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It's for the Scottish. It's in Iran's interests for Scotland to become independent because that would enforce change on the United Nations Security Council. The UK ceases to exist and loses its veto, then what happens on the UNSC after that is anyone's guess.

The UK doesn't cease to exist though, it just shrinks. Plus the USSR fragmenting and Russia (as the main constituent part, the nuclear power and the country the independent republics were happy to acknowledge as the continuation of the USSR) becoming the successor state is pretty well-established precedent for what happens when states fragment, whose legitimacy Russia probably doesn't want to contest too strongly...

General disruption in the UK would help the Iranian government a little, but I managed to click on one of the accounts before it was suspended, and its most popular tweets received very interaction (and were pretty banal statements of independence support indistinguishable from stuff thousands of completely normal Scottish people posted) I assume their attempts to seed wilder rumours were low effort and had very little success.


Russia was allowed to inherit the USSR seat on 3 conditions:

- It took on all the sovereign debt from the newly independent nations.

- It relinquished nukes that were left behind in Ukraine.

- The United Nations collectively agreed to it.

I don't think any of those things would happen in the UK's case. But of course it doesn't matter what you or I think. It only matters what _Iran_ thinks will happen if Scotland gains independence.


>The UK doesn't cease to exist though, it just shrinks.

Or as some wags have put it, when Northern Ireland unifies with the Republic of Ireland, and Scotland joins the EU as an independent state, the Rump UK (1) becomes the "Former United Kingdom of Wales and England" (2), or "FUK-Wangland" for short.

1) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rump_state

2) See FYROM: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Macedonia#Naming_dispute


Russia didn't lose its veto when the USSR collapsed and neither would the UK lose it in such a case. If the UK was in danger of losing its veto it would never allow Scottish independence.

If Russia kept the soviet UNSC seat when the Soviets collapsed then surely the UK keeps its seat if Scotland leaves.

It doesn’t matter whether independence is realized, what Iran wants is more time and effort spent on domestic disagreement, so less is available to support international engagement.

This is a tool of international competition and the U.S. and U.K. have been trying to do it to Iran (and others) for even longer than the reverse.


All that would happen would be Scotland would lose its influence over the veto.

The UK is a lot more then Scotland + England. The Welsh, northern Irish and Isle of Manx would like to have a word with you, to name a few.

The Isle of Man isn't part of the UK?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isle_of_Man


The Isle of Man is not part of the United Kingdom

[flagged]


Manx is the demonym for people from the Isle of Man. It's odd to see it written "Isle of Manx" in a list of other demonyms, but the word Manx itself is far from modern. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manx_people

It's the Isle of Man to the best of my knowledge, but the people, and language, are called Manx. Like the English are from England.

Let's not forget the Mancs are from England as well.


I was just thinking... "BugHog? The platform famously broken more often than not?"

We have a whole posthog interface layer to mask over their constant outages and slowness. (Why don't we ditch them entirely? I, too, often ask this, but the marketing people love it)


> Powered by Atlassian Statuspage

Is all I need to know.


A nice thing about the SAX approach is it lets you layer other APIs on top too. I did something like that in BFJ:

https://www.npmjs.com/package/bfj


It sounds like there’s another failure here, which you could have documented. If the test team didn’t understand what they were meant to test, that’s a failure of communication. Simply saying “they were wrong” is not sufficient exploration of the failure so, if that’s the point your manager was making, I agree with them. Blaming a third party for misunderstanding is less useful than seeking to improve the clarity of your own communication.


I think this and other recent posts here hugely overcomplicate matters. I notice none of them provides an A/B test for each item of complexity they introduce, there's just a handwavy "this has proved to work over time".

I've found that a single CLAUDE.md does really well at guiding it how I want it to behave. For me that's making it take small steps and stop to ask me questions frequently, so it's more like we're pairing than I'm sending it off solo to work on a task. I'm sure that's not to everyone's taste but it works for me (and I say this as someone who was an agent-sceptic until quite recently).

