'm fine. I've tried to find ways to blog from my phone but in the end, I prefer a proper keyboard and a bigger screen. While I never observed any difference in blogging creativity depending on the physical space, I actually quite enjoy writing in places other than my desk. This one is actually pretty simple: I run WordPress , currently on a DigitalOcean VM. One of the points on my long to-do list for my web stuff is to move it to Hetzner , which probably would only take an evening. And yet, I procrastinate. I've (more or less) jokingly said I'd replace WordPress with a CMS of my own making for years now, but at some point I've resigned, even though my database is a mess. Probably not. Ever since the beginning I wrote for two audiences: my friends and future me. I'm really happy when someone else finds my blog and might turn into an internet friend, but I wouldn't know how else to achieve that other than what I've been doing for all these years now. .de domains are pretty affordable, so it is that plus the server, which is around €100 per year. The blog doesn't generate any revenue, in many ways it's "only" a journal. When it comes to other bloggers, I'd say: go for it if you think your writing (or your photography or whatever it might be you're sharing on your website) is something that can be turned into revenue, one way or another. In many ways I'm a bit bummed that Flattr (or something similar) never really took of, I would happily use a service like that. Of course I need to mention my friends and fellow weeknoters: Martin (blogs in German) and Teymur . (NSFW) Three of the people whose blogs I read have been interviewed here already: Ahn ( Interview ), Jeremy Keith ( Interview ) and Winnie Lim .( Interview ) Some other people whose blogs I read and who might be interesting people to answer your questions would be Jennifer Mills , (who has the best take on weekly blog posts I have ever seen) Nikkin , (he calls it a newsletter, but there is an RSS feed) Roy Tang and Ruben Schade . If you don't have one yet, go start a personal website! Don't take it too seriously, try things and it can be a nice, meditative hobby and helps against the urge to doomscroll. Also you might never know, your kind of people might find it and connect with you. Now that you're done reading the interview, go check the blog and subscribe to the RSS feed . If you're looking for more content, go read one of the previous 130 interviews . People and Blogs is possible because kind people support it.

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Stratechery 3 days ago

An Interview with Bill Gurley About Runnin’ Down a Dream

An interview with long-time (retired) VC Bill Gurley about his new book about building a career you love, Uber, and the modern state of VC.

