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Starship – Test Like You Fly

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ANe_HW4X8oc
1•tiziano88•49s ago•0 comments

Why US Trucking Is So Deadly

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/24/opinion/trucking-safety.html
1•throw0101a•1m ago•1 comments

Uber Can Bring You Dinner. Now, It Wants to Book Your Hotel Room

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/29/travel/uber-hotel-booking-expedia.html
1•jbredeche•2m ago•0 comments

Qwen corrects code saying that Taiwan is a country

https://twitter.com/wongmjane/status/2049555509624312217
1•franciscop•4m ago•0 comments

Engineering tough blood clots for rapid haemostasis and enhanced regeneration

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-026-10412-y
1•warbaker•4m ago•1 comments

Whoop Sued Us [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iAcx7kP9sog
1•Eudaimion•5m ago•1 comments

Trypieces.com

https://trypieces.com
1•johndebord•6m ago•0 comments

Cold-inducible RNA-binding protein makes bowhead whales and flies live longer

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-09694-5
1•warbaker•8m ago•0 comments

Building with Love, and Paying for It

https://werd.io/building-with-love-and-paying-for-it/
1•benwerd•9m ago•0 comments

Pentagon AI chief confirms DoD's expanded use of Google Gemini

https://www.cnbc.com/2026/04/28/pentagon-ai-chief-confirms-work-with-google-after-anthropic-black...
4•devonnull•13m ago•0 comments

Rcarmo/go-joker: A personal twist on the original Clojure interpreter and linter

https://github.com/rcarmo/go-joker
1•rcarmo•13m ago•0 comments

20 years of serial mouse cloning fails in 58th generation

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-026-69765-7
1•warbaker•14m ago•1 comments

Vibe: LLM agent virtual machine sandbox on Mac

https://kevinlynagh.com/newsletter/2026_02_01_vibe/
1•rguiscard•15m ago•0 comments

The Dark Factory: How Twin Sun Automated Their Dev Pipeline [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kkvi2Rm-K84
1•JnBrymn•15m ago•0 comments

Valve Updates GameNetworkingSockets After Nearly Four Year Hiatus

https://www.phoronix.com/news/GameNetworkingSockets-1.5
1•Bender•16m ago•0 comments

Lessons on Building MCP Servers

https://taoofmac.com/space/blog/2026/04/29/2341
1•rcarmo•17m ago•0 comments

Claude Code and AI Agent Skills: 12 Prompts That Became Production Skills

https://medium.com/nginity/claude-code-ai-agent-skills-12-prompts-that-became-production-skills-7...
1•jungard•17m ago•0 comments

App Notes: Web App Viewer

https://taoofmac.com/space/notes/2026/04/29/1730
1•rcarmo•18m ago•0 comments

Building a Product or Infrastructure: Are AI Startups Choosing Both?

https://twitter.com/rishabhkaul/status/2049444064433500499
1•rishabhkaul1•19m ago•0 comments

You should 'feed a cold': eating primes immune cells for action

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-01362-6
1•gnabgib•20m ago•0 comments

Researchers move in the right direction, develop powerful GPS interference alarm

https://www.theregister.com/2026/04/29/boffins_new_gps_interference_alarm/
1•Bender•20m ago•0 comments

Oracle plans to power its New Mexico mega datacenter with 2.45GW fuel cell farm

https://www.theregister.com/2026/04/28/oracle_new_mexico_power_fuel_cell_farm/
1•Bender•20m ago•0 comments

Read White House Correspondents' Dinner Suspect Cole Allen's Full Manifesto

https://nypost.com/2026/04/26/us-news/read-whcd-gunman-cole-allens-full-anti-trump-manifesto/
2•SpyCoder77•24m ago•0 comments

Halo: RLM-based agent harness optimization

https://github.com/context-labs/halo
3•mikepollard_dev•27m ago•0 comments

Ubuntu's AI Plans Have Linux Users Looking for a 'Kill Switch'

https://www.theverge.com/tech/920723/linux-ubuntu-ai-features-ai-kill-switch
1•m463•29m ago•0 comments

Towards a Perfect Notes App

https://kvnd.me/2026/04/22/now-onto-ruin/
2•kvnd•32m ago•1 comments

SSD Price Tracking 2026

https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/ssds/ssd-price-tracking-2026-lowest-price-on-every-m-2...
1•WarOnPrivacy•32m ago•0 comments

I've Covered Robots for Years. This One Is Different

https://www.wired.com/story/when-robots-have-their-chatgpt-moment-remember-these-pincers/
3•zdw•36m ago•0 comments

"Transaction Denied": What Happens When Financial Companies Act Like Censors

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2026/04/former-eff-activism-directors-new-book-transaction-denied-e...
1•hn_acker•37m ago•1 comments

Setup an Agent in MS Teams within seconds with the new CLI

https://devblogs.microsoft.com/microsoft365dev/from-prompt-to-production-teams-agent-setup-simpli...
1•umangsehgal93•41m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Xkcd's "Is It Worth the Time?" Considered Harmful

https://will-keleher.com/posts/its-not-worth-the-time-yet.html
27•gcmeplz•11mo ago

Comments

jjk166•11mo ago
XKCD's comic is a very simple graphic that tells you whether your automation efforts will reduce the total amount of time for a task.

