Derek Kite

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Derek Kite

Derek Kite

@derekkite

Curmudgeon, amateur photographer, angular developer.

Entrou em Aralık 2010
469 Seguindo255 Seguidores
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Derek Kite
Derek Kite@derekkite·
God, I thank you that I am not like other people—joggers with dogs, churchgoers, people who want to plant a garden—or even like this business person. I wash my hands twice an hour and stay home to work, and all I get is delivered to my door.
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Derek Kite
Derek Kite@derekkite·
More reason to hate corporate media.
Peter Girnus 🦅@gothburz

I am a senior coordinating producer for the White House Correspondents' Association Dinner. I have worked eleven of these. I was backstage at the Washington Hilton when the shots were fired. The first thing I heard was not the gunfire. It was glass. A champagne flute hit the floor of the International Ballroom at approximately 9:47 PM. Then a second. Then the sound that I have since been told was a 12-gauge shotgun, which from inside the ballroom sounded like a heavy door slamming in a parking garage. Then the Secret Service moved. They moved the President, the Vice President, the First Lady through the east corridor in under ninety seconds, which is protocol, which is practiced, which is the one part of the evening that worked exactly as it was designed. Everything else was improvised. I know this because I ordered the wine. 94 tables. Two bottles per table. 188 bottles of a Willamette Valley pinot noir that the Association selected in February after a tasting committee spent three meetings debating between Oregon and Burgundy. Oregon won. The budget was $14,200. I signed the invoice. I can tell you the vintage. I can tell you the distributor. I can tell you the per-bottle cost because I negotiated it down from $89 to $76. What I cannot tell you is how 147 of those bottles left the building during an active shooter evacuation. I can tell you what I saw. A correspondent from a network I will not name picked up two bottles on her way to the east exit. Full bottles. One in each hand. She was wearing heels and she did not spill. A man in a tuxedo tucked one inside his jacket the way you'd shoplift a paperback at an airport bookstore. A woman picked up a bottle, looked at the label, put it back, and took a different one. She checked the vintage. During an evacuation. That's editorial judgment under pressure. The theme of the dinner was "A Free Press for a Free People." The banners were still hanging when the evacuation began. I know because I hung them. Twenty-three banners, navy blue, gold serif lettering, $11,400 for the set. They were still hanging when 2,600 guests were directed to the exits by Secret Service agents, one of whom had just taken a shotgun round in his ballistic vest and walked to the ambulance on his own feet. The agent's vest costs approximately $800. The wine that left the building was worth $11,172 at Association cost. At restaurant markup, roughly $29,000. The guests saved more in wine than the vest that saved the agent. That's priority. The video went viral by 10:15 PM. Not the video of the evacuation. Not the Secret Service response. The wine. Three guests in formalwear grabbing bottles off white tablecloths while being told to move toward the exits, while a man with a shotgun stood in the same motor entrance where John Hinckley shot Ronald Reagan 45 years ago. A woman near the service entrance was crying. She said "I just wanna go home." She was not holding wine. She was holding her phone. She was the only person I saw that night who looked afraid rather than inconvenienced. That's the distinction. The rest of the ballroom did not look afraid. They looked interrupted. An active shooter at the WHCD is a logistical problem. The dinner was disrupted. The timeline was off. The after-party at the French Ambassador's residence would need to be rescheduled. These are contingency matters. Contingency matters have solutions. Fear is for people who attend events without security details. I have produced eleven of these dinners. I have managed seating charts that require diplomatic-grade negotiations. I have handled comedians, cabinet secretaries, network anchors, and the editor of a major newspaper who once threatened to leave because his table was behind a column. I have never, in eleven years, seen a guest leave a $76 bottle on the table during an evacuation. I have also never seen a guest check the label first. Both observations are consistent. The bottle is worth taking. The evacuation is worth surviving. The instinct is to do both simultaneously. 188 bottles placed. 41 recovered. 147 unaccounted for. One agent shot. Zero guests injured. Zero bottles broken. A free press for a free people. The press is free. The wine was $76 a bottle. They took it anyway.