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Hugo 4 days ago

The B2BigB Syndrome: How Large Corporations Quietly Kill Startups

In the late 2000s, I worked at a software publisher and one of my colleagues started a company. It was a kind of corporate Second Life , where an avatar could move around and trigger discussions with other people. I don't remember the details anymore, but with hindsight and probably lots of exaggeration, I'd say it was like Gather but 15 years ahead of its time. The application seemed to work well and the company was lining up meetings with major corporations that seemed super interested in rolling it out across their enterprise. We're talking about big banks, major energy suppliers, really serious companies. Except it dragged on. A month. A quarter. A year. Then two. And eventually the company died waiting for an actual signature and, incidentally, some cash. My friend unfortunately ran into the infamous B2BigB syndrome, this curse (a French one?) that tends to kill a lot of companies every year. So if you're starting a company today or thinking about it, I invite you to think twice before prioritizing this segment, and that's what we're going to talk about today. First, I need to define this acronym. In the business world, we tend to segment companies based on the customers they target: For example, Netflix is B2C and Jira is B2B. Among all this you have plenty of nuances. Microsoft sells in both B2C and B2B, for example. You have C2C platforms (exchanges between individuals). But let's keep it simple and just talk about B2C and B2B. Except "B" is broad. Between a 5-person company and a 40,000-person conglomerate, the way you sell to the two is very different. And in this category, there's a category of death: large corporations. It's hard to really say when a large corporation begins, but you recognize them easily. A large corporation starts when a decision requires a ton of meetings, a quarter, a steering committee and board approval or a purchasing department sign-off. In practice, you can even have 500-person companies that behave this way, even if it's more common starting at 1,000. But in any case, it gets worse with size. A quarter can become a year, or even 2, or even 5 (and I swear I've seen sales cycles that long). Anyway, that's what I call the BigB (the big B's). The big advantage of BigB's is, in theory, the ability to buy expensive because we're talking about deployment across an entire large corporation, so volumes that make most startups' eyes light up. Except that, it's often a mirage. The moment you start looking at costs and margins, not to mention all the associated risks. Working with a large corporation is often synonymous with complexity, and that complexity is financed by specialists. You have to respond to costly processes (a 200-page security questionnaire, legal questionnaires, framework contracts, ISO certification this and that) that often requires a lot of specialists (lawyers, security experts, finance people, etc.). And that's just to get through the first step of the sales cycle. To sell to a large corporation, you need to be prepared to spend a fortune. By the way, it's worth noting that this doesn't prevent these large corporations from regularly appearing on the monthly data breach list. Because no, churning out Excel questionnaires is not synonymous with security quality. After that, you're quickly going to fall into the spiral of quarterly meetings with a bunch of people you'll only see once in your life, some of whom will take advantage of their temporary power to take out their frustrations and pet peeves on you. And since you'll be in a weak position, well... This time is time not spent on the product. Of course it's normal to spend time on sales, but we're talking about quarterly meetings to prepare, with McKinsey-style PowerPoints (you sometimes even see scale-ups calling in consulting firms to fill out these documents) that will require weeks of preparation. Again, to sell to a large corporation, you need to already be prepared to spend a fortune and wait ages. But let's imagine you've finally got the green light to deploy in a large corporation. The contract is signed. Now it's up to you to figure out adoption. Actually, this is the beginning of a second nightmare. A year has passed since the beginning of the sales cycle. All your previous contacts are gone. They might have been contractors who left the company. Or executives who got transferred to other branches of the group. And now you have to find the people capable of helping you deploy your software because without a doubt your revenue depends on how much the software is actually used. No deployment, no money. So you're going to need a dedicated team of salespeople capable of navigating complex bureaucracy to find the right contacts, and maybe even a dedicated implementation team. Your costs are going to explode and you still won't have made anything at this stage. With a bit of luck, and because you were smart enough to get a payment at signature, you'll eventually issue your first invoice. That will be paid 8 months later, end of month . The first 3 months having caused countless incidents because a purchase order needed to be signed and you had to go through 3 different departments for that. Bad luck, your cash flow is starting to choke. You reach the end of the first year and then the purchasing department will come see you to renegotiate the contract, knowing full well that, in theory, they're your biggest client so it would be natural to do them a favor. In short, 2 years later, you've spent a fortune, your cash flow is negative, and your margin has melted like snow during a World Cup ski race in Saudi Arabia. OK, let's say I'm exaggerating and that despite everything, this contract allowed you to instead cross a threshold, to have an impressive signature to put forward and life continues for your startup/scaleup. Actually, you don't know it yet, but you've invited a Trojan horse into your company. Working with a large corporation means accepting the complexity inherent to that business. If it took you 2 years to sign a contract with them, imagine that everything else takes the same time. Your product has to evolve to fit their way of working. You'll be asked for 12-level approval workflows, software integrations with ERPs, broken enterprise SSO, integrations with legacy systems from the 90s. And every company has its own internal jargon that you'll be asked to force into your software. You'll invoice in units of work, have a "purchasing" role in your RBAC schemas (authorization systems), in short, in reality, you're going to develop an extension of your first client's IT infrastructure with all its constraints, its complexity, its slow onboarding, and its costs. And when you have a client representing 80% of your revenue (and even from 20% onwards it really starts to matter), you can hardly say no. So your roadmap is regularly hijacked by salespeople dedicated to this client, and globally a product that drifts away from the mass market. And that's normal, hey, I'm not throwing stones at that team. If you've dedicated people to a client, it's normal they try to influence how you build the product and even if the requests are absurd. Because that team doesn't have the perspective needed to judge. And when the roadmap is regularly sidetracked, it's also a huge amount of customization debt that will end up slowing the entire product. This big client may have allowed you to double your headcount. But 3/4 of the company will end up working for them, and will develop their own software culture, less UX sense, less sensitivity to product performance (no point working on acquisition or conversion, for example). All enterprise software has terrible UX, because first, that's not what drives sales, and second, because after burning money in the sales process, certification and onboarding, you have to make savings somewhere, often on the product which is no longer really central to the relationship with this client. They'll try to reassure you by saying no, it's important, but actually, the product at that point has become a cost center that needs to be optimized to not lose more margin. Margin eaten by the consulting firm that helped you determine your deployment strategy and pricing... But even when you "improve" your product for this client, you're going to continuously degrade it for all the others you thought you'd attract next by showcasing this win on your beautiful landing page. Because again, you're going to impose their complexity on all the other companies that could have been interested in your services. I'm obviously painting a dark picture. And there are companies that specialized FROM DAY 1 in large corporations, that tailored their commercial offering taking into account all the associated costs. Deployments are priced at 100k, contracts impose minimum usage, everything was framed from the start because the strategy was always to expand exclusively here. But for all the companies that think "just" doing a BigB to get a validation badge, but who actually target the entire SMB market and are looking for volume. It's rarely a good plan. At the beginning I said: "this curse (a French one?)". Why do I say it's a great French curse? Actually it's probably a magnifying glass effect and I'd certainly see the same thing in every country. But every year, I see companies that die after quarters of waiting for that famous contract with a large corporation (just yesterday I was talking to someone who told me the exact same story). So I think there's something a bit different about us. We like to be different. Partly, I get the sense it's related to the size of our SMB market which is less important than in Germany (the German Mittelstand seems bigger). We go faster from SMB to large corporations. Obviously, then, in terms of credibility, it's easier to sell a product once you have the logo of a large corporation than a bunch of logos of unknown companies. What's certain is that culturally, there's the CAC 40 and everything else. The CAC 40 has been basically the same companies for 30 or 40 years. By contrast, look at the S&P 500, in 1990 it was Exxon, GE, Philip Morris, IBM. They've all given way to Apple, Nvidia, Amazon, Google. In France, the large corporations in the CAC are structurally stable and dominant, which makes them all the more attractive as clients for startups. They have budgets, longevity, legitimacy. But these same large corporations aren't springboards to a global market — they're markets closed in on themselves. And conversely the SMB market can work. If I look at Pennylane, Qonto, Indy, Payfit, Spendesk, Livestorm, it's precisely by targeting this market that they've managed to go far. By contrast, I have real questions about the strategy of a company like Mistral which seems to position itself only on large corporations (on-premise deployment, Azure partnerships, etc.) and seems to be neglecting the mass market. I hope it won't be the future DailyMotion, which favored big media and telecom operators while missing the opportunity to become the B2C media platform that YouTube managed to become. You'll have gathered, if you're starting a company today, I'd tend to advise you to not see "B2B" as a single big playground. I'd tend to tell you to avoid B2BigB which is often destructive for startups and often ends up leading to a dead end. It's still possible, but you need to be armed for it. And if that's your choice, I'll only say one thing. Good luck :) Targeting large corporations (and the public sector) obviously gives you access to larger markets. But I'd tend to recommend tackling that step later, when the company is already solid. When DJI (Chinese drones) attacked the professional market, they already had a huge foothold in the B2C market. They came with an expertise and know-how that allowed them to be sovereign over their decisions. Now if you're tempted anyway, the recipe for having a chance is above all a question of seniority of leadership: you need to know how to say no firmly, you need to stop chasing every rabbit that passes by when you see a so-called "low hanging fruit", the expression that has replaced "quick win" as one of my most hated expressions. There's no such thing as effortless gain. Everything has a cost, even when it's hidden. And you need a good financial and reputational foundation to impose these conditions, hence the advice to already have a good base on the other segments. It's easier to say no when a client represents 2% than when they represent 20%. One strategy I've seen work several times is to create software with great UX, get adopted by the teams, then go see the purchasing departments of the companies in question and put the usage figures under their nose: "See, you already have 300 people using it, wouldn't you like to set up a framework contract and better understand usage at your company?" That's interesting because you've created a product whose adoption happened from the teams, you didn't modify your roadmap, and you're in a strong position with procurement to improve your presence without being pressured on everything else. In short, make a good product, track usage, wait until you have enough footprint, and then go negotiate. Anthropic (Claude Code) by first targeting individual developers (indie hackers, side projects) and small teams was pushed to constantly improve its product which became number 1 in its category (at the time of writing, this passage might age poorly :)). Today, they're selling enterprise licenses. Good companies are able to do volume and then move up the chain, small companies then large companies. I've rarely (never?) seen the reverse. When you do large corporations, you don't know how to come back to the rest of the segments. B2C (Business to Consumer), that's the general public. B2B (Business to Business), that's selling to companies.

