Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | cbeach's commentslogin

They set themselves up for a fall when they named themselves "Impeccable Style"

The mix of sans and serif fonts on their website is a mess. There's too much negative space, and it's inconsistent. Too many font sizes, and some that are so tiny they're illegible.

In the landing page before/after example, I think the "before" design looks more appealing.


https://chrisbeach.co.uk/ - personal landing page with links to my projects

Disagree on being subsumed into the stagnating EU (far better to align with dynamic English-speaking economies with strong growth, like the US).

The EU customs union prevented the UK striking bilateral global free trade deals, and the legacy of EU over-regulation continues to curtail our innovation. The UK has a solid history of global trade and innovation, and it can acheive more if unshackled from the EU.

Austerity is absolutely necessary. If we keep giving the NHS above-inflation pay rises inline with what their staff demand, it would consume the entire annual excess wealth from the productive half of the economy in a matter of decades.

What we need are sensible and pragmatic policies like Reform's scaling back of net zero, for example. The cost of Ed Miliband's net zero measures are an estimated £4.5 trillion over the next 25 years, and a gross cost in excess of £7.6 trillion.

https://iea.org.uk/media/net-zero-could-cost-britain-billion...

That's more than our entire GDP. Just one example is the 20 year wind farm contracts that Miliband has set up, with a guaranteed energy cost that's nearly double the market rate for gas power (and then on top of that we need to pay for wind curtailment, grid upgrades and expensive backup power plants to cover low wind days).

https://x.com/ClaireCoutinho/status/2011335138987168173

We were promised that renewables would reduce energy bills. That was a total fiction, and the politicians are to blame.

Green energy could be a massive success story, and it could make our bills cheaper, but inept politicians from the Tories and Labour have focussed instead on vanity metrics.


Once again, Eurocrats gaslight the public into accepting dystopian surveillance and control mechanisms.

They love to make Trump a boogieman, too.


as useful idiots go, he’s surprisingly versatile

I’m in the UK. There is strong anti-ILLEGAL-immigrant sentiment, because hundreds of thousands of undocumented men originating in Africa and the Middle East have illegally crossed the English Channel from France and then made asylum claims, meaning the UK taxpayer is forced (by treaty) to house them and feed them. These are quite evidently opportunists. A large proportion are young fighting-age men, and most are fleeing countries where there is no current conflict.

As a taxpayer in a cost of living crisis I resent seeing hotels full of these chancers.

And I don’t think women and girls are safe with them around, given the staggering sexual crime statistics

https://www.migrationcentral.co.uk/p/up-to-third-of-sexual-a...

Call me “anti-immigrant” if you like. I don’t care. I’m voting for fairness and safety in the next election.


I'm not really interested in your personal opinion about immigration. I don't really know why you decided to vent your personal grievance at me.

Someone donate to this guy so he can upgrade his 20 y/o Thinkpad!

Scala is a fantastic language and in fact I'd say it's the language that proves the article wrong.

Java was the language where "write libraries instead" happened, and it became an absolute burden. So many ugly libraries, frameworks and patterns built to overcome the limitations of a simple language.

Scala unified the tried-and-tested design patterns and library features used in the Java ecosystem into the core of its language, and we're better off for it.

In Java we needed Spring (urghh) for dependency injection. In Scala we have the "given" keyword.

In Java we needed Guava to do anything interesting with functional programming. FP features were slowly added to the Java core, but the power and expressivity of Java FP is woeful compared what's available at the core of Scala and its collections libraries.

In Java we needed Lombok and builder patterns. In Scala we have case classes, named and default parameters and immutability by default.

In the Java ecosystem, optionality comes through a mixture of nulls (yuck) and the crude and inconsistently-used "Optional". In Scala, Option is in the core, and composes naturally.

In Java, checked exceptions infect method signatures. In Scala we have Try, Either and Validated. Errors are values. It's so much more composable.

There's so much more - but hopefully I've made the point that there's a legitimate benefit in taking the best from a mature ecosystem and simple language like Java and creating a new, more elegant and complete language like Scala.


I think you misunderstood the article (or only read the first couple paragraphs). The author sets the stage with the statement in the article title (a quote heard from other people), but shows that those fancy language features in some languages are exactly why rich, easy-to-use libraries can be built. And that some of these rich, easy-to-use libraries simply cannot be built in some languages that lack those features.

So you don't actually disagree with the article.


> the language that proves the article wrong

It helps to actually read it. The title is in quotes because the point of the article is to refute it.


Thanks for including the context in the title.

RIP, Joe


> Much better solution is to help you junior dev solve the problem

Meanwhile there are five other subordinates and all the overhead that you're neglecting while you fiddle with your dev environment trying to get started on the task, as you've been away from direct engineering for a while.


The simulator is an excellent reminder that engineering managers sign up for an eternity in the Kobayashi Maru scenario, and there's no way to Captain Kirk it, either.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kobayashi_Maru

I've had the fortune to be able to steer my career back down to IC with no loss of income every time I have been pushed up into an EM role.

Only one data point, but I'm 100% happier as IC than EM.


Glad that you chose happiness.

But there are other players who likes to trade it for Money!

Thanks for sharing the Kobayashi Maru scenario though! Can use it as a fun simulation if someone fails all scenarios to make it light hearted yet meaningful.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: