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Instead of product tours I like how AWS has little info/help buttons that are placed right next to every informational/actionable element on their dashboard. Totally unobtrusive. If you want to understand something on the dashboard that is not obvious at first, you can click on the info/help button that opens a side panel with a lot more information about that particular element (and any associated topics). Most of the time, you just know what you are dealing with (or can guess what that particular topic might mean and you will probably be right).

Incredible that tooltips were killed because braindead """designers""" couldn't figure out how to make them work on mobile.

They'll be reintroduced under a new name in a decade or two with endless self-congratulation. Same as physical car controls.

Here's a solution off the top of my head: have a dedicate "info" button at the OS level. Holding the button disables normal interaction, highlights all inspectable elements, and allows you to click on each one for a description. Like "inspect element" in the browser.


I'm fairly certain that exact thing existed on Windows XP and earlier. It was a question mark in the top right of the window, added a "?" next to your cursor. You could then click elements to see if there happened to be an explanation embedded in the program for that particular button/box/whatever. Didn't always work, but was useful when it was needed.

> Here's a solution off the top of my head: have a dedicate "info" button at the OS level. Holding the button disables normal interaction, highlights all inspectable elements, and allows you to click on each one for a description. Like "inspect element" in the browser.

This is a really cool idea. Agreed! Wish something like this actually existed.


Wait, isn't that what Windows 3.1/95 did with the "What's this" button?

In the future they'll track your eyes and when you've been staring blankly for a second at something, it'll pop up a tooltip that you'll have to dismiss.

Reminds me of Ramanujan learning during sleep from Namagiri.

There are umpteen stories in Hindu scriptures of baby learning in the womb of the mother and how the expecting mother must only be exposed to good thoughts and a good environment for giving birth to an intelligent and well rounded child: stories of Abhimanyu (learning how to break the Chakravyuha formation in his womb while mother was learning it but his learning was incomplete when mother fell asleep during the lecture) and Prahlada (mother learning about Lord Vishnu against the wishes of her demon husband Hiranyakashyapu). Wonder if any studies have been done on this as well.


Providing a blackbox to the blackbox to reason. We are screwed

No you are not. Anyone who is actually senior knows vibe coding sucks ass.

Please stop contributing to slop/chasing trends and care more for your customers, who are your bread and butter (provided they stick around after this debacle).


Not at all surprising this happened. Stop vibe coding if you value your business/customers.

Every senior/principal developer worth his/her salt knows how bad AI still is when it comes to coding.

DO. NOT. BELIEVE. AI. CEOS.

Do not hand over control of your production data/services to AI. No matter how you might feel you are missing out. Your feelings are not > your customers.

Value your customers. They are your bread and butter. Not AI CEOs or AI bros who want to sell you shovels in this inane fake gold rush.


The blockade is like a nuclear bomb detonated on all countries. 30% of World's oil supply is at risk. Not to mention critical elements needed for semiconductor production. Even the US is suffering passively because of this. Only saving grace for US is to restore navigation in the straits. Quicker it does it the quicker we can stop hell that'll be unleashed on the World. You really don't want to be responsible for 30% of Earth starving and dying of hunger because critical fertilizers never reached the masses for food production.


The fertilizer and helium shortages are unfortunate, but expensive gas has ~ doubled global demand for EVs. That’s an ecological miracle, given the idiocy of the US government. That’s probably where the good news ends though.

If spent on humanitarian aid shortfalls, the funds wasted by just the US on this war could have saved 87M lives:

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/apr/20/us-spending-on...

To put that in relative terms: WWII killed ~85M globally; 2/3 of them were civilians. So that’s killed 150% as many as the war crimes committed by Stalin, Hitler and the Japanese occupation of China combined.

I don’t mean to minimize the famine that’s definitely coming later this year.


Sounds like mass famine in the global South would be a feature to them, not a bug.


So where is the air superiority over Iran? This only proves Palmer Luckey right. Future of warfare has changed drastically and all countries are taking notes from this War.


Great! Instead of solving actual problems we are seeing funding for stuff we don't need.


YC needs to go back to how it was. Choosing those who know what they are doing, and have been in the game for long and not blindly choose those who have graduated from tier-1 institutions. University degrees mean nothing at the end of the day.

And please stop investing in slop/wrappers. They do not solve World's problems.

I feel there has been complacency set into investing in general where investors are chasing quick money (first crypto and now AI slop) over solving hard/grueling problems that take a long time to fix but have huge returns down the line.

And we have a lot of tough problems that still need solving. AI won't magically fix that, despite being a great tool.


Yeah, used to be that a lot of companies in the batches made more or less sense, or you could at least see how they'd made sense if they managed to successfully reach their vision, even if it many times was a bit wishy-washy.

YC since then seems to have moved into a "spray and pray" approach where the ideas don't matter at all, they're 150% in on the "We invest in founders" idea now, almost too much, although I know that's always been a thing they've thought about. But all the batches since some years ago are just so uninspired and seem to be quick cash grabs, or obviously acquisition targets, rather than "solve a problem you experience yourself" which seemed to be much more popular (and realistic) before.


>choose those who have graduated from tier-1 institutions. University degrees mean nothing at the end of the day.

It means everything for YC's model.

YC does not care about the software.

They care about the founders.

YC's model and ecosystem is explicitly designed to be a who's who club of interconnected founders that are very, very encouraged to """rely""" on each other when building their companies.

YC uses a lot of double speak regarding this ecosystem, but if you explained the concept to a layman on the street they'd tell you exactly what this concept is in just a very few, very blunt words.

Elite-class founders and lots of cheap, imported, or "passionate" labor.

Let's get real here folks.


yes obvious but this is not a secret, its the whole point of yc

yc is explicitly an imitation of harvard , right down to calling people 'alumni'

this is how to find supertalent. much like american idol it works well but not for everyone


It starts from the top


Agreed.


The only time I used Azure was for setting up Microsoft as a provider for authentication. Put me through a never-ending loop of asking for a Government of India issued document that was already submitted. Human support was non-existent. Decided never to use Azure in any product after that horrible experience.

If you cannot even get auth right I shudder to think what the rest of the product will be like to deal with should issues arise.


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