Fwiw my ~/.claude/CLAUDE.md is 2.2K / 49 lines.


Indeed Anthropic’s best practices suggest keeping the CLAUDE.md relatively small.


I think 3I/Atlas is a comet.

But I also think the question "what if it wasn't" is useful to consider.

I'd label anyone unwilling to discuss that topic a crank, not the other way round.


“What if” is just fine.

Loeb goes quite a bit further than that.


Does he though? Honestly I haven't seen it.

I've been through the last ~10 or ~15 posts on his Medium this evening, to check. Sentence-by-sentence I don't see anything that goes beyond "what if". Can you share some of the quotes you have in mind?

I think this is an interesting phenomenon, because it seems that lots of people throw personal insults at him (not saying that's you btw) without addressing the meat of whatever they're reacting to.

And lest we forget! One of the founding essays [1] of this very website discusses it: if you're slinging ad hominem attacks or personal insults around, you're by definition losing the "argument" (not that I think this qualifies as an "argument").

[1]: https://paulgraham.com/disagree.html



Not much, but just confirmation that it's in the expected part of the sky is quite exciting. There's a probable capture of it from Perseverance here (it's just a tiny faint smudge):

https://bsky.app/profile/stim3on.bsky.social/post/3m2aqnbwlw...


> just confirmation that it's in the expected part of the sky is quite exciting

It would be funny if it behaves "as expected" when in the range of our instruments, but not when it thinks we can't see it :)


Every confirmation is a data point.


As one of the curious minority who keeps trying agentic coding but not liking it, I've been looking for explanations why my experience differs from the mainstream. I think it might lie in this nugget:

    > I believe with Claude Code, we are at the
    > “introduction of photography” period of
    > programming. Painting by hand just doesn’t
    > have the same appeal anymore when a single
    > concept can just appear and you shape it
    > into the thing you want with your code review
    > and editing skills.
The comparison seems apt and yet, still people paint, still people pay for paintings, still people paint for fun.

I like coding by hand. I dislike reviewing code (although I do it, of course). Given the choice, I'll opt for the former (and perhaps that's why I'm still an IC).

When people talk about coding agents as very enthusiastic but very junior engineering interns, it fills me with dread rather than joy.


> still people paint, still people pay for paintings

But in what environment? It seems to me that most of the crafts that have been replaced by the assembly line are practiced not so much for the product itself, but for an experience both the creator and the consumer can participate in, at least in their imagination.

You don't just order such artifacts on Amazon anonymously; you establish some sort of relationship with the artisan and his creative process. You become part of a narrative. Coding is going to need something similar if it wants to live in that niche.


I don't disagree with any of that. But as long as there are companies willing to pay me to write code the old-fashioned way, I'll keep doing it.


I totally get this side of things. I see the benefits of Agentic coding for small tasks, minor fixes, or first drafts. That said, I don't understand the pseudo-tribalism around specific interfaces to what amounts to only a few models under the hood and worry about what its doing for (or not doing for) junior devs.

Also, if we could get AI tooling to do the reviews for us reliably, I'd be a much happier developer.


I don't think it's a complete good comparison. In the past painting was the only way to depict real world events, but painting is also art, and it often doesn't necessarily depict reality, but the artist's interpretation of it. That is why people still paint.

So yeah if you like coding as an art form, you can still keep doing that. It's probably just a bit harder to make lots of money with it. But most people code to make a product (which in itself could be a form of art). And yeah if it's faster to reach your goals of making a product with the help of AI, then the choice is simple of course.

But yeah in a way I'm also sad that the code monkey will disappear, and we all become more like the lead developer who doesn't really program anymore but only guides the project, reviews code and makes technical decisions. I liked being the code monkey, not having to deal a lot with all the business stuff. But yeah, things change you know.


A more apt metaphor is moving from hand-tools to power-tools.

The painting/photography metaphor stretches way too far imo - photography was fundamentally a new output format, a new medium, an entirely new process. Agentic coding isn't that.



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