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I believe you can just hit /cost within a session for this


This was me for a long time and it got even worse especially with Humble Bundles — I often ended up buying games on say PS5 though I had them on steam.

Ended up building a side project for myself which would yell at me for trying to buy something I already had.

But that’s ok, sometimes the collection is half the fun


Thanks for writing this up! I learnt a bunch from it. I noticed this didn’t discuss additional layers of caching - I can see how it would fit in, but is prompt caching out of the scope of this system?


Case in point: 2 years ago i interviewed at a number of places with mind boggling valuations and most of the places I got offers from either no longer exist or laid off half their staff. It’s a lottery


Lottery tickets still have value.


Usually negative value.


They moved to Hack many years ago, at some point the languages diverged too much


As a sibling commenter said, it helps brand and recruiting - which meta cares about


Maybe, but the gold chain, million dollar watch wearing CEO talking about masculine energy doesn't help the brand.


> Maybe, but the gold chain, million dollar watch wearing CEO talking about masculine energy doesn't help the brand.

Why not exactly? Between Meta’s great contributions to the open-source ecosystem and Mark behaving more like a normal man nowadays, right now is the only time in a long time that I’ve considered applying to go work at Meta. I’ve heard several of my colleagues and friends say the same thing in recent months.


Imagining that there's anything "normal" about that knucklehead is why "masculinity" is such an easy target for parody.


What's unattractive about how do you do fellow humans?


> Imagining that there's anything "normal" about that knucklehead is why "masculinity" is such an easy target for parody.

You’re certainly entitled to your opinions and ad hominems. Many folks, including myself, disagree with you, so there’s that.


Yep, and you yours of course.

But man is that dude a bad example of how to be a human.

I'll cut him some slack for growing up in public with stupid money and no one to regulate his impulses, but uff da.

Wake me up when he's old enough for his lagging prefrontal cortex to catch up with the rest of him.


I don’t know if that would have helped here, if memory serves me right:

1. The copy was needed initially 2. This structure wasn’t as heavy back then

… over time the code evolved so it became heavy and the copy became unnecessary. That’s harder to find without profiling to guide things


That one diff blew my mind when I saw it. It’s a prime example of that story about “you paid me a lot of money to know where to fix that pipe”


This echoes well. The most popular posts on my blog are things where I wrote things for myself (e.g. reflections on my career), rather than trying to orient them for an audience or maximum clicks.


I have been using the product for a while and I’m a huge fan. At least for solo/side projects it helps me get reviews in an easy manner similar to what I’m used to at $dayjob and the SNR was good enough that I find myself reaching for it regularly.

It also did find bugs in code I shipped professionally (I back tested on my public commits) and also OSS code shipped by meta (which I found surprising at first)

Hoping to see this and similar tools develop further.

(Disclaimer; I know one of the founders well, though they didn’t ask me to comment here)


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