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405 results for “overengineer”
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Oh man... Next stop Roller Coaster Tycoon 2!
...Oh, they made a second one? nvm then.
Anyway if you wanna learn how to move a little guy around in overengineered X86 assembly, my source so far is here:
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Oh man... Next stop Roller Coaster Tycoon 2!
...Oh, they made a second one? nvm then.
Anyway if you wanna learn how to move a little guy around in overengineered X86 assembly, my source so far is here:
-
Oh man... Next stop Roller Coaster Tycoon 2!
...Oh, they made a second one? nvm then.
Anyway if you wanna learn how to move a little guy around in overengineered X86 assembly, my source so far is here:
-
Oh man... Next stop Roller Coaster Tycoon 2!
...Oh, they made a second one? nvm then.
Anyway if you wanna learn how to move a little guy around in overengineered X86 assembly, my source so far is here:
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🚀🎨 Oh, look! Yet another tale of a tech enthusiast who thought a $200 tracker wasn't enough, so they over-engineered a telescope mount with harmonic drives and an #ESP32, just to be the Bob Ross of the Orion Nebula. Next up: building a particle accelerator to make better toast. 🥇🔧
https://www.svendewaerhert.com/blog/telescope-mount/ #techenthusiast #overengineering #telescopemount #harmonicdrives #OrionNebula #HackerNews #ngated -
Three Overengineered Stamps from Japan 🇯🇵 #stamping #stamps #japanesesta...
https://youtube.com/shorts/rYZsJ8xiR3Y?si=2RMuEyFP4lrtvhlr -
🥱 Oh, look! Another overengineered "solution" for those times when your clusters just aren't stateless and diskless enough. 🤖 But fear not, because it comes with all the buzzword bingo you'd expect: #AI, workflows, and security vulnerabilities, oh my! 🚀
https://github.com/warewulf/warewulf #overengineering #buzzwordbingo #techvulnerabilities #clustercomputing #HackerNews #ngated -
Dear #CircleCI, I'd like to inform you that I don't need another "#AI" shit. What I'd really appreciate, though, is being able to actually see the text rather than some colorful noise on your overengineered site.
(Yes, I know I can download the logs to see them. Also, not my package, not my choice of provider.)
Also, if anyone know how to fix this in #Firefox, since it's not the first site where I'm seeing this…
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It's not "overengineering" it's "modeling the solution".
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🎸📱 Behold, the revolutionary "Guitar Tuner" that demands your phone's accelerometer to pretend it's not just an over-engineered solution to a solved problem. 🤦♂️ Forget tuning by ear; now you can awkwardly press your phone against the guitar, in case you wanted to look like a complete lunatic while playing. 🎶🙃
https://tautme.github.io/phone-sensors/accel-tuner.html #GuitarTuner #PhoneTechnology #OverEngineering #MusicHumor #InnovativeSolutions #HackerNews #ngated -
🚀🙃 Behold, the latest miracle of over-engineering: JSIR! Yet another attempt to make #JavaScript less chaotic by throwing in a bafflingly named "high-level IR" that only a handful of Googlers could pretend to understand. Don't worry, the rest of us will continue to "analyze" JS with our trusty debugger and a strong drink. 🍻🤦♂️
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-jsir-a-high-level-ir-for-javascript/90456 #Overengineering #HighLevelIR #Debugging #HackerNews #HackerNews #ngated -
Me: I should create a website. Quick and simple, nothing fancy.
Also me: *drafts a bunch of ADRs to document the plans for the implementation*
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#Development #Fun
Worst of Breed Software · Why keep it simple when you can make it genius? https://ilo.im/169raa_____
#Business #Software #Bureaucracy #Overengineering #Complexity #Legacy #WebDev #Frontend #Backend #Satire -
😆 Oh, #nostalgia alert! Remember when web dev was like playing with Lincoln Logs? Now, it's an over-engineered mess of Legos with missing instructions. 🤦♂️ But sure, let's pretend it's "fun" again—just like taxes and root canals! 🎉
https://ma.ttias.be/web-development-is-fun-again/ #webdev #overengineering #fun #chaos #HackerNews #ngated -
Today's fun, cleaning up the external router and core firewalls for the house. Added in a 5G router as an alternate uplink and enabled automatic failover using IOS's ip sla feature. Up until now, I'd been reliant on a failover on the internal mesh wireless network itself but when that kicks in, I lost access to internal DNS services which are located on the core network.
