0x1C3B00DA
- 1 Post
- 8 Comments
0x1C3B00DA@piefed.socialto
Programming@programming.dev•Ignoring lemmyhate, are programmers really using AI to be more efficient?English
16·7 months agoI’m pretty sure every time you use AI for programming your brain atrophies a little, even if you’re just looking something up. There’s value in the struggle.
I assume you were joking but some studies have come out recently that found this is exactly what happens and for more than just programming. (sorry it was a while ago so I dont have links)
0x1C3B00DA@piefed.socialto
Firefox@fedia.io•Mozilla shuts down even more Firefox services you might still be usingEnglish
2·9 months agoThey said Pocket would be open sourced when they bought it seven years ago
0x1C3B00DA@piefed.socialto
Firefox@fedia.io•In the same vein as Internet Explorer and Netscape Navigator, I propose some renamings:English
2·9 months agoI think Voyager is a great name for a browser
0x1C3B00DA@piefed.socialto
Firefox@fedia.io•Firefox Lets Users Remove On-Device AI Models for Smart Tab Grouping, Link Previews & More
16·9 months agoIf you delete an AI model, the feature may stop working or revert to a non-AI version, but the feature itself still exists in Firefox.
Oh no, this is terrible. I’ll have to use features by myself, without ai help? How do they expect me to use a browser like that
0x1C3B00DA@piefed.socialto
JavaScript@programming.dev•ESLint v9.0.0: A retrospectiveEnglish
3·9 months agoSome of these takeaways are crazy:
- Users often do not have time to thoroughly read release notes or migration guides.
- …many users will install a major release before reading the release notes
Its a major release. You shouldnt be upgrading without reading release notes and the migration guide. Especially not when there was such a publicized lead up to it
Sometimes when I read about a new study, I find myself thinking “duh, of course” or “why did we need a study to prove this super obvious thing”. I have to remind myself that its always valuable to check assumptions and we can learn a lot even by studying obvious questions.
In case you dont know, theres https://sepiasearch.org/



Thanks for the response
When I was trying to find it, the first place i thought to look was Account > View Profile. It already shows my own posts and comments, so in my mind that was the logical place to look for my upvotes. I believe that’s also where reddit puts your upvotes
Keeping only a recent history makes perfect sense, but even being able to just search X previous months is better than nothing