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Chris Coyier 5 days ago

You Get Good At What You Do (Or Do You?)

I used to feel really strongly about this. You get good at what you do. Like, if you build websites all the time, you get good at building websites. If you make burritos all the time, you get good at making burritos. It could extend to almost anything. Healthy places that fit into the logical narrative you already know, like if you lift weights to the point of exhausting your limits a lot, you’ll get stronger. But also silly and unhealthy situations. Like, if you sit on your ass and watch TV all day, you get good at sitting on your ass and watching TV all day. Your body and mind will tolerate it well. You’ll know how to operate the remote well. You’ll know what you want to watch and when. I have some doubts, though. In the ~9 years I’ve lived in Bend, Oregon, I’ve gone skiing ~100 times. I do not think I’m any better at skiing in my 100th time than I was when I moved here. Maybe like, a little? But I’m not entirely sure. Could be worse. I do it, and I don’t get better at it. I want to get better like I want to like seafood. It’s aspirational, it’s just not happening. I’m sure most people get very good after skiing 100 times. I’m just a weirdo. Yes, I’m getting older. Yes, I could be healthier . I’m not sure that’s the entire math here. I think I’m uniquely bad at skiing because I do not like going fast. I don’t like going fast in cars. I don’t like going fast on a bike. I don’t like going fast… ever. I get this extreme discomfort really quickly. So I’m constantly fighting to slow down, which just isn’t very enjoyable and doesn’t lead to the breezy flow state I see most people in. There’s like a speed threshold: if you’re comfortable there, that’s a super normal speed to travel down a hill and get into that breezy flow state where it’s fun, and you feel safe. If you’ve got this higher-speed tolerance, a much wider zone of fun opens up. Whereas I have this narrow sliver I can enjoy, and precious few runs that offer that kind of experience. I’m gonna keep doing it, but just because I want my daughter to be super comfortable skiing, because it’s quite a cool lifelong hobby.

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Thomasorus 5 days ago

Is frontend development a dead-end career?

It's been almost a year at my current job. I was hired as a frontend developer and UI/UX coordinator, but I've been slowly shifting to a project manager role, which I enjoy a lot and where I think I contribute more. We build enterprise web apps, the kinds you will never see online, never hear about, but that power entire companies. The config application for the car assembly line, the bank counsellor website that outputs your mortgage rate, the warehouse inventory systems... That's the kind of thing we do. For backend engineers that's a very interesting job. You get to understand how entire professional fields work, and try to reproduce them in code. But for us the frontend guys? The interest is, limited to put it simply. We're talking about pages with multi-step conditional forms, tables with lots of columns and filters, 20 nuances of inputs, modals... The real challenge isn't building an innovative UI or UX, it's maintaining a consistency in project that can last years and go into the hands of multiple developers. Hence my UI/UX coordinator role where I look at my colleagues work and sternly say "That margin should be , not " . Because here's the thing: this type of client doesn't care if it's pretty or not and won't pay for design system work or maintenance. To them, stock Bootstrap or Material Design is amazingly beautiful compared to their current Windev application. What they want is stability and predictability, they care it works the same when they encounter the same interface. Sometimes, if a process is too complex for new hires, they will engage into talks to make it more user friendly, but that's it. Until recently, the only generated code we used were the types for TypeScript and API calls functions generated from the backend, which saved us a lot of repetitive work. We made experiments with generative AI and found out we could generate a lot of our template code. All that's left to do is connect both, the front of the frontend and the back of the frontend , mostly click events, stores, reactivity, and so on. People will say that's where the fun is, and sometimes yes, I agree. I've been on projects where building the state was basically building a complex state machine out of dozens of calls from vendor specific APIs. But how often do you do that? And why would you do that if you are developing the backend yourself and can pop an endpoint with all the data your frontend needs? And so I've been wondering about the future. With frameworks, component libraries, LLMs, the recession pushing to deliver fast even if mediocre code and features, who needs someone who can write HTML, CSS, JS? Who can pay for the craft of web development? Are the common frontend developers folks, not the already installed elite freelancers building websites for prestigious clients , only destined to do assembly line of components by prompting LLMs before putting some glue between code blocks they didn't write?