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Recall the fundamental theorem of software engineering: "We can solve any problem by introducing an extra level of indirection, except for the problem of too many levels of indirection."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fundamental_theorem_of_software_engineeringExcess indirection through frameworks has hit its breaking point. A reckoning is due.
#software_eng #overengineering #SoftwareEngineering #abstraction
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I still remember my first day on my first job very vividly.
I had just complted a test task where I had to add tag functionality to an anti-anonymous image-board clone the company made (it was called rep dot ly, pretty badass domain name, sad that it folded), whereas the guys, Paul and Danko, implemented a webcam integration, so that people could add cute photos to imageboard-esque threads.
And so, my first day was at a conference where they were presenting the project. I remember being very ashamed that I went to another job interview after I went to theirs, and how interesting was everything in the conference hall. I felt a huge imposter syndrome, heh.
Then, when I started working it was kind of back and forth. Of course, I was slower than the other guys and less well-versed in industrial practices, but ultimately what got me into trouble is my back-then passion for overengineering and not being able to deterime when a design of a feature is good enough. I was with the guys till the very end of that iteration of very.lv though.
Afterwards I made an appearance in banking software, only to make a glorious, but short-lived return to very, where my desire for overengineering, augmented by banking experience, essentially got me fired, because I got too defensive about some program that I made to interact with postgresql, which wasn't doing the thing I was requested to do. But I'm very glad that my second stint with #verypositive gave me production experience with #erlang, that I managed to leverage by writing #foss. It eventually landed me my first well-paid job.
These days, very.lv is more or less a one-person show, but if you need some software, drop them a line, they're really cool.
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GardensTale’s Top Ten(ish) Album Art of 2023
By GardensTale
As we drag our bloated stomachs from the dinner table of Listurnalia to the couch of January, it’s easy to forget that dessert has yet been served. Like a Monty Python waiter with a thin mint, the artwork article is here to ensure everyone’s entrails are catapulted across the living room in a shower of vomitus and viscera. Our yearly celebration of metal visuals is a wonderfully diverse one, if I say so myself, with a wide range of color palettes, moods and styles for you to feast your eyes on. This is the latest I’ve ever written this article, but spending a week among the clutches of Transsylvanian vampires held me up in completing it sooner.
The rules, the rules, the rules. Order must be established lest the resultant list means nothing at all.
- If we haven’t reviewed it, included it in a filter piece, or wrote a TYMHM article about it, it won’t be included. I’ve made one exception this year, because I can, but mostly because the review has just been sitting in the queue for ages as of this writing. So it’s been reviewed, just not published. Loophole!
- One entry per artist. This turned out to be easier than any other year. My stricter and quicker selection process had no doubles at all! Perhaps Kantor didn’t have much time this year.
- Original art only. While this does include photography (in vain, I’m afraid), it does not include a painting from 1739 with a logo slapped on. Be better than that, bands!
- And a new rule that is guaranteed to bite me in the ass at some point: no AI art! While there are ethical use cases for AI art, album covers aren’t one of them, and if I can at all help it I will not add fuel to that fire.
THE WORST
#3. Eternity // Mundicide — I didn’t want to just do artwork where the band clearly doesn’t give a fuck. That’s too easy. The joy is when a band has put in the effort to make something uniquely idiotic, and that is where Eternity’s cover comes in. How did no one at any point in the creation of this artwork say “Hey guys? This looks incredibly stupid.” The little arms, man. It’s like the world’s worst rendition of “It’s a small world after all.”
#2. Secret Rule // Uninverse — This is the unpublished exception and I’m sure you can see why I felt the need to make it. The amount of unskilled photoshop here is downright grotesque. Band photo album covers are rarely advisable, but with these outfits and poses, peak awkward is achieved several times over. Add the weird band name with overengineered logo and illogical pun of an album title and the cringe is complete.
#1. Savage Grace // Sign of the Cross — This is How Not To Composition 101. Everything on this cover is in the wrong place at the wrong scale. Not to mention, the typefacing is a disaster. Unexplained additional text, fonts that don’t match, vertical text, you name it, Savage Grace has got it. The lady knight in the foreground looks like she’s taking a very satisfying dump, and do try not to spray your drink across your screen when you zoom in on the meme-worthy face on the floor. An unmitigated disaster.
THE BEST
#(ish). Varathron // The Crimson Temple (artist: Paolo Girardi) — Girardi has been doing this for well over a decade and along with Burke, Kantor and Chioreanu is one of the most recognizable artists in the scene. This one is one of his more horrifying scenes, a grisly and visceral mass sacrifice. The many details and surreal horror recalls Hieronymous Bosch, but the clever composition draws the eye back to the crimson pool and the screaming evil god-face.
