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as content creator this makes me not wanting to create any new content, in fact this year I slowed down a lot, probably I'm going to a complete halt.


Why? Genuinely asking.

As a software engineer this all is very inspiring. I’m tickled and excited to do things again. I’m also learning deep learning and statistics and having a blast with toy projects.


How come? Genuinely curious.


After struggling with different webcams, including the MacBook Pro camera, I opted for this setup: - Canon RP - 50mm Canon lens - Tripod located between my two monitors

All it fully tax deductible, amazing quality and even more flexibility when I have a meeting, for example ability to show my desk.


what's anti-CCP?


Suspicious of and hostile towards the Chinese Communist Party.


How many of us are reading this article while "at work"? Just me? I don't think so. I open HackerNews four or five times a day and I read some of the articles. Right now I am in a company where I have to work at least 43 hours a week. Needless to say that I don't feel rested as I used to and my productivity is way lower compared to the past and I get distracted longer and more often than before.


I've never understood required hours. Because sometimes 20 hrs in a week is a lot. Other times 60 is no time at all. Those weeks where 20 are a lot I am extremely distracted and the next day I am not excited for work. The weeks where 60 is no time, most of that is productive and I want to go to work. Judging work by number of hours just seems like a poor metric.


>I've never understood required hours.

They want you there to answer questions.

Workplaces value availability because it's too difficult to design coherent systems and to document them. Instead of that boring old stuff, in the modern workplace, we go fast and break things (or never get them fully working in the first place).

Then we expect workers to be always around so they can be reached on slack when there is a problem.


Yeah, but with modern technology everyone is almost always reachable.


And that's an unwelcome intrusion into my time off.

But hey, I like surfing, and you can't 'reach' a person while they are surfing. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯


I don't put company email or company chat (slack) on my phone.


Would you if it gave you more time flexibility? And could set it to only chats for you, not group?


Not at all. When I leave the office, I want to leave work concerns along with it. My off time is for me, not my employer.


More than half of my work is time and materials work (as opposed to a fix bid project), and so it's directly billed to the client. My putting in hours is directly proportional to how much the company makes.

I don't like it either, and I feel like I could contribute a lot more effectively on the fixed price items if I wasn't constantly scrounging up T&M work, maybe I'd even have time to think up decent solutions instead of justifying why I have to spend another 2 hours on issue #blah, but it's an example of why required hours exist.


yes, a poor metric but a measurable, quantifiable metric common to all regardless of their individual capacities in a given time.


I don't believe this. Because your managers generally know who is a good worker and who isn't. The rest of the workers definitely know.


I don’t think that there are many people who can code in a concentrated manner for more than, say, 6 hours per day. There are days when I manage 8 hours of actual coding, but those are not my favorite ones - I only do those under immense deadline pressure, and with all the interruptions it means sitting at a screen for 10-12 hours. Such days leave me exhausted for 2-3 days after. Not sure why, but the brain is a muscle after all, and it can get sore.

I got sidetracked.. what I mean is that you need HN, Facebook etc to prevent you from using too much of that precious brain power. Maybe this is different for other areas of work, but IMO it should make not much of a difference whether you are forced to stay at work for 35 or 45 hours - you just will procrastinate more.

Update: Added “more than”.


The brain is an organ. If I could flex my brain, I would!


Of course it is. I think we all know how brains work physiologically (at least basically).

But use it, and it will tire. Forget to pause and it will tire faster. And neurotransmitters are not an endless resource.


Just because it's not an endless resouce doesn't mean it's a muscle. Your liver isn't an endless resource.


The half of the world that includes the US is well into the evening now, so I’d imagine most of HN is surely not still at work.


Asia, Australia/New Zealand are well awake and almost at the end of their working day :)


I never had the problem mentioned in the article, but for misspelled commands I trust git autocorrect:

git config --global help.autocorrect 1

It will run the correct misspelled command after 100ms. For example git stauts will be corrected automatically to git status http://schacon.github.io/git/git-config.html


I feel the other way around: I prefer serif fonts in general, however well designed websites should not have any issue with the font style chosen, as long as the basics of design and human vision are respected; e.g. contrast ratio, size, line heights etc.


Human are made to interact one each other, love and enjoy life. Even if you feel alone sometimes because you might do not have someone that can understand you, you should try finding a person to love. Also love is the best feeling you can have.


