Vineet Dixit

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Vineet Dixit

Vineet Dixit

@vinndixie

Seattle, WA Katılım Kasım 2016
1.4K Takip Edilen174 Takipçiler
Vineet Dixit retweetledi
Ken LaCorte
Ken LaCorte@KenLaCorte·
Why don’t Asians commit crimes? By any metric, East Asians – at home or as immigrants – commit crime at rates far below other ethnicities. Even when they’re poor. The answers blow the narrative of "poverty = crime” right out the window … Video Chapters: 00:00 - Introduction 1:27 - Asian Crime Numbers 3:39 - Poverty and Crime 5:22 - Asian Family and Culture 9:30 - Wartime 11:32 - Conclusion
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Vineet Dixit
Vineet Dixit@vinndixie·
@github I'm a bit uncertain which repos are included in "Github-internal repositories". Does this refer to Github's own private/internal repos or also customer private repos?
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GitHub
GitHub@github·
2/ Our current assessment is that the activity involved exfiltration of GitHub-internal repositories only. The attacker’s current claims of ~3,800 repositories are directionally consistent with our investigation so far.
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GitHub
GitHub@github·
1/ We are sharing additional details regarding our investigation into unauthorized access to GitHub's internal repositories. Yesterday we detected and contained a compromise of an employee device involving a poisoned VS Code extension. We removed the malicious extension version, isolated the endpoint, and began incident response immediately.
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The Seattle Times
The Seattle Times@seattletimes·
Foes of Washington's new high-earners income tax announced an initiative campaign to repeal it, aimed at the November ballot. #Echobox=1778627894-2" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">seattletimes.com/seattle-news/p…
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Vineet Dixit
Vineet Dixit@vinndixie·
Are we at a point where there’s one standard Linux distro to use with one standard windows manager and one standard package manager for someone looking to setup a brand new machine without having to make make all sorts of decisions first or is that still out of reach for a average non-technical person?
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Ben Landau-Taylor
Ben Landau-Taylor@benlandautaylor·
Today I'm setting up a new computer. By which I mean I’m disabling popup notifications and removing bloatware and turning off default settings that open random programs if I click near the corner of the screen. Literally an hour turning off programs that only make things worse.
Ben Landau-Taylor@benlandautaylor

For much of my life, software's speed and usability got noticeably better every year or two. Sometime around 2012 it peaked for a bit. Since then it's been getting gradually slower and more annoying.

