punchmesan

joined 6 months ago
[–] punchmesan@lemmy.dbzer0.com 9 points 4 months ago (2 children)

What makes you think it's willful ignorance over garden-variety ignorance? Being incorrect and thinking you are correct is different from purposefully keeping yourself ignorant.

I have no horse in this race, and willfully being ignorant and spreading disinformation about trans topics willfully is indeed transphobic and warrants aggressive shutdowns, like the comment I'm replying to. But unless I'm missing something I don't see the evidence of bad intent here? It just seemed like a bit of a leap.

[–] punchmesan@lemmy.dbzer0.com 41 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Holy shit I would take this over an open floor plan any day. I dream of having my own quasi-isolated space.

[–] punchmesan@lemmy.dbzer0.com 7 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Love the idea! What if instead of stakeholders voting on everything you implemented a "steering committee" style model. Stakeholders meet/organize at some cadence to make larger decisions and decide the direction to "steer" the instance and the smaller decisions made in service of the direction decided by committee are left to the admins (decided/maintained by committee). The committee would have veto power over those decisions.

Just thinking of communication overhead and how the more is decided by committee upfront the less agile you can be.

[–] punchmesan@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 6 months ago (1 children)

Yeah, it's trivial work for a capable AI. It isn't farfetched to envision an AI tracking down your alt accounts by analyzing writing style, post/comment topics, and various other bits of commonality.

[–] punchmesan@lemmy.dbzer0.com 6 points 6 months ago (3 children)

My knee-jerk reaction is that I'm generally against it. I'm all for AI in a variety of applications, but I don't participate in discussion in online places to give free training days to corporate LLM's. If somehow it could be guaranteed that it was only used in open models I suppose I would feel a little better, but the second issue in my mind is that even careful people leave a trail of identifying breadcrumbs sprinkled across their posting history. A human having to sift through thousands of posts and comments will have a much harder time putting pieces together than an AI will. So I see it as a privacy concern mostly.

[–] punchmesan@lemmy.dbzer0.com 7 points 6 months ago (1 children)

I'm in IT too. My experience is that if you use Linux at home and Windows at work you just end up skilled at both. At one point I was even using a Macbook at work (wouldn't have even been a consideration if WSL was just a little better), using a Windows jump server or a VM for my Windows-y ops, and I became skilled at all 3 OS's.

All of that is to say that your skill won't decrease if Windows is still being used, especially if you're using it in a professional context.

 

Hello! This is obviously a new community so I'm not expecting many responses, but who knows? A community has to start somewhere and it needs posts.

Anyways, in about 6 months I'll be a new parent. I have a lot of my own ideas about parenting based on what I've seen work and not work in the real world, and I'm no stranger to babies, so I don't feel totally unprepared. I'm not so foolish as to think that some preconceived notions on how to parent makes me prepared to be one, though (as prepared as anyone can really be, anyways).

That being said, I am also fully aware no book is going to have all the answers either, but that doesn't mean there's nothing to learn from them. So to the parents out there, what reading have you found useful or helpful in your parenting journey?

[–] punchmesan@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago)

LinkedIn and Indeed mostly, though I do check my resume against the listing using stuff like jobscan.co to play the stupid match-the-keywords game to rank myself as high as possible. The response rate sucks but I do get responses, and I think shitty response rates for applications via job boards is kinda common in general. In my area (both geographically and career-wise I suppose) there are also plenty of recruiters looking for people to get in the door, which gets you past the AI gatekeeper. Though recruiter activity has slowed down in the past year and it's not a time of plenty anymore they're still around.

As with anything YMMV. So many variables, and surely some luck has played a part in my experience.

[–] punchmesan@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 6 months ago (2 children)

That's entirely dependent on experience. Low to no experience? Get certs. In today's age of AI powered resume screens, even with experience if what you're pursuing is a position lower on the totem poll then you will still need them to get through the AI. Probably want a higher-value cert than CompTIA if you wanna work in IT but don't want to stay trapped in the help desk (I'm talking a networking cert, a cloud cert, ITIL, etc). The most common career path is through the help desk but one doesn't need to stay there.

Once one gets a decent amount of experience certs don't really matter. In fact, I climbed up the early rungs of the IT ladder by selling my experience with stuff in my home lab and selling my ability to learn. I don't have a single cert and never have. I misrepresented nothing about myself, but I did need to eat some below-market-pay jobs at first to rack up real experience to sell. Nobody really cares about the cert, it's a knowledge industry and what matters is what you know and what you've done.