I used to get contracts through oDesk/UpWork as well ( https://www.upwork.com/freelancers/~015eaccf9967b4f9f4 ) However the quality of the jobs I can apply for are a continuously going backwards, even if the quality I am able to deliver is really high compared to many other freelancer on the platform. This is why I almost do not use UpWork to do my freelancing anymore.


Giving to a private company the ability to effectively sue a government is the worst idea ever. Imagine a world with no regulations because there are damaging the business. Welcome to a world where you need a mortgage if you are sick because there are royalties to be paid to the pharmaceutical companies. One example is already happening: Phillip Morris Honk Kong is suing the Australian government because the laws to discourage people from smoking are damaging their business (here is the link: https://au.news.yahoo.com/thewest/a/29064155/tobacco-giant-s... ). This was going on before the TPP even it is not active yet.


Citizens have been able to sue the Government for a long time, English law is littered with cases where Citizens have won against the state for hundreds of years.

The whole point of a free state is that the entities within that state, people or groups of people (for example, companies) are able to keep their rulers in check.

Let's remember, the Government is sometimes wrong and needs to be kept in check.


Citizens are people. Companies (regardless of mind-boggling US Supreme Court rulings otherwise) are not people. They are not even groups of equal people. Representative democracies represent people, not companies, and that's precisely how it should be. How companies are expected to behave in our societies should be decided by the people.


You know what, I'm starting to think we should make use of that US Supreme Court decision and the ISDS trade rules. Activists incorporating companies in the fields they are interested in, using them as platforms to sue the government for lack of a fair market (for example, starting a renewable energy company and suing over the subsidies given to the fossil fuel industries). Perhaps that'd be an effective way to get these deals rejected or renegotiated (and that includes the existing deals containing ISDS, such as NAFTA).


The New York Times is a company. Should "the people", through their elected representatives, decide what the Times can and can't print?


Yes, and they do. That includes the First Amendment. :-)


So some companies have First Amendment rights, but others don't?


It's not "the worst idea". It's designed to stop countries commandeering or nationalizing assets that a company owns. (Search for "venezuela expropriations" for some recent cases). For that limited purpose it's fine.


Call me socialist but I actually kinda like the idea that my country can just nationalise whatever if we just so feel like it. Sure, it would ruin our reputation, but I like to think sovereignty means something, right?

I tell you what, if I was PM of my country and, say, a foreign company discovered a significant oil field within our territory, I would want to nationalise the shit out of it, reputation be damned.


Why should sovereignty mean that you can disregard the rights of foreigners any more than owning a home should result in a right to take a guest's wallet at gunpoint? Whether or not either of these situations is morally desirable, I don't see how they would be sustainable, as in, why would everybody else put up with you?

To take your example, if my country nationalizes an oil field found and owned by your country's citizens (assuming that my country originally tricked them into searching for oil by promising it'd be theirs to some extent or other when they find it - otherwise why would they search for it in the first place?), why would your country stop at "tarnishing my country's reputation" when it could apply force, ranging from economic sanctions to an actual war?


Sovereignty means having the power to make or change any law.

And our elected leaders should have that power so that bad laws can be fixed.

Imagine if, in pre-civil-war America a lot of British investors had invested in cotton plantations whose profitability depended on slavery. Should Lincoln have said "gee, I guess my hands are tied, banning slavery would be bad for our foreign investors" and done nothing?

You might argue that in the past we had bad laws, but we don't have bad laws any more and all our laws are perfect. But the fact we still employ legislators rather implies we think we might need some legislating done.


Sovereignty means that you have a monopoly on using force within your borders. When you infringe on the interests of foreigners, the foreign sovereign might have objections, and I don't understand how this fact is inconsistent with your sovereignty.

Whether your infringement upon the foreigners' interest is good or bad is an entirely separate question, all I'm saying is that sovereignty does not grant you the ability to automatically get away with it and I don't understand why this word became so fashionable in this context recently (a similar example is defaulting on sovereign debt.)


There may not necessarily be any 'tricking' going on, perhaps our hypothetical oil company started prospecting under one government and there's been an election/regime change since then...

And I guess if the other country can seriously threaten force without bluffing then we never really had sovereignty all along...


Nothing in ISDS stops the state from leaving the treaty and nationalizing anything it wants. The state and people are still supreme. What they can't do is join a free trade treaty, "trick" companies into investing, and then expropriate assets while still enjoying the benefits of free trade.