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Vineet Dixit
Vineet Dixit@vinndixie·
I was new to typescript when I first encountered Effect and found it bit intimidating. But now I’ve reached a logical conclusion that I need to rely on type system to track errors as well not just input and return types to make function behavior crystal clear. So I’m going to revisit Effect.
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Rhys
Rhys@RhysSullivan·
With agents writing code I’ve become more bullish than ever on Effect and the problems it solves If you’re not using it, I’m curious on why and what you’re using instead to solve the same challenges - interested to see what the ecosystem looks like
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Vineet Dixit retweetledi
antirez
antirez@antirez·
Markdown vs HTML. Every time we go from a semantically dense to a semantically sparse format, we lose. Even more today where less tokens from the same content is way better. I can understand we need a better markdown. I can't understand we should replace it with HTML.
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Eric Weinstein
Eric Weinstein@ericweinstein·
@Kanatunga Huh? फ़ॉर्क? अरे? ये “फ़ॉर्क” अचानक क्या है यार?
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swyx
swyx@swyx·
Idea: Business owners should crowdsource a list of Most Hated Software and then indiehackers should pick thru and make new clones of them are just "simple" - rewind 10 years of enshittification on them. I hate (and use): - dropbox - gusto - zoom - loom - canva - accel - most of gsuite - substack - descript - youtube
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Vineet Dixit
Vineet Dixit@vinndixie·
@simonbrown LLMs write code. Specs make LLMs write better code. Your dev doesn’t like to write specs? Someone else will. That’s not a prediction—it’s a job posting. Market has moved.
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Simon Brown
Simon Brown@simonbrown·
Spec-driven development makes very little sense to me. The software development industry has repeatedly shown that devs don't like writing docs, often saying "it's tedious and time-consuming; I'd rather be coding". - How will this turn out to be different? - Why automate the fun part (coding) and force devs to write docs instead? developer.microsoft.com/blog/spec-driv…
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Yogi
Yogi@Houseofyogi·
Spirit Airlines died tonight at the hands of the socialist crusader, Elizabeth Warren She must be so proud to add another casket to her achievements. Tonight at 3am, Spirit turns off the lights. 14,000 jobs gone. 30+ smaller airports lose service. JetBlue offered $3.8 BILLION in cash to buy Spirit in 2022. Shareholders, flight attendants union, literally everyone voted yes. The combined company would have held 9% of the US market against a Big 4 that already owned 80%. For anyone who understands numbers: 9% isn’t a monopoly against 80%. Warren said no. She wrote letters. She pressured Buttigieg. Biden’s DOJ sued. A federal judge killed the deal in January 2024. Her argument: the merger would cost consumers $1 billion a year. Now look at her collateral damage she dusts under the rug. 510 pilots gone in the months after. 1,800 flight attendants furloughed in December. 14,000 jobs in 2023. 7,500 last week. Zero tonight. And that’s just the people in Spirit uniforms. Catering goes. Fuel guys go. Baggage crews, gate agents, airport coffee shops, hotels and rental cars in 70 cities Spirit flew to. Every airline job carries 3 more on its back. 40,000 people out of work because of one woman’s moronic crusade against the market. And the math ain’t mathing. Spirit abandoned 90 routes during the death spiral. Fares on those routes are up 14% on average. Oakland to Newark: $135 to $288. Fort Myers to San Juan: $92 to $219. Kansas City to Newark up 66%. That’s reality. Not some BS number from a “study.” So @SenWarren tell me how this saves the consumer money? Cheap carriers in a market drop fares 21% across the board. Southwest did this in the 90s and saved Americans $68 BILLION over 20 years. Warren killed it. That’s what moronic politicians led by socialism do. Then with her own blind arrogance, she tweeted Spirit’s collapse is “a Biden win for flyers.” A win. 14,000 people are reading termination letters tonight. And she’s taking credit. This is socialism in 2026. A senator who’s never made payroll thinks she knows how to run a market better than the people who own and work in the company. She saved you a billion on imaginary paper. She cost you ten times that in real life. She didn’t protect consumers from anything. 14,000+ will go from working to welfare. She will make sure to blame billionaires, hardworking tax payers, AI, capitalism and whatever monster they will make up tomorrow hiding under your bed. Higher taxes. Fewer jobs. More expensive everything. She called it a win. I hope you enjoy winning.
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Vineet Dixit
Vineet Dixit@vinndixie·
@simonbrown I just imagine that any line between where the current state of the software is to where the architecture North Star is getting skewed silently and unknowingly at a tremendously fast speed and heading to a tar pit
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Simon Brown
Simon Brown@simonbrown·
I've been watching a few GitHub repos with interest over the past few months. AI PRs, big new features on a regular basis, much more frequent releases. But the number of issues has skyrocketed ... bugs in those new features and existing functionality that's been broken. I can't imagine the damage that's being done inside enterprises from all of the AI mandates I keep seeing/hearing about. 🙈
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Nathan Baschez
Nathan Baschez@nbaschez·
I have a lot of empathy for this worldview because I used to be this way. And not just about SF. I used to think most people basically sucked, they’re shallow and even sometimes soulless, they didn’t like me or understand me, it’s all a status game, etc. This was basically wounds from childhood and hyper-vigilance to protect myself. (And of course only accomplished the opposite.) The reality is that almost everyone is actually great. They will love you when they get to know you, and you will love them. They are interesting and real, and worth talking to and being honest with. Sure, they have wounds too, but most people’s wounds quickly melt when they sense that you like them. And sure, this doesn’t mean it will make sense for you to become besties or for them to join your company or hire you or anything. But sometimes maybe it will! Golden retriever energy is real, it will change your life, and it can be yours, I promise.
Clara Gold@Clara_Gold

