Hard agree. Cant even qualify for housing connect, medicaid, or food stamps - income tax credits (single / no kids / no property) - which are significant help to quality of life.
I'm outside of NYC, still in NY. As a single person, the 80% AGI limit is $49,000 here.
It's actually kind of painful to be barely above 100% AGI and not be able to get secure 'quality' housing up here. Everything that's being rehabilitated is focusing on low income (sub-80% AGI) limits, and everything else up here is... dire to rent. We have no real protections or anything in place up here, let alone an attempt to register rental properties that can go through without landlord revolt.
And tax credits - that was amazing when I filed my taxes through NY's direct file during the IRS pilot. I was given a "great news!" screen where it boasted that I qualified for exactly $0 for every single tax credit on offer because I couldn't own property or have a family.
But hasnt it gone down in quality with broader mainstream appeal, more ai slop, and just general self promotion? I feel like a lot of niche communities have also lost their core or original user bases that are not as active any more or it could just be me? For example off the top of my head not digging too deep, r/juststart used to be very high signal and strongly moderated but now not so much. But, on the other hand, i did discover r/laundry recently with some awesome content around “spa day” but again thats mainly one user responsible. I guess another big gripe is having to use the reddit mobile app after they closed their api’s and shutting down third party apps because now i cant browse its more feed-like. Sorry for the ramble not sure what my point is but hoping others can share their experiences and any advice too i guess
I'm not sure how you can claim that going more mainstream would decrease the quality of a site that gave us "we did it reddit!" and "the bacon narwhals at midnight".
You think this place, the people in my circles infamously refer to as the "orange site", is considered a bastion of good conversation among the people that don't frequent it?
How do you get chatgpt to teach you well? I feel like no matter how dense and detailed i ask it to be or how much i ask it to elaborate and contextualize topics with their adjacent topics to give me a full holistic understanding, it just sucks at it and is always short of helping me truly understand and intuit the subject matter.
Yes, this is my experience as well. At some point you would be better off find something written by a human, because AI would just take you in circles.
Would love to see that link and any other posts others might have run across here as well. I feel like pre covid it was common to see high Quality ask hn discussions with niche/prestigious book recommendations often. I dont see that as much now.
Curious about attempting something like this in my area as well since I’m remote. Are you doing both or does one have to give way to the other eventually?
Also im seeing the same trend as you at my company, roles replaced overseas while people only focus on AI taking the jobs i think this is the more sinister thing happening quietly (by that i mean not getting much news coverage)
Not surprised to hear that it’s the trend. It’s been going on for quite some time. I used to work for a very large Canadian multinational and HR told me they only hire US/Canadian lead developers. The rest were to be from Bulgaria. This was 10 years ago.
I’m in-progress on all of this but I’m offering my services to my current employer though my LLC for 20 hours a week at 3X the hourly rate of my old salary. Take it or leave it. They are losing their leverage for me with his move. I no longer need them, they can’t put me in the streets.
So not entirely leaving the industry but will take any work at or above the market rate. High rates mean less waste of my time, as it is more limited with starting a 2nd career.
For doing both, there’s no abusive overtime like in software because it’s double time pay. Which puts you at the pay rate of what would be $240,000 a year. No one wastes your time at that rate. You actually want overtime when it’s fairly compensated like that. You can do both.
It’s sad when you work towards something your entire life, both in school and professionally. And you’ve never done anything wrong. We played by the rules of our society, and our lives were stolen from us. As Steve Bannon famously said once, these American workers deserve reparations. If the situation is ever corrected, I don’t think it would be too hard to jump back in at that point full-time.
I have very little formal education in advanced maths, but I’m highly motivated to learn the math needed to understand AI. Should i take a stab at parsing through and trying to understand this paper (maybe even using AI to help, heh) or would that be counter-productive from the get-go and I'm better off spending my time following some structured courses in pre-requisite maths before trying to understand these research papers?
And any prereqs you need. I also find the math-is-fun site to be excellent when I need to brush up on something from long ago and want a concise explanation. i.e. A 10 minute review, more than a few pithy sentences, yet less than a dozen-hour diatribe.
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