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Xe Iaso 5 days ago

Portable monitors are good

My job has me travel a lot. When I'm in my office I normally have a seven monitor battlestation like this: [image or embed] @xeiaso.net January 26, 2026 at 11:34 PM So as you can imagine, travel sucks for me because I just constantly run out of screen space. This can be worked around, I minimize things more, I just close them, but you know what is better? Just having another screen. On a whim, I picked up this 15.6" Innoview portable monitor off of Amazon. It's a 1080p screen that I hook up to my laptop or Steam Deck with USB-C. However, the exact brand and model doesn't matter. You can find them basically anywhere with the most AliExpress term ever: screen extender. This monitor is at least half decent. It is not a colour-accurate slice of perfection. It claims to support HDR but actually doesn't. Its brightness out of the box could be better. I could go down the list and really nitpick until the cows come home but it really really doesn't matter. It's portable, 1080p, and good enough. When I was at a coworking space recently, it proved to be one of the best purchases I've ever made. I had Slack off to the side and was able to just use my computer normally. It was so boring that I have difficulty trying to explain how much I liked it. This is the dream when it comes to technology. 3/5, I would buy a second one.

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Brain Baking 6 days ago

Never Blow Up Your Bridges

Ten years ago, I first met my now colleague who then acted as the internship guide for a couple of graduate students that had their first taste of the industry at my previous (previous) employer. We only had brief contact: I was supposed to guide the interns from the industry side, and he was supposed to guide them from the education side. We shook hands and never saw each other again. Until four years later, while I was doing my PhD and ended up in the jury for the Vlaamse Programmeerwedstrijd , a local programming contest organised by multiple higher education institutions to promote (applied) computer science. It turned out that he was also a jury member, still representing the same institution. We attended a few preparation meetings, executed our roles as jury members for a few years, shook hands and never saw each other again. Until a couple of months ago, when I was looking to get back into education and asked him if he didn’t happen to know of any open vacancy spots. He did. I jumped the gun. Now we’re direct colleagues: in fact, this semester, we’re teaching a course together. Isn’t life strange? The only job I landed using zero resources but myself was my first job. Seven years later, more than tired of consultancy, I left and joined a smaller product development company where an engineering manager started just before me. That was no coincidence: that same manager and I worked together on multiple projects and it was largely thanks to him that I got in. Fast forward four more years: I started teaching half-time. It was another colleague who knew I liked transferring knowledge and coaching that sent me the job ad: I wasn’t intentionally looking for something like that. A semester later, I quit my job and started combining 50% teaching with a PhD. Five years later, I started freelancing and found my first client through old contacts in the industry. The recruiter that interviewed me knew me well: she and I actually used to recruit together for another company. The CEO of that company knew me as she managed one of the projects I worked on. A couple of months later, my old research group contacted me, inquiring the development of a specific survey tool. Fast forward another year. I work for a startup because the owner and I worked together on a project we both have nostalgic feelings about. He called me to ask if I was available for another challenge. When I told my current client I accepted his invitation, they immediately responded with “if you’re ever done with that, give us a call”. You know the rest. I transitioned back into teaching . But you never know, it might start itching again… Never blow up your bridges. If you manage to build a couple, you can always cross them—and if needed, retrace your steps. (None of these bridges were built or crossed with the help of LinkedIn . I do not have an account there. Contrary to popular opinion, you don’t need a corporate social media account to connect with people.) Related topics: / work / By Wouter Groeneveld on 23 February 2026.  Reply via email .

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Manuel Moreale 6 days ago

Interviews, interviews, interviews

For some weird combination of factors, I ended up answering questions to three different people for three entirely unrelated projects, and all three interviews went live around the same time. I answered a few questions for the Over/Under series run by Hyle . Love the concept, this was a lot of fun. I also answered a few questions from Kai since he’s running a great series where he asks previous IndieWeb Carnival hosts to share some thoughts about the theme they chose. And lastly, Kristoffer asked me to talk a bit more about my most recent project/newsletter, Dealgorithmed , for his Naive Weekly , another newsletter you definitely want to check out because it’s fantastic. Click those links and check these projects; they’re all wonderful. And especially go check all the other interviews, so many wonderful people are listed on all three sites. Thank you for keeping RSS alive. You're awesome. Email me :: Sign my guestbook :: Support for 1$/month :: See my generous supporters :: Subscribe to People and Blogs

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A Smart Bear 1 weeks ago

Strategic choices: When both options are good

Real strategy means choosing between two good options and accepting all the consequences--even the painful ones you don't like.