#10. Hexvessel // Polar Veil (artist: Benjamin König) — I’ve made it no secret that I love surreal art, and this deeply intriguing illustration by Benjamin König fits that bill completely. Both the misty blue sky and the black of night fit perfectly well over the idyllic snowy town, but the way the split forms a curious celestial figure is inspired. The largely monochrome coloration gives the art a sense of cold stillness, hovering between serenity and grim portent.
#9. Sanguine Glacialis // Maladaptive Daydreaming (artist: Alex O’Dowd) — This is probably the most meta we’re going to get today. I love the contrast of the dark, bleak room and forlorn painter with the glowing, overspilling painting full of warmth and life. The logo and title placement are uncommonly nice as well here. It’s such a lovely work of art I can even overlook the fact that the woman is clearly not dressed for the job at hand.
#8. Raider // Trial by Chaos (artist: Mitchell Nolte) — It’s difficult making art that’s purposefully crowded but still easy to read. Mitchell Nolte, who was featured here with last year’s excellent Dawnwalker art, manages with ingenious color use, creating contrast with the warrior’s fiery aura to spotlight him in the center of a writhing mass of monsters. Wielding a broadsword in one hand and strangling a multi-eyed monster snake with the other solidifies the subject’s status as one of the most badass bastards in metal art this year.
#7. Fire Down Below // Low Desert Surf Club (artist: Christi du Toit) — Comic style illustrations are a rare treat in metal, and those done well are rarer still. Christi du Toit clearly has a knack for wondrous, intriguing layouts. I love the sharp shading and color palette, and the atypical, adventurous feel the illustration exudes. I read a lot of webcomics, and if I saw this on a cover page I’d already be hooked.
#6. Grant the Sun // Voyage (artist: William Hay) — So many metal covers are grim, dark, foreboding or violent. The art for Voyage, on the other hand, is a quirky and colorful affair. The diving panda and the anglerfish make for an interesting dichotomy, a collision of worlds that are never supposed to meet. But the wink and smile belies the beautiful details, such as the streams of air escaping the panda’s mouth or the various level of refraction in the turbulent waters.
#5. Wormhole // Almost Human (artist: Adam Burke) — Adam Burke is usually the go-to guy for sci-fi cosmoscapes, but his strongest artwork this year graces the cover of Wormhole, or as I’m told the correct pronunciation is, WWWWOOOOOOORRRRRMMHHHOOOOOOOOLLLEEEEEE. What I especially like about this art is how much story it suggests. Either something that wasn’t human is in the midst of becoming gradually more so, or someone is shedding their humanity (as well as skin). Either way, it has something to do with the rhino beetle, and I can’t wait to find out what.
#4. Evile // The Unknown (artist: Eliran Kantor) — Few artists could make me include a cover that is like 75% black. Kantor can, though. The slim beam of light cast by a cracked cellar door is the only light for the father and son, surrounded by inky blackness. Kantor is an expert at expressive faces, and this pair ooze fear and despair. It’s an effective and haunting image that uses black as a tool to tell a story. If only the album were as great as the artwork.
#3. Slomatics // Strontium Fields (artist: Ryan Lesser) — I knew this had to be on the list the moment I saw it. I’ll even forgive the lack of album and band titles. The breathless figure reminiscent of the Statue of Liberty, her eyes beaming and her hair waving as if underwater, stands in stark contrast with the glistening embodiment of cosmic horror behind her. A clever trick that enhances that contrast, besides the clash in color, is the difference in shading. The flesh monster has been rendered in angry blotches, the statuesque woman in more marble-like tones. Don’t forget to check out the full-size art in the review!
#2. Harm’s Way // Common Suffering (artist: Corran Brownlee) — This stark, haunting piece makes it abundantly clear that “It’s Raining Men” is a horror scenario. The dreamlike surrealism and the apocalyptic climax clash into a nightmare depiction that took my breath the first time I saw it, and still fills me with an appropriate excess of dread when I look at it now. Rendering it entirely in black & white and cleverly constraining the cloud of people with a frame makes the scene feel both immense and claustrophobic.
