Luke McCormick
556 posts


@hasantoxr These seem useful, but why wouldn’t Anthropic and Open AI want people to know these techniques that make their products work better?
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@PhilWMagness That’s not meant to be ironic? I don’t think I’ve ever seen such a heartfelt plea for genuine 1930’s style fascism from an American during my lifetime. “My vaguely-defined enemy is so horrible and dangerous that anything I do to fight them is justified.”
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@SVG__Collection There’s a reason I saw Jerry Garcia over 150 times. Not every one was great, but in the majority there were several points where you would think “there’s nobody else that can play that”. And maybe every tenth show, it was impossibly, profoundly wonderful.
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@SVG__Collection Larry Coryell, opening for Jon Luc Pontu solo acoustic at Pier 84 in New York City, summer of 1982.
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@SVG__Collection Layla. Duane Allman drove all night after a concert to play with Clapton, and insisted on immediately going into the studio. That first jam must have been incredible.
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@ErnestoEmerald @SVG__Collection Some of the people who actually WERE there quit their jobs just so that they could leave, so I’m not sure how much fun that would have been.
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@LoveMyScionFRS @SVG__Collection Watching Hendrix jam with Steve Winwood. 🤯
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🎉 "Behind the Scenes at BADCamp 2024" 🌉
In his latest article, Luke McCormick @cellear takes us on a vivid journey through the highs, challenges, and community spirit that made this year’s Bay Area Drupal Camp unforgettable. From the meticulous pre-event setup to the inspiring keynote by Kristen Pol @kristen_pol, and the lively post-camp gatherings, Luke recounts every detail of an organizer’s experience.
Held in Oakland, California, @BADCamp 2024 re-energized the Drupal community. Attendees had the chance to dive into sessions ranging from Tim Lehnen’s @timlehnen "Next Decade of Drupal" vision to JD Leonard’s @drupal_jd fun “Cooking with Drupal 11” presentation. Luke even shared his own insights on simplifying Drupal maintenance, which were well-received, paving the way for his upcoming presentation at @NEDCamp.
Each year, BADCamp reaffirms that the Drupal community is more than a network—it’s a family. 🥂 Here’s to another year of innovation, connection, and inspiration!
To learn more, check the story out from the below link!
thedroptimes.com/43830/luke-mcc…
#DrupalCommunity #BADCamp2024 #DrupalEvents #OpenSource #LukeMcCormick

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Hey everybody. Want to see Simplify Drupal LIVE in concert? Then you should come to my talk at BADCamp, this Thursday at 4PM in Oakland CA!
badcamp.org/schedule