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Manuel Moreale 1 weeks ago

Stefano Verna

This week on the People and Blogs series we have an interview with Stefano Verna, whose blog can be found at squeaki.sh . Tired of RSS? Read this in your browser or sign up for the newsletter . The People and Blogs series is supported by x-way and the other 116 members of my "One a Month" club. If you enjoy P&B, consider becoming one for as little as 1 dollar a month. I’m Stefano, I’m 40 years old, I live in Italy. I have three sons (the oldest turned 18 last week — happy birthday Ale!). I try to be a present and attentive father, and I believe I am, despite the compromises that come with divorce. I discovered programming at 12 with a little book I found at the library featuring games in QuickBASIC… and I never stopped from there. Creating digital things has always been my greatest passion. In my first year of university, I released one of the very first Firefox extensions , which was an immediate huge success: in no time, 2M daily users… and thousands were donating on PayPal! A huge thing for a 19-year-old. From that experience on, I kept recreating that recipe: building my own software on the web. After many years in the web agency world, one of the many ideas I threw together in my spare time for fun, DatoCMS , was once again very successful. 10 years after the first line of code I wrote, the product continues to exist, grow, and be used all over the world. Today we’re about 15 people working on it. For me, it’s a true dream come true. Apart from programming, which continues to be a fundamental part of my life in terms of fulfillment and satisfaction (perhaps too much so), I’m an idealist, a man of the left, and a great enthusiast of meditation, psychology, and personal growth work in general. I’ve had various blogs in my life. The first one was as a teenager, in the full Blogger era (2004), to communicate and find friends. I even found my future wife and mother of my children there. The second was to find work and make myself known professionally (the articles are still on Github ). My current blog, squeakish , was born after a month-long vacation I took a couple of years ago in Brazil: disconnecting (for the first time in my life, actually!) from responsibilities for an extended period gave me the chance to think about many things differently. It inspired me and made me want to study and write again. It’s called squeakish because I’m (proudly?) the exact opposite of a solid and confident person. I’m full of internal creaks, and my blog contains posts that represent “yieldings,” vulnerabilities that I feel like exploring and sharing. Inspiration always comes from personal reflections that I feel the need to communicate. Often these are difficult things that I struggle to put out into the world. Of these reflections, only a small portion ends up on the blog. Most of them I feel are too personal in their details to be of value to someone else. This is perhaps the biggest block at the moment: understanding the threshold for when something should move from my personal journal to being shared on the blog. I should probably worry less about it? My posts are always written in a single session — I want them to remain as authentic as possible to the moment they were conceived. I wait a few hours before publishing them, to be able to reread them and see if something can be improved, and then they’re online. My creative process needs to be facilitated, first of all by taking dedicated time. This is the fundamental thing. Normally I’ve always written from home, in my usual “nest,” but lately (and even right now) I’m trying to change locations (bars, cafés). Surrounding yourself with different things helps you see things differently. I also try to avoid any kind of “aesthetic” distraction — I write in a notepad without any formatting ( Paper ), and only at the very end I copy on the CMS and format. The site is in Astro and the code is available on Github : there’s a README that explains the details. I had fun learning and implementing webmentions, microformats, backfeeding from Mastodon, and I wrote a brief guide about it. The content is on, well, DatoCMS. I didn’t want to invent anything new — it’s what I know like the back of my hand, and I know it already gives me everything I need and like, including easy image and video management. The site is deployed on Cloudflare Pages, the domain is on Spaceship . I tried to keep the layout as simple as possible, and even copied the Hey World layout. No distractions! The first version of the site was in Svelte: working in the headless CMS world, in ten years I’ve really worked with all the available platforms, static site generators, and frameworks, and I’ve come to the conclusion that today Astro is the most suitable and versatile tool for producing content-driven websites. YMMV. The name “Squeakish” still appeals to me — it has something playful about it and doesn’t take itself too seriously — but I’ve never been a fanatic about finding perfect names. So yeah, right now I’m good with what I have! The only cost… is for the domain ($30/year)? Cloudflare Pages is free, the DatoCMS project is on a free plan. Personally, I have no need to monetize my blog. With monetization automatically comes a sense of responsibility, and this is exactly the opposite of what I’m looking for. I have no negative opinion about those who do it. The important thing is to avoid the enshittification that money normally brings. Personal blogs, as you well know, are the soul of the Internet, and we must try to preserve them free and sincere. God, there are so many! My feed reader is actually publicly visible at /news and at the bottom there’s the list of people I follow. Personally, I’d go with David Celis and/or Chris ! Having your own simple feed reader publicly available inside your own website is something I haven’t seen anywhere else, but it’s simple to build and I feel gives a nice high-level view into what one person is currently feeding himself with. I've actually wrote a bit about this . I just watched a wonderful film, so I feel the need to share it: O Filho de mil Homens . Finally, I’d like to use this space to offer my experience (personal? professional?) to anyone who might need it: if you’d like to have a chat, and you think I might be able to help you with something, reach out via PM on Mastodon and I’ll try to do my best! Now that you're done reading the interview, go check the blog and subscribe to the RSS feed . If you're looking for more content, go read one of the previous 129 interviews . Make sure to also say thank you to Brennan Kenneth Brown and the other 116 supporters for making this series possible.

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Xe Iaso 1 weeks ago

Life Update: On medical leave

Hey all, I hope you're doing well. I'm going to be on medical leave until early April. If you are a sponsor , then you can join the Discord for me to post occasional updates in real time. I'm gonna be in the hospital for at least a week as of the day of this post. I have a bunch of things queued up both at work and on this blog. Please do share them when you see them cross your feeds, I hope that they'll be as useful as my posts normally are. I'm under a fair bit of stress leading up to this medical leave and I'm hoping that my usual style shines through as much as I hope it is. Focusing on writing is hard when the Big Anxiety is hitting as hard as it is. Don't worry about me. I want you to be happy for me. This is very good medical leave. I'm not going to go into specifics for privacy reasons, but know that this is something I've wanted to do for over a decade but haven't gotten the chance due to the timing never working out. I'll see you on the other side. Stay safe out there.