#1. Deadly Carnage // Endless Blue (artist: Alexios Ciancio) — Though this list is ever a contentious one, I don’t think much protest will be levied at the winner this year. Graphic designer Alexios Ciancio is the vocalist and guitarist for Deadly Carnage, making this the rare treat of a band member designing their own album’s cover. Inspired by traditional Japanese art, Ciancio has created an absolute feast for the eyes. Though the portrait-oriented illustration leaves a lot of blank space on the sides, the dynamic composition that spills out the frame grants sumptuous life and vitality. The spectral nature of the cresting whale elevates the scene above the earthly and into the ethereal, which the music inside encapsulates. And whereas many artworks suffer from zooming in too much, the crisp lines and myriad beautiful details keep me scrolling endlessly across the canvas, from the swans flying out of the frame to the upended rowboats. A visual masterpiece.
#2023 #DeadlyCarnage #Eternity #Evile #FireDownBelow #GrantTheSun #HarmSWay #Hexvessel #Raider #SanguineGlacialis #SavageGrace #SecretRule #Slomatics #Varathron #Wormhole
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GardensTale’s Top Ten(ish) Album Art of 2023
By GardensTale
As we drag our bloated stomachs from the dinner table of Listurnalia to the couch of January, it’s easy to forget that dessert has yet been served. Like a Monty Python waiter with a thin mint, the artwork article is here to ensure everyone’s entrails are catapulted across the living room in a shower of vomitus and viscera. Our yearly celebration of metal visuals is a wonderfully diverse one, if I say so myself, with a wide range of color palettes, moods and styles for you to feast your eyes on. This is the latest I’ve ever written this article, but spending a week among the clutches of Transsylvanian vampires held me up in completing it sooner.
The rules, the rules, the rules. Order must be established lest the resultant list means nothing at all.
- If we haven’t reviewed it, included it in a filter piece, or wrote a TYMHM article about it, it won’t be included. I’ve made one exception this year, because I can, but mostly because the review has just been sitting in the queue for ages as of this writing. So it’s been reviewed, just not published. Loophole!
- One entry per artist. This turned out to be easier than any other year. My stricter and quicker selection process had no doubles at all! Perhaps Kantor didn’t have much time this year.
- Original art only. While this does include photography (in vain, I’m afraid), it does not include a painting from 1739 with a logo slapped on. Be better than that, bands!
- And a new rule that is guaranteed to bite me in the ass at some point: no AI art! While there are ethical use cases for AI art, album covers aren’t one of them, and if I can at all help it I will not add fuel to that fire.
THE WORST
#3. Eternity // Mundicide — I didn’t want to just do artwork where the band clearly doesn’t give a fuck. That’s too easy. The joy is when a band has put in the effort to make something uniquely idiotic, and that is where Eternity’s cover comes in. How did no one at any point in the creation of this artwork say “Hey guys? This looks incredibly stupid.” The little arms, man. It’s like the world’s worst rendition of “It’s a small world after all.”
#2. Secret Rule // Uninverse — This is the unpublished exception and I’m sure you can see why I felt the need to make it. The amount of unskilled photoshop here is downright grotesque. Band photo album covers are rarely advisable, but with these outfits and poses, peak awkward is achieved several times over. Add the weird band name with overengineered logo and illogical pun of an album title and the cringe is complete.
#1. Savage Grace // Sign of the Cross — This is How Not To Composition 101. Everything on this cover is in the wrong place at the wrong scale. Not to mention, the typefacing is a disaster. Unexplained additional text, fonts that don’t match, vertical text, you name it, Savage Grace has got it. The lady knight in the foreground looks like she’s taking a very satisfying dump, and do try not to spray your drink across your screen when you zoom in on the meme-worthy face on the floor. An unmitigated disaster.
THE BEST
#(ish). Varathron // The Crimson Temple (artist: Paolo Girardi) — Girardi has been doing this for well over a decade and along with Burke, Kantor and Chioreanu is one of the most recognizable artists in the scene. This one is one of his more horrifying scenes, a grisly and visceral mass sacrifice. The many details and surreal horror recalls Hieronymous Bosch, but the clever composition draws the eye back to the crimson pool and the screaming evil god-face.
#10. Hexvessel // Polar Veil (artist: Benjamin König) — I’ve made it no secret that I love surreal art, and this deeply intriguing illustration by Benjamin König fits that bill completely. Both the misty blue sky and the black of night fit perfectly well over the idyllic snowy town, but the way the split forms a curious celestial figure is inspired. The largely monochrome coloration gives the art a sense of cold stillness, hovering between serenity and grim portent.
