4 is used for non-deterministic delay - - - is Random.nextInt() also cryptographically secure?
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Anyone who thinks it’s about the prompts (or the programming language du-jour) is missing the real questions.
A.I. is taking (atleast some) junior dev jobs.
I think this is likely to be a temporary-transient effect, until they figure out that they still need thinking people to work with the LLMs to get what they need. Some of this transition period is going to involve discovery that they didn’t need some of those junior devs in the first place, and eventual discovery that they need more junior devs for new things.
I think it’s IBM that told a story of downsizing 15,000 people in various areas, and re-hiring 20,000 people in other areas - including people tasked with running the AI/LLM interfaces.
I love the: lack of exposure to toxic chemicals (usually), the lack of harsh loud work environments (usually), the comfy chair and peaceful office space (eventually), and the fact that the money is good enough pretty much seals the deal. I like working with my hands, making things, wearing ear and eye protection, cutting down trees with chainsaws, replacing engines in cars: on my own terms, not as something I have to do 250 days a year to avoid homelessness.
My guest wifi network is automatically segregating (as default from Netgear). So, if three guests are on it, none can “see” the others, only the internet.
My guests get WiFi access to the internet when they ask. What they don’t get is WiFi access to our home systems network. When they don’t ask, I assume they’re just fine paying for their own cellular data.
Our IT department and leadership are more schizophrenic than usual around AI. Top leadership wants it bad, pushing big initiatives. Risk management layer, predictably, is more cautious - requiring analysis and approvals and so forth - this is driven into IT with things like redirects from open internet AI services to internally hosted alternatives (sensible), but the internal services aren’t completely up-to-speed with tools like Cursor. So, I have approval for Cursor, and IT is helping me make it work around their filters, but then again - once in a while the Cursor software magically uninstalls itself overnight. Luckily, the work in progress is still there and when I re-install Cursor it picks up where it left off.
We clearly have conflicting interests at work behind our company computers.
If you ask an AI agent (like the one on Google search) how to disable the prompt dialogue it will usually tell you something that works. This is actually nothing new, back in Windows ME days I spent 8 hours with search engines figuring out how to de-feature Windows ME until it worked like Windows 98SE, that was actually a pretty good computer/OS for the day - after I turned off all the ME garbage.
I had an Atari 800, and the manual for it was pretty complete.
At office in 1991 I started programming for IBM PCs in DOS, that was a big step into the void.
had comprehensive manuals
You must not have coded for DOS.
In the late 80s there were no man pages, we had a 50 page paper manual - and it was mostly useless.
I do most of my cursing during preliminary test…
Nah, the good ol’ days were when websites provided value to their users. The only competitively sustainable business model is the reverse: where users provide value to the website owners.
You know what you didn’t mention? Security. Privacy. Authenticity.
a clean and functional site
But the specs no longer call for a clean, functional site. Today’s “professional” web development specs call for user tracking, customized content per user per platform per locality the page is being served to. Then there’s the backend dashboard services showing the overlords user behavior patterns and how they change based on tweaks made to their ui, I wouldn’t be surprised if the algorithms auto-tune presentation to optimize behavior.


The question the optimizer can’t really answer is: will Random.nextInt() ever return 10? If that’s a 64 bit integer it could be a LOOOOOONG time before 10 ever shows up.