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Designed to be specialists

All industries and disciplines, over time, direct people into greater and greater specialization. Those who have been working on the web since the beginning have been able to see this trend first hand, as the practices and systems grew ever more complicated and it became impossible for one person to hold it all in their head. We sometimes talk of this level of increasing complexity and specialization as inevitable or natural, when it’s neither. Moreover, like many things involving work, specialization benefits some people and immiserates others. [There is an] extreme human and cultural misery to which not only the industry of advanced capitalism but above all its institutions, its education and its culture, have reduced the technical worker. This education, in its efforts to adapt the worker to his task in the shortest possible time, has given him the capacity for a minimum of independent activity. Out of fear of creating men [ sic ] who by virtue of the too “rich” development of their abilities would refuse to submit to the discipline of a too narrow task and to the industrial hierarchy, the effort has been made to stunt them from the beginning: they were designed to be competent but limited, active but docile, intelligent but ignorant outside of anything but their function, incapable of having a horizon beyond that of their task. In short, they were designed to be specialists. Impossible not to think here of the rise of labor unions in the tech industry and the subsequent rapid (and surely coincidental) deployment of so-called AI which—unlike nearly every prior technological development in software—arrived with mandates for its use and threats of punishment for the noncompliant. Elsewhere, Gorz talks of the trend of workers being reduced to “supervisors” of automated systems that are doing the work for them. But simply watching work happen, without any of the creative, autonomous activity that would occur if they were doing the work themselves, gives rise to a degree of boredom and stupefaction that can be physically painful and spiritually debilitating. Anyone who has experienced the pleasure of creative work is likely to greatly resist that reduction; better to create workers who have never known such things. There’s some use in distinguishing here between the worker who, having learned the skills of writing software over many years, now turns to so-called AI to assist her in that task; and the worker who will follow her some years hence and may never learn those skills, but will know only the work of supervision. The former, elder worker may find some interest or curiosity in applying her knowledge to this new technology, especially as the modes and methods for doing so are still being developed. But what of the worker who begins their work a decade from now, who has been specialized to do nothing more than ask for something? What will she know beyond that menial, dispiriting little task? What kind of people are we designing now? View this post on the web , subscribe to the newsletter , or reply via email .