#9. Sanguine Glacialis // Maladaptive Daydreaming (artist: Alex O’Dowd) — This is probably the most meta we’re going to get today. I love the contrast of the dark, bleak room and forlorn painter with the glowing, overspilling painting full of warmth and life. The logo and title placement are uncommonly nice as well here. It’s such a lovely work of art I can even overlook the fact that the woman is clearly not dressed for the job at hand.
#8. Raider // Trial by Chaos (artist: Mitchell Nolte) — It’s difficult making art that’s purposefully crowded but still easy to read. Mitchell Nolte, who was featured here with last year’s excellent Dawnwalker art, manages with ingenious color use, creating contrast with the warrior’s fiery aura to spotlight him in the center of a writhing mass of monsters. Wielding a broadsword in one hand and strangling a multi-eyed monster snake with the other solidifies the subject’s status as one of the most badass bastards in metal art this year.
#7. Fire Down Below // Low Desert Surf Club (artist: Christi du Toit) — Comic style illustrations are a rare treat in metal, and those done well are rarer still. Christi du Toit clearly has a knack for wondrous, intriguing layouts. I love the sharp shading and color palette, and the atypical, adventurous feel the illustration exudes. I read a lot of webcomics, and if I saw this on a cover page I’d already be hooked.
#6. Grant the Sun // Voyage (artist: William Hay) — So many metal covers are grim, dark, foreboding or violent. The art for Voyage, on the other hand, is a quirky and colorful affair. The diving panda and the anglerfish make for an interesting dichotomy, a collision of worlds that are never supposed to meet. But the wink and smile belies the beautiful details, such as the streams of air escaping the panda’s mouth or the various level of refraction in the turbulent waters.
#5. Wormhole // Almost Human (artist: Adam Burke) — Adam Burke is usually the go-to guy for sci-fi cosmoscapes, but his strongest artwork this year graces the cover of Wormhole, or as I’m told the correct pronunciation is, WWWWOOOOOOORRRRRMMHHHOOOOOOOOLLLEEEEEE. What I especially like about this art is how much story it suggests. Either something that wasn’t human is in the midst of becoming gradually more so, or someone is shedding their humanity (as well as skin). Either way, it has something to do with the rhino beetle, and I can’t wait to find out what.
#4. Evile // The Unknown (artist: Eliran Kantor) — Few artists could make me include a cover that is like 75% black. Kantor can, though. The slim beam of light cast by a cracked cellar door is the only light for the father and son, surrounded by inky blackness. Kantor is an expert at expressive faces, and this pair ooze fear and despair. It’s an effective and haunting image that uses black as a tool to tell a story. If only the album were as great as the artwork.
#3. Slomatics // Strontium Fields (artist: Ryan Lesser) — I knew this had to be on the list the moment I saw it. I’ll even forgive the lack of album and band titles. The breathless figure reminiscent of the Statue of Liberty, her eyes beaming and her hair waving as if underwater, stands in stark contrast with the glistening embodiment of cosmic horror behind her. A clever trick that enhances that contrast, besides the clash in color, is the difference in shading. The flesh monster has been rendered in angry blotches, the statuesque woman in more marble-like tones. Don’t forget to check out the full-size art in the review!
#2. Harm’s Way // Common Suffering (artist: Corran Brownlee) — This stark, haunting piece makes it abundantly clear that “It’s Raining Men” is a horror scenario. The dreamlike surrealism and the apocalyptic climax clash into a nightmare depiction that took my breath the first time I saw it, and still fills me with an appropriate excess of dread when I look at it now. Rendering it entirely in black & white and cleverly constraining the cloud of people with a frame makes the scene feel both immense and claustrophobic.
#1. Deadly Carnage // Endless Blue (artist: Alexios Ciancio) — Though this list is ever a contentious one, I don’t think much protest will be levied at the winner this year. Graphic designer Alexios Ciancio is the vocalist and guitarist for Deadly Carnage, making this the rare treat of a band member designing their own album’s cover. Inspired by traditional Japanese art, Ciancio has created an absolute feast for the eyes. Though the portrait-oriented illustration leaves a lot of blank space on the sides, the dynamic composition that spills out the frame grants sumptuous life and vitality. The spectral nature of the cresting whale elevates the scene above the earthly and into the ethereal, which the music inside encapsulates. And whereas many artworks suffer from zooming in too much, the crisp lines and myriad beautiful details keep me scrolling endlessly across the canvas, from the swans flying out of the frame to the upended rowboats. A visual masterpiece.
