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It's ok to ship code that supports tests.

Just a quick drop for some more notes on a key #paper in #ResilienceEngineering and Cognitive Systems Engineering: Klein & Woods' "Ten Challenges for Making Automation a "Team Player" in Joint Human-Agent Activity": researchgate.net/publication/3

This paper is about the idea that automation should be considered a team player, and establishes a "basic compact" (what makes people work together) and exposes 10 challenges that must be met to do it decently.

Notes at: cohost.org/mononcqc/post/11194

4 years of development.
12,000 merged pull requests.
7,000 fixed issues.
1,500 individual contributors across engine and docs.

Godot 4.0 sets sail NOW! ⛵

A complete overhaul. A solid foundation to build upon. #GodotEngine
godotengine.org/article/godot-

Sizzling take:

haters were kinda right. It's a bit of a unique situation where hiring **software engineers** rather than framework programmers (the latter is an admirable profession as well, don't get me right) is nigh impossible.

My best performing elixir developers aren't coming from elixir background. Sadly elixir is so good, it's impossible to use a 2013 heuristic of "just hiring erlangers".

I'm going to run a one-shot of Black Sword Hack: Utimate Chaos Edition this week, so I translated the character sheet to French (unproductive rant on Creative Commons in #TTRPG included in the blog post 🤷).

whidou.fr/fiche-bsh-en.html

@ttrpg #OSR #BSH

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Roses are red.
Roses are blue.
Depending on their velocity
relative to you.

"If you are a subscriber to either Tweetbot or Twitterrific, I beseech you to decline these prorated refunds. It’s a couple of bucks for you, but in the aggregate, this amounts to an existential sum of *already booked revenue* for these two companies, both exemplars of the indie iOS and Mac community.

"Reinstall the app if you’ve already deleted it. Tap that ‘I Don’t Need a Refund’ button and feel good about it. We have a month. Spread the word.”

@gruber

daringfireball.net/2023/03/twe

I, uhh, need a Canadian to help me out. Please PM!

I wonder how many great and useful interactive programs made by people who know what they're doing would be ten times more popular if they had goddamn context menus or at least a hotkey to show all the hotkeys.

Seriously, it's amazing that you made this terminal emulator / window manager / editor / client for this or that, and based on the cute website with build instructions you actually care that people try it, so why does all that nicety stop the moment I actually run the thing.

No one owes me anything, absolutely, but I just honestly don't get why it be like that.

I am working on a new lino print - Moon Princess. Still a few places to tidy up.

this is not a "we are forcing normal people to understand scary programming things" problem. this is a "corporations are doing everything to make people so strongly anti-learning and so against trying new things that they voluntarily refuse to use anything except for their own product" problem

it's very intentional and absolutely not something that just happened on its own. it's a lot easier and more convenient to keep your users using your product if you turn them against the fundamental concept of "learning other things"

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Oh hey my talk from London is online.

Do you like #Rust and want to know how to do more clever things with your concurrent datastructures? Watch this ✨ (or don't, I'm not your boss)

youtube.com/watch?v=Z-2siR9Ki8

If you ever needed a single image that encapsulates the blame game around socio-technical systems often shifting towards operators, it would be harder to achieve better than this article did on one of its earlier versions:

Human error [...] manual signalling was in use due to broken electronic systems.

(source: telegraph.co.uk/world-news/202)

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