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Derek Kite
Derek Kite@derekkite·
@KirkLubimov At the end of Carney's Davos speech he talked about using pension assets for economic development. If you are wondering where the money will come from.
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Kirk Lubimov
Kirk Lubimov@KirkLubimov·
Re: Canada's Sovereign Wealth Fund, Canada Strong Fund. It's important to understand. Canada's government runs a deficit and has over $1.3T in debt, costing taxpayers over $50B per year just in interest. It isn't being paid down. It grows. Doesn't matter how you spin it or identify it. The $25B in funding for Canada Strong Fund comes from debt. This debt will have an interest carrying cost + operational cost, together around 4%. That's the hurdle rate. In other words, the fund will lose 4% every year, and to generate a positive return, it will have to come above that rate. This is the fundamental risk of borrowing to invest.
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Derek Kite
Derek Kite@derekkite·
In BC, Canada after the 2001 election the provincial government cut staffing across government. In an environment ministry in the interior a guy got notice of layoff. He went home, got his rifle, came to the office and shot his boss and a couple coworkers. CBC coverage was sympathetic to the shooter.
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Walter Kirn
Walter Kirn@walterkirn·
Now comes the "debate" over "social murder," the notion introduced, quite handily, just days ago on that NYT podcast with the incredibly authentic figure, Hasan Piker, who had a kind of fashion spread there when he first became "the left's answer to Rogan." Listen for this kind of thing: "No one here is justifying violence, Rachel, but I think it's important to ask..." Etc.
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Derek Kite
Derek Kite@derekkite·
@mattgurney I'm investing in the future when I buy Kraft dinner with my credit card.
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Matt Gurney
Matt Gurney@mattgurney·
I am also launching a sovereign wealth fund.
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Tablesalt 🇨🇦🇺🇸
NEW - Calgary food bank reports they are now getting "3 to 4" THOUSAND visitors every Saturday ...as food inflation ravages Canada.
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Derek Kite
Derek Kite@derekkite·
@globeandmail This coming from a place that defines itself as "not American".
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Derek Kite
Derek Kite@derekkite·
Canada and the US have the same issue; for a generation economic vitality has happened somewhere else. For the same reasons; regulatory barriers, high costs. Trump wanted to change this, and won the election as a result. He controlled regulation and changed a long standing policy of few import barriers, a policy that has been the foundation of prosperity everywhere else in the world, but not so much in the US. Will it work? It seems to be doing something already. We have structured our economy, like much of the rest of the world, on open access to the US economy. We do very little here anymore, and could benefit from similar policies. But we have decided that Trump is the crazy one. And that approach is going to fail when it comes to the negotiations.
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Peter Saker
Peter Saker@PeterSaker2·
@Douga536_ @FoodProfessor @Lisabronagh @terftasticwoman Listen, so what if the legacy media prefers to blame Trump and has a crush on Carney? That can be true and we're still in a situation in which the US has gone rogue, hit us with severe tariffs and shows no signs of being capable of agreement. It's not TDS to see this.
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The Food Professor
The Food Professor@FoodProfessor·
CUSMA scoreboard. U.S. sets the terms, Mexico plays it smart, Canada postures. Winning: Mexico. Losing: Canada. The U.S.? Still in control.
The Food Professor tweet media
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The Food Professor
The Food Professor@FoodProfessor·
"Canada’s instinct, increasingly, is to talk about diversification, reducing dependence on the United States. That is a sensible long-term goal. But it is not a short-term substitute. Geography still dictates trade flows. Logistics still favor proximity. And in food, proximity is everything."
The Food Professor@FoodProfessor

"The warning came quietly, but it was unmistakable. According to a Reuters report, U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer made it clear: Canada’s dairy dispute will be resolved one of two ways, through negotiation or through enforcement." Read article below.

