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hnlmorgyesterday at 8:33 PM5 repliesview on HN

The golden age for me is any period where you have the fully documented systems.

Hardware that ships with documentation about what instructions it supports. With example code. Like my 8-bit micros did.

And software that’s open and can be modified.

Instead what we have is:

- AI which are little black boxes and beyond our ability to fully reason.

- perpetual subscription services for the same software we used to “own”.

- hardware that is completely undocumented to all but a small few who are granted an NDA before hand

- operating systems that are trying harder and harder to prevent us from running any software they haven’t approved because “security”

- and distributed systems become centralised, such as GitHub, CloudFlare, AWS, and so on and so forth.

The only thing special about right now is that we have added yet another abstraction on top of an already overly complex software stack to allow us to use natural language as pseudocode. And that is a version special breakthrough, but it’s not enough by itself to overlook all the other problems with modern computing.


Replies

zzo38computertoday at 1:16 AM

> The golden age for me is any period where you have the fully documented systems. Hardware that ships with documentation about what instructions it supports. With example code. Like my 8-bit micros did. And software that’s open and can be modified.

I agree, that it would be good. (It is one reason why I wanted to design a better computer, which would include full documentation about the hardware and the software (hopefully enough to make a compatible computer), as well as full source codes (which can help if some parts of the documentation are unclear, but also can be used to make your own modifications if needed).) (In some cases, we have some of this already, but not entirely. Not all hardware and software has the problems you list, although it is too common now. Making a better computer will not prevent such problematic things on other computers, and not entirely preventing such problems on the new computer design either, but it would help a bit, especially if it is actually designed good rather than badly.)

davidhydeyesterday at 10:40 PM

My take on the difference between now and then is “effort”. All those things mentioned above are now effortless but the door to “effort” remains open as it always has been. Take the first point for example. Those little black boxes of AI can be significantly demystified by, for example, watching a bunch of videos (https://karpathy.ai/zero-to-hero.html) and spending at least 40 hours of hard cognitive effort learning about it yourself. We used to purchase software or write it ourselves before it became effortless to get it for free in exchange for ads and then a subscription when we grew tired of ads or were tricked into bait and switch. You can also argue that it has never been easier to write your own software than it is today.

Hostile operating systems. Take the effort to switch to Linux.

Undocumented hardware, well there is far more open source hardware out there today and back in the day it was fun to reverse engineer hardware, now we just expect it to be open because we couldn’t be bothered to put in the effort anymore.

Effort gives me agency. I really like learning new things and so agentic LLMs don’t make me feel hopeless.

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HoldOnAMinuteyesterday at 9:35 PM

Have you tried using GenAI to write documentation? You can literally point it to a folder and say, analyze everything in this folder and write a document about it. And it will do it. It's more thorough than anything a human could do, especially in the time frame we're talking about.

If GenAI could only write documentation it would still be a game changer.

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XenophileJKOyesterday at 10:28 PM

Actually this makes me think of an interesting point. We DO have too many layers of software.. and rebuilding is always so cost prohibative.

Maybe an iteresting route is using LLMs to flatten/simplify.. so we can dig out from some of the complexity.

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fragmedeyesterday at 9:45 PM

> perpetual subscription services for the same software we used to “own”.

In another thread, people were looking for things to build. If there's a subscription service that you think shouldn't be a subscription (because they're not actually doing anything new for that subscription), disrupt the fuck out of it. Rent seekers about to lose their shirts. I pay for eg Spotify because there's new music that has to happen, but Dropbox?

If you're not adding new whatever (features/content) in order to justify a subscription, then you're only worth the electricity and hardware costs or else I'm gonna build and host my own.

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