#2023 #DeadlyCarnage #Eternity #Evile #FireDownBelow #GrantTheSun #HarmSWay #Hexvessel #Raider #SanguineGlacialis #SavageGrace #SecretRule #Slomatics #Varathron #Wormhole
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@andi @ActionRetro @andre_igler @Katti @datacop Noch ein Test außerhalb des Gehäuses, um zu sehen, ob der Luftstrom auch so läuft, wie er soll. Auf dem zweiten Bild sieht man die quasi fast überhaupt gar nicht overengineerte Wippe am Luftkanal-Aufsatz über dem Einschaltknopf des M4 mit PTFE-Schlauch (Filamentrohr) als Verlängerung zum Einschaltknopf am äußeren G4-Gehäuse. =) #G4M4k #DesperateHousehackers
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Yesterday I said something a bit naughty live on @ewolff's architecture stream.
I said that sometimes you should do your architecture modernization in secret.
Of course this is not the default. It's very risky and there are nuances.
What I mean is, sometimes you don't need to over-share your implementation details.
if you say "we will refactor the domain model while modernizing" - people might be worried that you're going to over-engineer.
1/2
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Oh, look! Another attempt to solve the monumental crisis of handling tarballs—this time with #WebAssembly and a sprinkle of #Emscripten magic. 🙄 Instead of just extracting a file like a normal person, let's generate an "index" to mount things because who doesn't love an overengineered solution to save a few bytes? 😂
https://jeroen.github.io/notes/webassembly-tar/ #tarballs #overengineering #techhumor #HackerNews #ngated -
Oh, look! Another attempt to solve the monumental crisis of handling tarballs—this time with #WebAssembly and a sprinkle of #Emscripten magic. 🙄 Instead of just extracting a file like a normal person, let's generate an "index" to mount things because who doesn't love an overengineered solution to save a few bytes? 😂
https://jeroen.github.io/notes/webassembly-tar/ #tarballs #overengineering #techhumor #HackerNews #ngated -
Oh, look! Another attempt to solve the monumental crisis of handling tarballs—this time with #WebAssembly and a sprinkle of #Emscripten magic. 🙄 Instead of just extracting a file like a normal person, let's generate an "index" to mount things because who doesn't love an overengineered solution to save a few bytes? 😂
https://jeroen.github.io/notes/webassembly-tar/ #tarballs #overengineering #techhumor #HackerNews #ngated -
Oh, look! Another attempt to solve the monumental crisis of handling tarballs—this time with #WebAssembly and a sprinkle of #Emscripten magic. 🙄 Instead of just extracting a file like a normal person, let's generate an "index" to mount things because who doesn't love an overengineered solution to save a few bytes? 😂
https://jeroen.github.io/notes/webassembly-tar/ #tarballs #overengineering #techhumor #HackerNews #ngated -
🎉 Behold, the #Hyperbrowser #MCP Server: the latest marvel in over-engineering! 🤖 Now you too can connect #AI #agents to the web using browsers, because why solve problems in two steps when you can do it in ten? 🙃 Just another day in the #GitHub #funhouse, where complexity is the punchline and #simplicity the forgotten art.
https://github.com/hyperbrowserai/mcp #Server #Overengineering #HackerNews #ngated -
GNU coreutils and the broader GNU operating system is an extreme exercise in bloated and overengineered software. It's the antithesis of everything I like Alpine for. Give me a POSIX coreutils and I'm happy. Actually using any of GNU's extensions is an antipattern. #ShitHNSays
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Explizite Softwarearchitekturarbeit ist essenziell, muss aber nicht schwer sein.. Wie trefft ihr zielgerichtet Entscheidungen, ohne Overengineering und bei bestmöglicher Risikoabschätzung? Wie entwickelt ihr eure Software möglichst flexibel und für alle Stakeholder transparent? Erfahrungen und Best Practices teilt @sippsack heute auf der #jax2023
👉 https://jax.de/software-architecture/effiziente-software-architektur
#java #Development #Software #softwarearchitektur #JAXcon #jax2023 -
Slack managed to bloat a simple "Oops, page not found" message into a full-blown, 57MB symphony of redundancy 🎶, proving once again that over-engineering is the true path to digital enlightenment 🤖. With more links than a chain mail sweater and less utility than a chocolate teapot, their 404 page is a masterclass in how not to web design. Bravo, Slack! 👏
https://a.slack.com/archives/b/c #Slack #404page #Overengineering #WebDesign #DigitalEnlightenment #UXFail #HackerNews #ngated