The problem with TPP is the ISDS goes far beyond these simple goals (the treaty has been "commandeered by corporations", if you like).

But for simple, limited protection of assets in foreign countries, it's a good thing, encouraging inward investment.


Luckily, we have a 4th amendment to stop people from seizing property with impunity on personal whims.


It is designed to remove power from the people and give it to the big corporations.


Companies are essentially groups of people. I'm not sure that taking away the right to sue from groups of people is such a good idea.

I see this as actually giving power back to the people.


No. By this logic, giving any organization power is giving power to the people, because all organizations are "essentially groups of people". But that's clearly fallacious -- in all but the most bizarre cases, the local warlord's crime organization isn't nearly as representative of the will of the people as a democratically elected local government.

Companies are not democracies. Especially multi-national corporations and the lobbying arms of entire industries are in no sense representative of the will of the general public -- or even of their own employees (see unions)! This is significant because it is categorically not possible to actually choose not to interact with a particular corporation. In fact, the historical truth of that observation is the root cause of environmental, health, and many other regulations.

A defining characteristic of democracy is one person, one vote, and it is that characteristic that safeguards the will of the people. There is no corporate structure (other than unrepresentative radical experimental structures) that even conceits to affording one vote to each person. In fact, there's no provision of the TPP that requires the suing company to be publicly traded, so in some cases it may not even be possible to buy votes.


Your statement fails to represent the reality in that corporations are inherently undemocratic. They are groups of people controlled by a few people with all the money and therefore power.


Business's are amoral entities, designed with just a single charter: to increase the bottom line for it's majority stakeholders. Nothing about that is inherently democratic or good for their customers, for the environment, for the nation that company occupies, for anyone not in the company, or even for any one of their bottom tier employees by default. Any adoption of altruistic practices are either part of the companies branding and therefor good for business, or are core beliefs held by the majority stakeholders and are adopted by force. This also works for adoption of not so altruistic practices as well, and we shouldn't leave it up to chance.

If anything, corporate structure creates a multiplier effect on the influence of single humans or small groups of humans thereby corrupting the one-person one-vote intent of democracy. While I agree with the philosophical kernel of the Supreme Court's citizens united ruling that money is free speech, just like many things, at large scale, it has unintended side effects that need to be thwarted by campaign finance reform so that some people don't have MORE free speech then others.


Companies are absolute dictatorships generally owned by a very tiny class of wealthy elite capitalists. Calling them "groups of people" is deeply dishonest.


I see how a lot of people in this thread are just conservative American thinking "government is bad" and "private is good". Very open minded for HN.


>. One example is already happening: Phillip Morris Honk Kong is suing the Australian government because the laws to discourage people from smoking are damaging their business

And because they did sue, Tobacco companies are specifically excluded from the ISDS procedure in TPP.


Don't you see the fallacy here. Tobacco was carved-out primarily because of their unreasonably aggressive lawsuits and not because tobacco is unhealthy. Using reason, we should ban either all companies, because all companies have the power to abuse the system, or ban all companies that are producing arguably unhealthy products. They did neither of those.


Does the TPP include a provision to stop Oil Companies suing over any future regulation to reduce CO2 emissions ?


This is just a "positive" aspect of the TPP so that you can say it has positive things in it. Surely it has a lot of caveats for other industries, companies/lobbies. Typically corporations have lawyers working for them full time.


> Imagine a world with no regulations because there are damaging the business. Welcome to a world where you need a mortgage if you are sick because there are royalties to be paid to the pharmaceutical companies.

What makes you think companies would win such cases?


Secretive courts are unaccountable courts.

Let's say an arbitration court lawyer made a billion-dollar judgement in a corporation's favour, then the corporation offered the lawyer a position as an "expert legal advisor" paying a million dollars a year for very little work. I wouldn't turn down that offer if I was the lawyer, and I wouldn't hesitate to make that offer if I was the corporation.


Even if they wouldn't - isn't the waste of time and money of courts enough? My government has really more important things to spend money on (like healthcare, social services, basic infrastructure) than beat away foreign corporation lawyers.

And that's even before we even begin to discuss the idiotic idea of making your own companies and citizens accountable to foreign entities past local law.


Just yesterday I saw here on HN a news about what the TPP actually means for intellectual property, which should be a quite known problem here in the community. Interestingly enough though that news has only got 10 points and right now it is quite low in the list. The first news today in HN is about CPU caching. What do we need it for if we're losing our rights so quickly?


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