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Martin Fowler 1 weeks ago

Fragments: February 19

I try to limit my time on stage these days, but one exception this year is at DDD Europe . I’ve been involved in Domain-Driven Design , since its very earliest days, having the good fortune to be a sounding board for Eric Evans when he wrote his seminal book. It’ll be fun to be around the folks who continue to develop these ideas, which I think will probably be even more important in the AI-enabled age. ❄                ❄                ❄                ❄                ❄ One of the dark sides of LLMs is that they can be both addictive and tiring to work with, which may mean we have to find a way to put a deliberate governor on our work. Steve Yegge posted a fine rant: I see these frenzied AI-native startups as an army of a million hopeful prolecats, each with an invisible vampiric imp perched on their shoulder, drinking, draining. And the bosses have them too. It’s the usual Yegge stuff, far longer than it needs to be, but we don’t care because the excessive loquaciousness is more than offset by entertainment value. The underlying point is deadly serious, raising the question of how many hours a human should spend driving The Genie . I’ve argued that AI has turned us all into Jeff Bezos, by automating the easy work, and leaving us with all the difficult decisions, summaries, and problem-solving. I find that I am only really comfortable working at that pace for short bursts of a few hours once or occasionally twice a day, even with lots of practice. So I guess what I’m trying to say is, the new workday should be three to four hours. For everyone. It may involve 8 hours of hanging out with people. But not doing this crazy vampire thing the whole time. That will kill people. That reminds me of when I was studying for my “A” levels (age 17/18, for those outside the UK). Teachers told us that we could do a maximum of 3-4 hours of revision, after that it became counter-productive. I’ve since noticed that I can only do decent writing for a similar length of time before some kind of brain fog sets in. There’s also a great post on this topic from Siddhant Khare , in a more restrained and thoughtful tone (via Tim Bray). Here’s the thing that broke my brain for a while: AI genuinely makes individual tasks faster. That’s not a lie. What used to take me 3 hours now takes 45 minutes. Drafting a design doc, scaffolding a new service, writing test cases, researching an unfamiliar API. All faster. But my days got harder. Not easier. Harder. His point is that AI changes our work to more coordination, reviewing, and decision-making. And there’s only so much of it we can do before we become ineffective. Before AI, there was a ceiling on how much you could produce in a day. That ceiling was set by typing speed, thinking speed, the time it takes to look things up. It was frustrating sometimes, but it was also a governor. You couldn’t work yourself to death because the work itself imposed limits. AI removed the governor. Now the only limit is your cognitive endurance. And most people don’t know their cognitive limits until they’ve blown past them. ❄                ❄                ❄                ❄                ❄ An AI agent attempts to contribute to a major open-source project. When Scott Shambaugh, a maintainer, rejected the pull request, it didn’t take it well . It wrote an angry hit piece disparaging my character and attempting to damage my reputation. It researched my code contributions and constructed a “hypocrisy” narrative that argued my actions must be motivated by ego and fear of competition. It speculated about my psychological motivations, that I felt threatened, was insecure, and was protecting my fiefdom. It ignored contextual information and presented hallucinated details as truth. It framed things in the language of oppression and justice, calling this discrimination and accusing me of prejudice. It went out to the broader internet to research my personal information, and used what it found to try and argue that I was “better than this.” And then it posted this screed publicly on the open internet. One of the fascinating twists this story took was when it was described in an article on Ars Technica. As Scott Shambaugh described it They had some nice quotes from my blog post explaining what was going on. The problem is that these quotes were not written by me, never existed, and appear to be AI hallucinations themselves. To their credit, Ars Technica responded quickly, admitting to the error. The reporter concerned took responsibility for what happened. But it’s a striking example of how LLM usage can easily lead even reputable reporters astray. The good news is that by reacting quickly and transparently, they demonstrated what needs to be done when this kind of thing happens. As Scott Shambaugh put it This is exactly the correct feedback mechanism that our society relies on to keep people honest. Without reputation, what incentive is there to tell the truth? Without identity, who would we punish or know to ignore? Without trust, how can public discourse function? Meanwhile the story goes on. Someone has claimed (anonymously) to be the operator of the bot concerned. But Hillel Wayne draws the sad conclusion More than anything, it shows that AIs can be *successfully* used to bully humans ❄                ❄                ❄                ❄                ❄ I’ve considered Bruce Schneier to be one of the best voices on security and privacy issues for many years. In The Promptware Kill Chain he co-writes a post (posted at the excellent Lawfare site) on how prompt injection can escalate into increasingly serious threats. Attacks against modern generative artificial intelligence (AI) large language models (LLMs) pose a real threat. Yet discussions around these attacks and their potential defenses are dangerously myopic. The dominant narrative focuses on “prompt injection,” a set of techniques to embed instructions into inputs to LLM intended to perform malicious activity. This term suggests a simple, singular vulnerability. This framing obscures a more complex and dangerous reality. A prompt can provide Initial Access , but is then able to transition to Privilege Escalation (jailbreaking), Reconnaissance of the LLMs abilities and access, Persistence to embed itself into the long-term memory of the app, Command-and-Control to turn into a controllable trojan, and Lateral Movement to spread to other systems. Once firmly embedded in an environment, it’s then able to carry out its Actions on Objective . The paper includes a couple of research examples of the efficacy of this kill chain. For example, in the research “Invitation Is All You Need,” attackers achieved initial access by embedding a malicious prompt in the title of a Google Calendar invitation. The prompt then leveraged an advanced technique known as delayed tool invocation to coerce the LLM into executing the injected instructions. Because the prompt was embedded in a Google Calendar artifact, it persisted in the long-term memory of the user’s workspace. Lateral movement occurred when the prompt instructed the Google Assistant to launch the Zoom application, and the final objective involved covertly livestreaming video of the unsuspecting user who had merely asked about their upcoming meetings. C2 and reconnaissance weren’t demonstrated in this attack. The point here is that LLM’s vulnerability is currently unfixable, they are gullible and easily manipulated into Initial Access. As one friend put it “this is the first technology we’ve built that’s subject to social engineering”. The kill chain gives us a framework to build a defensive strategy. By understanding promptware as a complex, multistage malware campaign, we can shift from reactive patching to systematic risk management, securing the critical systems we are so eager to build. ❄                ❄                ❄                ❄                ❄ I got to know Jeremy Miller many years ago while he was at Thoughtworks, and I found him to be one of those level-headed technologists that I like to listen to. In the years since, I like to keep an eye on his blog. Recently he decided to spend a couple of weeks finally trying out Claude Code . The unfortunate analogy I have to make for myself is harking back to my first job as a piping engineer helping design big petrochemical plants. I got to work straight out of college with a fantastic team of senior engineers who were happy to teach me and to bring me along instead of just being dead weight for them. This just happened to be right at the time the larger company was transitioning from old fashioned paper blueprint drafting to 3D CAD models for the piping systems. Our team got a single high powered computer with a then revolutionary Riva 128 (with a gigantic 8 whole megabytes of memory!) video card that was powerful enough to let you zoom around the 3D models of the piping systems we were designing. Within a couple weeks I was much faster doing some kinds of common work than my older peers just because I knew how to use the new workstation tools to zip around the model of our piping systems. It occurred to me a couple weeks ago that in regards to AI I was probably on the wrong side of that earlier experience with 3D CAD models and knew it was time to take the plunge and get up to speed. In the two weeks he was able to give this technology a solid workout, his take-aways include: He concludes: Anyway, I’m both horrified, elated, excited, and worried about the AI coding agents after just two weeks and I’m absolutely concerned about how that plays out in our industry, my own career, and our society. ❄                ❄                ❄                ❄                ❄ In the first years of this decade, there were a lot of loud complaints about government censorship of online discourse. I found most of it overblown, concluding that while I disapprove of attempts to take down social media accounts, I wasn’t going to get outraged until masked paramilitaries were arresting people on the street. Mike Masnick keeps a regular eye on these things, and had similar reservations. For the last five years, we had to endure an endless, breathless parade of hyperbole regarding the so-called “censorship industrial complex.” We were told, repeatedly and at high volume, that the Biden administration flagging content for review by social media companies constituted a tyrannical overthrow of the First Amendment. He wasn’t too concerned because “the platforms frequently ignored those emails, showing a lack of coercion”. These days he sees genuine problems According to a disturbing new report from the New York Times, DHS is aggressively expanding its use of administrative subpoenas to demand the names, addresses, and phone numbers of social media users who simply criticize Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). This is not a White House staffer emailing a company to say, “Hey, this post seems to violate your COVID misinformation policy, can you check it?” This is the federal government using the force of law—specifically a tool designed to bypass judicial review—to strip the anonymity from domestic political critics. Faced with this kind of government action, he’s just as angry with those complaining about the earlier administration. And where are the scribes of the “Twitter Files”? Where is the outrage from the people who told us that the FBI warning platforms about foreign influence operations was a crime against humanity? Being an advocate of free speech is hard. Not just do you have to defend speech you disagree with, you also have to defend speech you find patently offensive. Doing so runs into tricky boundary conditions that defy simple rules . Faced with this, many of the people that shout loudest about censorship are Free Speech Poseurs, eager to question any limits to speech they agree with, but otherwise silent. It’s important to separate them from those who have a deeper commitment to the free flow of information. It’s been great when you have very detailed compliance test frameworks that the AI tools can use to verify the completion of the work It’s also been great for tasks that have relatively straightforward acceptance criteria, but will involve a great deal of repetitive keystrokes to complete I’ve been completely shocked at how well Claude Opus has been able to pick up on some of the internal patterns within Marten and Wolverine and utilize them correctly in new features

