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Because working now at what used to be startup size, not having X Person leads to really bad technical debt problems as that person Handling X was not really skilled enough to be doing so but it was illusion of success. Those technical debt problems are causing us massive issues now and costing the business real money.

Sure, if they pulled Apple and locked everyone into only installing from Microsoft Store, Steam would have been in serious trouble.

They still can be, Microsoft is one of the biggest publishers, and they can lock everything from their studios into XBox app store or Gamepass, if they feel like it.

As someone who worked in fraud, sometimes the $10 transaction is primer for 10k transaction that will really cost the company. When you don't know what's going on, you don't give a shit about end user and primary objective is prevent the company from losing money, shut it down and sort it out is easiest way.

Furthermore, without physical presence where you could sit down with someone, this becomes more difficult to deal with. Truth is, Apple should have option where someone could go to Apple Store, verify ID and talk to someone with power but they don't want to spend that money so here we are.


If you don’t care about the end user, you should be fired, your manager should be fired, and your company should be shut down.

Yep. Remember, people not posting on this website are just grinding away at jobs where their individual output does not matter, and entire motivation is work JUST hard enough not to get fired. They don't get stock grants, extremely favorable stock options or anything else, they get salary and MAYBE a small bonus based off business factors they have little control over.

My eyes were wide open when 2 jobs ago, they said they would be blocking all personal web browsing from work computers. Multiple Software Devs were unhappy because they were using their work laptop for booking flights, dealing with their kids schools stuff and other personal things. They did not have personal computer at all.


There are people posting on this website that are in that category; or in those companies. For example most people working outside America as a SWE who like the profession. The options to work for a place that gives stock options, and equity in general is small -> and generally in many countries is heavily penalised tax wise.

They don't have phones?

They do but obviously laptop is easier than doing it on their phone. That’s what most of them ended up doing.

He had a son before he started.

Yes? Reports are that OpenAI is buying unfinished memory kits which they have no capacity to complete. It appears that OpenAI is just buying them to remove them from the market and damage their competitors. In United States, that used to be considered against the law if we were actually enforcing such things.

Since COVID, this has been the norm for any industry that requires chips.

Operation handbook now dictates that you should have 3-4 years of all the ICs you'll need for production so you don't end up like the car manufacturers.


The reason my 2018 Chevrolet has HDR radio and my wife's 2024 doesn't.

Massively over inflating your vehicles to the point they can't move them in the market?

I doubt this is to create artificial scarcity. Especially when OpenAI is the biggest player thought to be able to build AGI first and that it is now backed by the US & the Saudis.

> thought to be able to build AGI first

Who still thinks this?


The US Government, Saudis, consumer/private investors apparently or at least the one that can build the most economically useful AI. I myself believe Google is most likely.

Because most people are working at Failure/Feature factories where they might work on something and at last minute, they find out something is now warning. If they work on fixing it, the PM will screaming about time slippage and be like "I want you to work on X, not Y which can wait".

2 Years later, you have hundreds of warning.


You found that out at the last minute. So then you did a release. It's no longer the last minute. Now what's your excuse for the next release?

If your management won't resource your project to the point where you can assure that the software is correct, you might want to see if you can find the free time to look for another job. You'll have to do that anyway when they either tank the company, or lay you off next time they feel they need to cut more costs.


The value for TFCDK was Developers don't have to learn another language, they can just continue to use existing language they already know.

Downsides are doing infrastructure in a programming language was always problematic unless developer was skilled at Ops which most who used TFCDK were not.


I ought to have phrased it I guess as "I don't agree with the value proposition", mainly because of the downside you point out. This seems superior to Pulumi, though, in that the abstraction is (was) at least owned by Hashicorp so there was less likelihood of it falling out of date and giving you footguns.

That might have been the promise but never the real value. As you say in practice the engineer needs to know ops & terraform along side their language of choice.

The real value of cdktf was more dynamic infrastructure provisioning while still having the plan / apply pattern.


If you gave them an email address, it's possible they were able to verify you with 3rd party data brokers without your knowledge.

It is easier then smuggling drugs because US is not making it difficult to sidestep the sanctions. Hey, this random house in Delaware is buying a ton of GPUs, should we investigate? Nah, our donors don’t actually want Nvidia stock to go down so ignore it.

I don’t think the root problem is political corruption or donors.

If anything, the hundreds of millions of dollars from AI lobbyists would overwhelmingly support anything that would prevent anyone outside of the US getting their hands on computer chips.

The AI lobby in support of banning export of chips is way greater than anyone lobbying the opposite.

> should we investigate? Nah, our donors […]

The US government is a very slow moving bureaucracy. Slower to adapt than the slowest moving large public company.

The GPU chip issue came about suddenly, out of the blue, and caught the government unprepared. When that happens, it typically takes government years to catch up and figure out how to adapt.

Even in cases where incentives are aligned in favor of the government’s position, they still take forever to roll out meaningful change with effective enforcement - e.g. charging sales tax on software business, remember that Supreme Court case years ago? Or remember all the concern about engineer salaries being de-categorized as R&D? These are examples that are legally decided but gov is incredibly slow to enforce. The Wayfair supreme court case was back in 2018, right? Many years later, most SaaS companies are still getting away with not charging sales tax. Certain states are just now stating to enforce, 7 years later.


Investigate and do what? It's not illegal to buy GPUs, the sanctions have no power in this space. Who could a law even hurt here, the seller who is a single individual? If they made it illegal to individually export them out of the US the Chinese could just buy them somewhere else.

You can investigate buyers who have anomalous purchase patterns for sanction violations and convict them. DEA commonly looks at narcotic purchases by legal buyers for indications they might be funneling it to illegal market and investigates. NVidia could report "Hey, we are seeing massive purchases from entities we didn't expect so you might want to look into that"

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