Simon 𐕣he 🪨 Johnson

they/them

Lord, where are you going?

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Joined 16 days ago
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Cake day: April 22nd, 2025

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  • CapEVs are almost nowhere on the American tech radar. It’s entirely an industry dominated by China. Ironically the industry started out in the US. Foton America was a subsidiary of Foton. China’s first trials in Shangai in 2006 were done with Foton vehicles made in America. Foton America folded because America was not investing in the tech or public transport. Foton reshored the tech in China and continued development.

    Almost every major European metro is doing a field test. Belgrade installed Chinese Higer busses for a lot of its’ routes. Graz is running 2 lines from an American manufacturer (with no presence in America lmao) called Chariot Motors (how much longer until we see the Foton America story play out again). Paris is running tests with busses made by German manufacturer MAN, but they’re hybrids because Westoids can’t stop relying on fossil fuels “just in case”.

    I fully see China dominating Eastern Europe with these things because the value proposition is so good, Foton and Higer are miles ahead in testing, deployment and development than any other manufacturer. Since China is generally hotter than Europe and America they have a lot more practical experience with keeping the capacitors from overheating which has been a problem for this type of tech esp. ~15 years ago.

    Either way it’s essentially a trolley that doesn’t require continuous lines which is why it’s so hated in the US, ever since GM bought up a bunch of lines and left them to rot.


  • Yeah I just haven’t really held out for one. At one point I have this fear that on average regardless of language I’m gonna see the same shit everywhere, so I typically pick by project interest and scale. If I wasn’t such a little cockroach about having a stable income I could have had some fun opportunities holding out for some Haskel, Erlang or Clojure jobs, but I didn’t.

    I was once interviewed by a startup that was a crypto payments processor targeting the central American market and the interviewer let it slip that I shouldn’t worry about runway because it comes from a fairly large crypto fund that the founder owns that’s payed into by USAID/NED style soft intelligence services.

    I immediately got the ick and I was like this is not something I want to involve myself in for stability’s sake but god damn I could have had a peek behind the curtain.


  • This is what vertical integration between distros and GUIs often leads to. This could be completely innocuous from Deepin’s end, because that’s just how they made it work in Deepin because they have vertical integration on their own stack. However, It’s completely bad form.

    In general Deepin seems to adopt a lot of commercial software industry practices in building its tools, which I’m sympathetic to on some level, but it’s very obvious that the Linux community is not going to accept default-on telemetry. They should have known better after the CNZZ incident.


  • I’ve found it hard to find jobs with Clojure/Haskell/Rust. I typically look for interesting projects and industries that don’t make me feel icky even though they end up doing so because everything is fucking enterprise sales. My career has kinda been Bar Rescue for idiot companies who have blundered into an extremely hard problem and need someone to actually figure it out before the software stack implodes on itself.


  • I love Lisp, that’s why I like doing industry work in JS, because it’s very lisp like.

    However if you gave an average industry programmer Lisp today they’d fuck up so much worse than the garbage enterprise grade language code that exists today. I switch jobs probably every 4 years and on average I teach 3 people a year what a closure is.

    Lisp has a lot of great solutions for a lot of real problems, but these people quite literally fix one bug and create 3. I had a 10+ YOE Tech Lead tell me the other day that they kinda just ignore the error output of the TS compiler and it made me want to tear my eyes out.


  • don’t even try to learn what a software dependency

    Everyone at my company keeps using the term “dependency hell” when referring to literally dependency management and order of operations with a modern package manager like NPM that tracks versions and dependencies.

    They’ve literally never experienced working with dynamically linked libraries and they think it’s so hard because they have to understand a tree that exists in data form (e.g. package-lock.json) and can be easily visualized vs a tangled file system and LD_LIBRARY_PATH or Windows standard search order / HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Session Manager\KnownDLLs.

    It’s pathetic.



  • Vaxry is not a very smart guy. He originally got a wrist slap by FDO saying don’t do your toxic shit here. Then he followed it up by going postal on the FDO mailing list. Then he put up a blog post where he was like like “SJWs are coming for me”.

    https://blog.vaxry.net/articles/2023-inclusiveActivists

    The entire argument is that you can’t make an exclusionary space for people (no definition of what that means) but you should be able to call them slurs. Who would want anything to do with him? He should have gone full tilt and made a list of slurs you should be allowed to say beyond just arguing for the R-slur. That would have really convinced people he’s not an extremely toxic right wing weirdo.

    https://blog.vaxry.net/articles/2023-hyprlandsCommunity

    This was his non-apology where he says “lets be real” a lot which is a common way of just ignoring a criticism and then he follows it up with, I should have banned that user instead of doing what I did.

    Asking for professionalism in the OSS community is not a huge deal. It’s also quite literally not even about the code AFAIR Drew Devault is still taking Vaxry’s patches. He just doesn’t want him in the community starting shit with people.