If your goal is not to reduce time spent, why would you be looking at a chart to determine how much time you're reducing?

Learning is a very good use of time. Choosing to spend extra time to automate something for the sake of learning is a perfectly rational decision. But it's never harmful to know what your choice is costing you. If you wouldn't be willing to automate something in the full knowledge that it's going to take longer than just doing it manually, then the comic is succeeding in stopping you from making a choice you wouldn't want to make.

arcfour•11mo ago
My boss would probably prefer—thinking short-term—that I work by that chart. I would prefer to learn something new, and it usually pays off in the long-term, possibly years from now in unexpected and unforeseeable ways.
banku_brougham•11mo ago
Yup if I followed team/management guidance I would be nowhere.
jjk166•11mo ago
"This may help in unexpected and unforeseeable ways" doesn't sound like the most convincing argument for taking time from your job to learn a new skill.

All the same, you are choosing to learn something new, not to automate something to save time. Learning something new by automating a task which doesn't justify automation is no different from say reading a book or doing coding exercises in the same time - it's potentially a good use of your time, it just doesn't relate to the xkcd chart at all.

patrakov•11mo ago
Key sentence from the article:

> Automating the easy things is how you build the skills, mindset, and muscle-memory to automate the hard things.

hicksyfern•11mo ago
The counter to that is that going and looking at the call sites to that function would have given the author a better understanding of what those call sites were, why they called the function, etc, thus learning more about the codebase.
abc-1•11mo ago
The goal to automate is to reduce suffering. Full stop. It’s not to “save time”. STEM types like to pretend they’re stoic cold calculating robots and everything is objective and they don’t mind doing some repetitive 5 minute task every day, because they saw some xkcd comic about efficiency. Maybe they pretend they don’t mind simply so they can smugly post the xkcd comic every time someone new asks why they’re suffering through some repetitive slog.
banku_brougham•11mo ago
exactly. work can be fun and there is so much to learn.
try_the_bass•11mo ago
Harmful? No. Good rule of thumb? Yeah. Like any rule of thumb, if followed dogmatically, it loses the nuance that makes it a good "rule of thumb".
add-sub-mul-div•11mo ago
Right. Almost nothing should be followed dogmatically, but a major theme of this site is to act like all advice was meant to be taken as gospel and then counter it with mundane exceptions.
karmakaze•11mo ago
> ...updating the order of arguments to a function [...] was only in about 10 spots, so it would have only taken a minute to search and fix manually, but instead I spent an hour automating the fix using sed and xargs. And I think that was the right choice.

Spending an hour to learn and use sed/xargs is good use of time. Bringing in the xkcd formula has nothing to do with that. It could/should have been done as a one-off whether manually or scripted. Automation doesn't make sense unless you plan to keep putting me function arguments in an undesired order.

I would have put in time sooner to use a static typed language the can reliably reactor in the IDE with a click.

dontreact•11mo ago
The flip side of this is that for some tasks (especially in ml/ai), doing it manually at least a few times gives you a sense of what is correct and a better sense of detail.

For example, spending the time to label a few examples yourself instead of just blindly sending it out to labeling.

(Not always the case, but another thing to keep in mind besides total time saved and value of learning)

more_corn•11mo ago
“Considered harmful” is considered harmful
V__•11mo ago
> Automating the easy things is how you build the skills, mindset, and muscle-memory to automate the hard things.

I agree with the statement, yet I think it misses the point. Hyperbole: Pressing play on a mp3 robs you of the experience of learning to play all instruments yourself. They key question is whether automating is a task one wants to improve in at all.

phendrenad2•11mo ago
I agree. The author spent an hour of trying to use 'sed', and the next time, they thought better and used Python! That's a valuable lesson right there! ;)
al_borland•11mo ago
There is also the situation where if it doesn’t get automated, it won’t be done at all. Some things are just too annoying to manually do, especially if it would be nice if they were done more than once.

There is also an aspect of repeatability without mistakes. Assuming the code is good, it removes the human error from the equation, which has value.

atoav•11mo ago
This is about tasks you automate to save time, that however isn't the only reason to automate a task.

A big one for me is to ensure consistency of data, intervals, etc.

banku_brougham•11mo ago
Every day you are building the foundation for the rest of your career. When I can I execute tasks as though need to scale and be instrumented with alarms.