6 months ago, I moved to San Francisco. It’s the best place in the world to build, and one of the worst places to stay human. My unfiltered take: 1. SF is both overhyped and underrated The overhyped part: there are a lot of people with incredible resumes who are deeply unimpressive in real life. They were at the right company, at the right time, in the right market, and got carried by the wave. They made money, got comfortable, and now spend their time “exploring opportunities” over coffee, wasting your time. The underrated part: the top 1% here is insane. But almost impossible to get. Hiring in SF feels like being a guy on a dating app: everyone you want is out of your league, and everyone in your league wants someone out of theirs. The best people have unmatchable packages, endless options, and are optimizing for maximum impact: labs, frontier companies, or startups raising $100M pre-seed rounds. If you raised $10M from Tier 1 investors, you’re not hot shit here. You’re a B-player. It’s humbling. 2. There are fewer mission-driven people than I expected Especially on the application layer. A lot of people are in “secure the bag before it’s too late” mode. And honestly, it gives me the ick. The real religious builders I’ve met are often in labs, hardware, biotech, deeptech, defense — places where the work is hard enough that you can’t fake obsession. 3. The status game favors builders This is what SF does better than anywhere else. It rewards obsession. It rewards weirdness. It rewards people who make building their entire personality. Europe punishes that. SF gives it status. If you’ve felt like an outsider your whole life because you care too much, work too much, think too radically, or refuse to be chill about things that matter, this city will make you feel less insane. 4. The market liquidity is absurd Even if you don’t build a billion-dollar company, if you manage to build a strong product with a great team, someone smart might still acquire you for $ 100M. Yeah I know, it’s not your dream outcome as a founder, but on the days you feel desperate, it helps to keep going. 5. SF does not care about the meaning crisis that’s coming Anyone paying attention here can feel that something massive is happening with AI. But I’m shocked by how little people talk about the meaning crisis coming next. Everyone wants to talk about AI liberating humanity. Almost no one wants to talk about what happens when work — the thing that gives most people identity, structure, dignity, status, and purpose — starts disappearing. The vacuum will not be peaceful. People are underestimating the chaos that comes from humans suddenly having no idea why they matter. And I really feel like no one cares. 6. Personally, I’ve never been more unhappy I moved to SF and entered the matrix. I’ve always been intense. I’ve always worked crazy hours. But here, I lost the last parts of myself that were not about building. I don’t go to events. Most networking events feel like theater for people pretending to be important. The only events worth going to are small, curated dinners with people who are actually alive. I’ve made 0 real friends. I don’t do well with transactionality. I don’t do well with people constantly performing greatness. I don’t do well with rooms where everyone is optimizing and no one is being honest. So yes, SF is lonely, transactional, delusional, addictive, inspiring, boring, extraordinary, and completely insane. But it is still the only place to be right now if you’re a founder trying to build the next wave of humanity. And for now, that’s enough.

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Garry Tan
Garry Tan@garrytan·
出污泥而不染
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Arman Hadi
Arman Hadi@ArmanHadi386902·
My decision on selecting @tanstack start was wrong using just Vite react is much tanstack is so slow for even just route without any data in it
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Corbin Crutchley
Corbin Crutchley@crutchcorn·
OK, I tried @SST_dev for the first time today... It's sick as hell and makes AWS deployments bearable - a thought I never thought was possible. Incredibly well done team!
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Vineet Dixit retweetledi
Marc Andreessen 🇺🇸
"Marc, why do you care about SPLC's crimes & other activists/companies/gov't agencies who may have done the same/complicit?" I sat in so many meetings for a DECADE where these groups determined who got cancelled/debanked/censored. Wholly un-American. People need to go to jail.
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