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Well it is subtle satire done well because another person could write the same thing and be completely serious.

Yes a bit ironic, but I am glad they can see that there are times to use AI, and times for human interaction.


How can one downvote on HN?


You need to reach a minimum karma threshold (501, if I recall) before you get the ability to do so.


Some useful information not documented on HN [1] not my repo

[1] - https://github.com/minimaxir/hacker-news-undocumented


First rule of Fight Club is...


Yes, I was wondering if I missed some context.


Interesting, and I have also finished live football games thinking it would have been better to just watch it on TV at home.

However, his claim that a spectator would "automatically reframe what she saw into the way it would appear on television" is never supported other than him saying "trust me, it's true, if you don't believe me you are in the minority".


I've been to JerryWorld or ATT Stadium one time for a non-NFL game. Most people just watch the giant screen as the actual players are tiny from the stadium seats. Watching at home/bar was the same conclusion I got to as well. I have no idea how much tickets are, but I know parking is extremely expensive as well, never mind concessions.


I'm convinced 'attendance' at those games is a form of worship / tribal participation.


I think that depends on how you interpret "happiness to become one’s default state of mind."

I think feeling happy is my default. I still get mad, hurt, sad, bored, etc. But when those feelings wear away, I return to a general state of happy contentment.


This sounds interesting, but I do not totally understand your description. Could you explain further what you are building?


Sure!

The problem with existing knowledge management systems is that they all eventually become victim to scale the operator can no longer manage.

Consider two scenarios:

Scenario 1:

You have a chaotic system of notes, dispersed throughout random pieces of paper and digital notes on your phone and computer. You have a relatively easy go of it when saving new notes (its as simple as pressing "New Note" or pulling out a new sheet of paper), but as you add more notes to your system it becomes harder and harder to find a particular piece of information. The cost of adding stays the same, but searching goes up and up. Scenario 1 causes us to eventually succumb to chaos.

Scenario 2:

You have an extremely rigid system of tag management, headings, sub-headings, sub-subheadings and sub-sub-subheadings. This taxonomy makes it easier to find information...at first. The problem with these systems is that they require a ton of manual maintenance, and they also make it easy to find certain "classes" of information, but fail at geo locating others. Much more perniciously, this scenario eventually stifles creativity as it falls prey to too much order. The cost of searching stays roughly the same, but the cost of insertion goes up and up.

(I am personally guilty of creating a system like this btw [1][2]).

Both of these systems eventually begin to become inert holders of information, as the processor (us), begin to fear them and stop working with them.

IMO, the closest technology to managing human information well in my opinion is well over two thousand years old, the commonplace book [3]. Simply put, a commonplace book is extremely resilient to chaos due to its centrality of information, but even people like John Locke had to create indexes to fully utilize them [4].

This changed recently with the advent of vector databases[5]. It turns out that commonplace book entries are the perfect form factor to benefit from an address in vector space, since entries are atomic. In simpler terms, the vector processing layer handles the order, allowing our system to "live" and assign headings/tags/etc. as it evolves. Vector databases love commonplace books as well, because many vector solutions have way too much noise as they chunk and store useless information at quite a disappointing ratio.

My system differs from current offerings because it makes no attempt to automize parts that are meant for the human, and makes no attempt at making humans do the work computers should be doing. Ergo, creating a type of symbiotic relationship.

Finally, a note on why I use the term "asset". An asset should become more valuable over time, and particularly, each individual component of the overall asset class should be worth more (e.g. $1 in a bank account of $20 is inherently less valuable than $1 in a $20MM bank account, because it grows slower). So in our scenarios above, the transmutation of information to knowledge peaks out at a logarithmic curve, subject to the scale issues I mentioned before. Old entries appear less frequently in even the most ordered systems, and when they do, it is only in one particular context. My system stores time of entry in the metadata, but since I use vector addresses, the information is accessible in many different ways (dog can be found when query == canine, fido, perro, mans best friend, etc...). An informational asset should scale linearly, and each action of create/read/update/delete should improve the health of the overall system.

There's much, much, much more I could say here, but I'll stop for now :)

[1] - https://github.com/bramses/bramses-highly-opinionated-vault-...

[2] - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=34034414

[3] - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commonplace_book

[4] - https://publicdomainreview.org/collection/john-lockes-method...

[5] - https://openai.com/index/introducing-text-and-code-embedding...


Tags are useless, encoded titles are better.

I'm using Zettelkasten with Obsidian and completely satisfied.


Do you have a link?


I'm suprised to see Nix at #20. Is it becoming more widely adopted?


The criticality score looks like it involves not just dependents but a bunch of different kinds of activity metrics, and Nixpkgs is an extremely active repo. It's niche but there's a lot of contributors and a lot of automation, so there's a lot of frequent activity.


Dune - Frank Herbert


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