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Derek Kite
Derek Kite@derekkite·
By the way "we" are the Liberal handlers who are getting calls from very very angry people who are seeing their fortunes disappear as trade with the US falls apart. The economic miracle that this central banker dude was supposed to bring is not materialising and won't.
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Derek Kite
Derek Kite@derekkite·
We are at the "we can't let him into Parliament" stage of Carney's Prime Ministerial journey. Keep him out of the country. Keep him out of Parliament. They are going to confiscate his video equipment next.
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Derek Kite
Derek Kite@derekkite·
@KirkLubimov He wants it applied to imports. That will be the rationale behind the collapse of the trade negotiations.
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Kirk Lubimov
Kirk Lubimov@KirkLubimov·
Holly shit❗️ Mark Carney thinks our effective carbon price is too low; "The effective carbon price in this country is actually quite low relative to the headline price,in the $20 to $30 range in most Canadian markets. And that's something we're working to rectify." The industrial carbon tax price increased to $110 this year, with a plan to increase it to a minimum of $130 and all the way to $170 around 2030. Do you understand how MASSIVE the increase to these levels will be to cost of things in Canada and how uncompetitive our industries will be!?
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Derek Kite
Derek Kite@derekkite·
We are getting to the 'every business that depends on the US is calling their MP' stage of the trade negotiations. Carney is not taking it well. The carbon tax thing was a threat to Canadian businesses.
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Kate Harrison
Kate Harrison@KatlynHarrison·
Evolution of the Carney's position on the US: 1️⃣April '25: We will strike a new economic & security partnership with the US. 2️⃣Summer '25: We have the best deal already. 3️⃣April '26: Our reliance on the US is a weakness. Time to stop diagnosing. Start fixing the mess. #cdnpoli
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Kirk Lubimov
Kirk Lubimov@KirkLubimov·
This is really what it comes down to; Pierre Poilievre: "He (Mark Carney) has not removed a single Trudeau-era anti-development law, but he has stacked new laws on top of old ones. He's not removed a single government agency or bureaucracy, but he instead has created twelve new ones." Bureaucracy and red tape is what suffocating development and investment in/into Canada. Why is it so hard to understand?! You would think that after losing $1T in investment since 2015 the Liberals would get the point.
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Derek Kite retweetou
Dean Allison
Dean Allison@DeanAllisonMP·
2,600,000 Canadian jobs depend on Canada-US trade Liberals think these jobs are a weakness
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Derek Kite
Derek Kite@derekkite·
@TasonJorres @WebStormIDE I agree that it is tricky. Part of this whole thing is learning the best way to use a very powerful tool. It can't suggest something useful at times because it can't read my mind. So maybe I have to tell it. Which will have the added benefit of the code being well commented.
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Jason Torres
Jason Torres@TasonJorres·
@derekkite @WebStormIDE The Angular + MCP feedback is great to hear! On the inline suggestions stuff, try, Settings > Editor > General > Inline Completion that lets you toggle it off entirely or per language if you want more control. The delete and resuggest behavior specifically is tricky.
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Derek Kite
Derek Kite@derekkite·
AI and angular development works very well with a bit of setup. I use webstorm, set up the MCP server. Suddenly signals, angular material, the component and service structures just worked. I had a moderately complicated component where I needed a table where the rows were a series of check marks. Everything changeable, the columns depending on interval, the rows added from selecting something in a tree. All outputting a data structure collecting information from multiple sources. I have used ai quite a bit and found that asking it to do a specific function worked well, but without the MCP any angular stuff was dodgy to say the least. It created the component, and maybe four iterations fixing something, or filling out some detail I hadn't specified. Quite impressive. Not agent mode, it generated the code that I applied to the files. It reads enough context from existing code so it uses existing interface definitions for data, suggesting modifications if required. Using Claude, angular.dev/ai/mcp for MCP setup.
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Derek Kite
Derek Kite@derekkite·
@WebStormIDE AI editing implementation is sometimes prescient, other times annoying. Consistently if I highlight and delete some code it will immediately show the code ready to paste in. Please no. Ctrl-z exists. It guesses property names or method names, getting in the way of the correct code completion. Sometimes it guesses the intent properly, but gets the names wrong. Tab tab. Go through and fix, or escape and write it out. The block code suggestions are confusing, or extremely useful. Obviously it doesn't know what to do most of the time. I'm going to try writing a comment describing what needs to be done to see if that improves. It is many things but not prescient.
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