Monday, May 5, 2025

As an experienced LLM user, I don't use generative LLMs often | Hacker News

This was an interesting quote from the blog post: "There is one silly technique I discovered to allow a LLM to improve my writing without having it do my writing: feed it the text of my mostly-complete blog post, and ask the LLM to pretend to be a cynical Hacker News commenter and write five distinct comments based on the blog post."


Friday, March 14, 2025

FAQ · Wiki · briar / briar · GitLab



Long answer: We're looking into whether an iOS version is feasible. Briar needs to run in the background to receive messages from contacts, and iOS has much tighter restrictions on background apps than Android (though Android's getting stricter).

I want this app to be there but not use ANY battery unless something bad has happened and now we need peer to peer networking. I don't want it sucking up battery in the background every day. 

I don't know how we can accomplish this… 

https://code.briarproject.org/briar/briar/-/wikis/FAQ#will-there-be-an-ios-version-of-briar


Saturday, February 22, 2025

Austerity is a fallacy

Careful, as that can be a slippery slope: that exact expression, "financial literacy", has been used in Europe as a way to push ideology - all economy is political.

Will they teach the fallacy that economic agents make rational choices?

Will they teach the fallacy that running a country is the same as running a household or a grocery store (in terms of supposed thrift)?

Will they teach Keynesian Economics or Neoliberal Economics?

Furthermore, will they teach austerity is mathematically self-defeating and in 95% of cases, will fail?

<https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43137461>
very respectfully,
kushal

Teaching financial literacy without money is like teaching swimming with just powerpoint

Great article. I think it's very true.

I felt I was failed by education/parents with regard to financial literacy, because the first time I ever had real money in my life was when I went to university the first time and I had no idea how to manage it, and I ended up homeless for some time.

Now I'm a parent myself, I decided I'd teach my kids about money by actually giving them money. $100 each per fortnight. I made both kids set up savings accounts that earned interest, and they had to save $50 a fortnight. The other $50 I said they could spend on whatever they liked, but that I would no longer pay for anything related to their gaming (ie, Xbox subscriptions etc), I don't buy them toys, or nice snacks, or fancy branded clothes - that's all stuff they now need to save for and buy themselves with the money they are given. One kid has ADHD and the other kid is close to neurotypical. The neurotypical kid certainly learned how to manage money quicker. His savings account remained perfect, he accumulated interest as well, and can always afford his subscriptions etc. he barely ever even spends the $50 that he's allowed to do anything with, but when he wants to use money when going out with friends etc, he just always has money, and he even keeps some cash on hand as well.

The other kid on the other hand has taken a longer time to understand but, there's absolutely no way an ADHD kid would learn without real money to manage in my opinion and I think they benefit from having the freedom to make mistakes with money. He would spent his $50 within about 10seconds of receiving it, generally on stupid shit from Amazon. Then he never had money for his gaming subscriptions which would result in massive meltdowns when he couldn't play his games, and then he never had money to do stuff with friends when he wanted to. He was always the "poor kid". Then, even though he wasn't supposed to, he withdrew cash from his savings to pay for subscriptions, losing interest etc, and then also having no savings. It took about a year, but he's finally learned to stop buying stupid shit on Amazon. He still can't seem to save the way his brother can, but he saves for a couple of months at a time, and then buys the next computer part he wants, and he always sets aside the money for his game subscriptions now as well. He also does sometimes put extra little bits of money in his savings when he's particularly motivated for a more expensive piece of computer, but he still often withdraws for stupid small shit. He also compares his spending behaviour to his brothers and he realises that his brother is "rich" because he doesn't spend money.

It's an expensive lesson for me to teach them, but, I genuinely think that it has helped them both learn real life lessons with regard to money. I think the unfortunate thing is that the people who really need to learn money, are the ones that don't have it. I'm very lucky that I'm in a position to be able to afford to let me kids experiment with $100 each a fortnight. There's people out there who could probably afford more than that, but I think that in the real world, a large majority of people cannot afford to give their kids that learning opportunity. However, for me, having once been homeless, and then many years later having done an MBA which included finance, I realised the best way to help my own kids learn to manage money was to give them some money to manage.

<https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43093307>
very respectfully,
kushal