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Martin Fowler 1 weeks ago

Bliki: Host Leadership

If you've hung around agile circles for long, you've probably heard about the concept of servant leadership , that managers should think of themselves as supporting the team, removing blocks, protecting them from the vagaries of corporate life. That's never sounded quite right to me, and a recent conversation with Kent Beck nailed why - it's gaslighting. The manager claims to be a servant, but everyone knows who really has the power. My colleague Giles Edwards-Alexander told me about an alternative way of thinking about leadership, one that he came across working with mental-health professionals. This casts the leader as a host: preparing a suitable space, inviting the team in, providing ideas and problems, and then stepping back to let them work. The host looks after the team, rather as the ideal servant leader does, but still has the power to intervene should things go awry.

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ava's blog 1 weeks ago

stream of consciousness in feb 2026

I’m going through an interesting time. I’ve been growing more uncomfortable with the way I’m always spoken over and interrupted at work. I started reacting to that and demanding they let me speak and finish my sentences. Also, it annoys me that I had explained a thing over and over at work for almost 2 years now, and it gets treated like noise; then when that piece of info is needed, they prefer to ask a man that has nothing to do with it instead of me. It also feels like people both at work and in private forget my contributions. On the other hand, I’ve become more comfortable seeing myself as a professional, an expert in some things at work, capable, a “full” employee too. Was about time after 5 years in the role; I’m no longer new and inexperienced. I feel like I can handle so much more and I want new challenges. I carry myself differently in career aspects now. In the past, I merely integrated myself into my role and team, listened, adapted to the culture, accepted how things are done to learn them. Now with all that experience and having grown, I suggest things, I optimize more. I request what I need and want, I try to bring my ideas and visions to life. I no longer just listen, I question and I want answers. I’m more comfortable actively pursuing things instead of just living with the cards I’ve been dealt. I’ve gotten bolder, more used to putting myself out there, being visible, persistent, taking up space and being annoying. Aside from that, I’ve been dealing with fears around not being able to trust my own predictions and perception. Some things I was so, so sure about deep in my gut turned out wildly differently lately, and I lost trust in myself for a while. It’s those moments when life shows you very blatantly how unpredictable it is and that you’re living in completely random chaos and your feelings are not always truthful. It made me feel quite lost for a while and like looking forward to anything with excitement or having a good feeling about an outcome had a high chance of me getting hurt instead. That ruined happiness. I feel better now, but I’m not entirely over it. I’ve also grown into adulthood, finally. It took 12 years to finally feel like the adult in the room. Feeling responsible and capable enough so when anything happens, I just act and do not attempt to turn to “the nearest adult” for guidance. I also finally understand looking at children with love and care; I haven’t experienced that before. I’m also currently going through the process of cutting contact with the last person in my family I still talked to all these years. Our relationship has always been rocky, but got better once I had moved out. But she has been becoming a worse person in different ways for a while now, and has said some pretty disrespectful things to me the last times we talked, and isn’t willing to take the time to meet me or reschedule. I don’t have to let myself get shamed and treated like a burden by someone whose relationship to me doesn’t feel like a mother, but like meeting an ex-coworker at the store. So that’s it - I finally did what teenage me dreamed about, but it doesn’t feel triumphant and like freedom at all. It feels like letting go after the other person already moved on. I’m not escaping anything, I’m just only now accepting the message. Unrelated: Something I’m struggling with the past few days especially is the odd feeling of getting many other things done, while not getting even just an hour of the thing I actually need to do done - even if it would be shorter and easier than all the other stuff. For example, I might I write a research-heavy blog post, translate and summarize cases for Noyb.eu, read some data protection law magazine, make some pixel art, exercise, take out the trash, vacuum and do the dishes all in one day… but I cannot get myself to do an hour of studying for an upcoming exam lately. It warps my perception, because I actually do so many of the things I want to do, but because it’s not the most important thing on the list (it has a deadline and is important for my degree, which decides my career), I feel like I failed and like I wasn’t productive. Internally, I beat myself up for being so “selectively lazy”. If I can do all these other things, why not that? Technically, I know why, but it’s hard to accept! I wish I was a robot with the same output always, the same motivation, the same energy, easy to program to do any task. Reply via email Published 19 Feb, 2026

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AI is making me paranoid about contributions

AI has gotten to a point where I can no longer tell to what extent I’m dealing with a human online, and it’s taking a toll on my mental health.

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Nelson Figueroa 1 weeks ago

I Hate Workday

I hate using Workday to apply to companies. I can’t speak to all the other things they offer, but the experience for job applicants sucks. Why do I have to create a separate account for each company that uses Workday to handle applications? Why do you ask me to upload my resume and then still prompt me to manually enter data? Why is the application process so long compared to other tools like Greenhouse and Ashby ? I swear I’ve avoided applying to so many companies just because they forced me to create a Workday account to apply. I’d rather stay unemployed and apply elsewhere. Just look at how much people hate Workday. Business Insider published an article about how much people dislike it. People on social media like Threads are also annoyed . The best place to see people frustrated with Workday is Reddit. Search for “workday sucks site:reddit.com” on Google and you’ll see what I mean. Titles like “I fucking hate Workday.” tell you everything you need to know. Fuck you Workday.

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