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@tealtalk @NateSilver538 I don’t.
Also, I look several graduate level classes in statistics.
This stuff is hard. Prior to your tweet, I would have thought it reasonable to assume a polling average change would typically change odds. Can you explain why it doesn’t?
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@NateSilver538 Do people not understand the difference in a change of odds versus a polling average change?
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@dewolfe001 @natmiletic Backdrop CMS is, precisely, “a way to modernize Drupal 7”. Are you familiar with it? If not, I would be happy to show you around.
backdropcms.org
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@natmiletic If there were a way to modernize Drupal 7, I'd consider it. Drupal is facing spectre of what happens when they finally sunset D7 and 30-40% of their install base rots.
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@ryanszrama @outlandishjosh If your theory that fewer people are creating simple sites now than they were in Web 1.0 is true, new Wordpress (and Joomla) site launches should be declining at a similar rate as Drupal. Are they?
(I'm hoping you won't notice that I'm too lazy to try to look that up myself)
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fwiw, I’ll post thoughtful engagement here and flame you on LinkedIn instead.
These numbers don’t surprise me at all. Drupal got really big because in the heyday of Web 1.0, a lot more people wanted to build a personal website than today. Web 2.0 made social profiles more important, and I think that’s still true … many businesses have a FB page or IG account with a Linktree to dedicated services (menu, reservations, etc.) while maintaining only a barely functioning web presence. Personal websites have fallen far out of favor, so why not just setup a WordPress site if casual blogging is your thing, Substack if long form writing is, or Shopify if selling is.
Going back to that heyday, if you wanted a website, you likely tried one of the “big three” open source CMSes. Drupal got hundreds of thousands of users because there were millions of new users building out Web 1.0 and we were there. In other words, Drupal’s size wasn’t just due to Drupal’s excellence - it was just a matter of gross adoption numbers and a percentage split.
We held the line until we made the transition to the new version much harder and the casual hacking more sophisticated. This transition to OOPHP rolled out after years of redevelopment, pairing waning enthusiasm with fundamental shifts in the way people use the Internet thanks to the ascendancy of Web 2.0 and smart phones. For what remained to be done on those Drupal 7 sites, WordPress was good enough and easier to switch to than figure out Drupal 8. I don’t know the full data set you’re looking at, but would I be right to guess that more sites just went away or are slowly rotting than migrated either to WordPress or Symfony Drupal?
The time’s, they are a-changin… and my voice on the DA Board and in community discussions has and always will be, “Let’s embrace the change!” We’re small. Fine. We can’t compete with Gutenberg on content publishing. No biggie. We can’t “increase conversions 50%” (or whatever lie Shopify would have you believe ; ). Ok. Whatever. We do have a core competency, and the organizations that value it are willing to pay top dollar to get it. Let’s keep finding better ways to serve them, not focus on regaining yesteryear’s mojo.
I know this might appear to put me at odds with certain goals of the Starshot initiative, but I think it’s a matter of priority and making sure that even as we focus on easier adoption, we don’t lose ground in our core competency.
cf. ryanszrama.com/blog/07-28-202…
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@SweetsthecatLiz @DrGJackBrown This was the point I was going to make. He was thirsty, and he didn’t trust the bottle that was offered to him. It makes much more sense than other theories.
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@DrGJackBrown Doc, could it be that he didn’t trust the bottle given to him, but thought hers would not have been tampered with, and the first handling was to test the seal and make sure it was tight, before he then later drank from it?
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@theemmamont That seems like a reason to FAVOR Shapiro as a pick. It’s immaterial how *you* feel about these policies — they seem like the kind of thing that would appeal to undecided voters. They would help make Harris less scary to people who aren’t sold on liberal viewpoints.
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Shapiro advocated HARD for school vouchers. Vouchers famously negatively impact public schools (esp poorer schools) and highly benefit charter and private schools. This policy was championed by Republicans and only abandoned because PA Dems pushed back apnews.com/article/school…
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The BadCAMP 2024 call for speakers is now open! This is your opportunity to be a part of the 13th annual BADCamp.
Click through and get started TODAY: sessionize.com/badcamp-2024
Don't wait, now is your time to shine!
#drupal #webdevelopment #conferences #oakland #sfbayarea

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@robertgraham In 1991 Sun *almost* entered into a partnership with Apple. Apple instead partnered with IBM, which produced the very successful PowerPC chip but ruined the next-generation OS Apple was working on.
I think if Apple had teamed up with Sun we would all be in a better place.
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nVidia is in the same position as Sun Microsystems was in the early days of the dot-com bubble.
Sun had the leading edge web servers, the smartest engineers, the most respect in the industry. If you were dot-com startup, you bought Sun servers. Smart engineers wouldn't come work for your startup if you were dumb enough not to buy Sun servers. And they charged a premium, their profits went through the roof.
Except, well, there wasn't actually anything special about them -- they weren't actually "the best", nothing really was. It's just that they were the least risky option. You knew they'd work, that newly hired employees would be familiar with them, that they were good enough.
As a startup, you don't optimize for the efficiency of your systems, you optimize for building the business, like selling pet food, doing auctions, selling books online, and so on. You want growth, not profits. Once you've dominated your market and have steady revenue, then you can afford to go back and fix the efficiency problems.
It's funny because back in 1996, Windows NT 4 running on Pentium Pro was a vastly better web server than sun. It's just that Silicon Valley startups couldn't find anybody who knew the system. Techies looked down on "Windows" and considered it a "toy" operating system compared to the mighty Solaris, and Intel CPUs were "CISC" when everyone knew "RISC" was better. Everybody was wrong, of course.
nVidia is in the same position. Everyone wants nVidia chips for AI because they are known to work, the techies know how to program for them, and so on.
But Intel, AMD, and others makes competitive chips for part or all of the AI stack that cost a lots less. Indeed, Apple's own chips are quiet good -- their Private Cloud could in theory be serviced by racks of Mac Ultra servers. But they probably are buying nVidia, too.
When the dot-com bubble burst, Sun crashed, and never recovered. Right now, VCs are throwing vast amounts of money at startups who are in turn sending it to nVidia. At some point, this will stop. Unsuccessful startups will go bankrupt and sell nVidia hardware and office chairs on eBay, successful companies will now work to attain profitability by reducing costs.
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@NersesAposhian @elonmusk It’s definitely much better for me, in spite of the big increase in nuckle-dragging MAGA types. The ability to edit posts alone is a game-changer for me.
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