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A (flagged) discussion on the topic from a month ago:

BBC director general and News CEO resign in bias controversy 117 comments

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45873738


I'd forgotten what an unusually strong and culturally-resonant line of movies the man had without (I think) the popular acclaim you might associate with them, like a low-profile Spielberg.

Spinal Tap

The Princess Bride

When Harry Met Sally

Sleepless in Seattle

Stand By Me

etc

A great loss, RIP


I'm just commenting to mention The Sure Thing, a delightful and endearing romcom with John Cusack and Daphne Zuniga, with small parts by Anthony Edwards, Nicollette Sheridan, and Tim Robbins.

This is indeed a delightful film. I tend to forget that Nicollette Sheridan was the titular character. It’s unusual (but perhaps explains some of Reiner’s interest, I wonder) that this film has an identifiable, personified McGuffin.

A Few Good Men is also a great movie IMHO.

And he was quite excellent in The Wolf of Wall Street (playing I think Leonardo's father?)

Very sad development.


Oh wow he did A Few Good Men, too? These comments are just crazy in how many influential movies he made to me, without me realizing they were by him. And how are you the first to mention AFGM? That's the best of the bunch!

He also co-wrote the pilot for Happy Days...

His first seven films are the kind of good that most filmmakers would like to have throughout a career, not starting one. He was also a writer on The Smothers Brothers before his role on All in the Family. He was definitely one of the greats.

He was also brilliant as Michael “Meathead” Stivik in the phenomenal TV series “All in the Family”.

Amazing how many classics he worked on throughout his career.


Throughout his entire career I have always thought "Meathead has done so well for himself! He really showed Archie."

Talking about Rob Reiner:

https://interviews.televisionacademy.com/people/rob-reiner?c...

https://interviews.televisionacademy.com/interviews/rob-rein...

Rob Reiner: The 60 Minutes Interview (2 months ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DLeBquj8LKI


I remember a radio host in the 90's remarking about how ironic it was that three of the biggest movie directors at the time were: Opie (Ron Howard), Laverne (Penny Marshall) and MeatHead (Rob Reiner).

Indeed. I grew up watching AitF, and I remember being totally floored when I realized he directed “When Harry Met Sally.”

Really sad end to a great career and as far as I could tell, a decent human being.


I only ever watched the re-runs (1980s). Still, somehow I never made the connection that “meathead” was Rob Reiner.

It's definitely interesting seeing him physically morph from his younger days to today. When he first came on my radar as a director, I wondered if it was just another guy with the same name, I had to go look it up, and I was surprised. Seemed like a really great guy. :(

His last film was Spinal Tap II. I think if you could tell him that Spinal Tap would bookend his life, he'd be tickled by that.

The second installment isn't good... But he has more than enough decent work to be remembered by.

No, it isn't a patch on the original. But I did find it better than I expected at least. A low bar, but at least it passed it. ;)

I personally preferred the sequel to the original.

I loved the original but its pacing wasn’t all that great. I also felt II had better cohesion too.


I had the same thought when I looked up his filmography - highly underrated. No idea he made all those classics.

Amen. I can appreciate films. Reiner made Movies. Great movies.

Spielberg is an apt comparison.


Misery is another classic

Wow, I didn't know he directed Misery! Great film.

If somebody is going to have the conceit to name an argument after themselves - and imply some sort of equivalence with a great physicist they could at least make some effort with the details.

How do they know there aren't apps and services with significant AI contributions? Any closed source app is by definition a black box in regard to the composition.

We decry AI slop but this article shows no AI is needed for that.


Off-topic: it's been a while since I looked in on Nautil.us, which I used to read articles on quite regularly.

What a decline. Straight in I was hit by article restriction warnings and the whole thing was half adverts.

An interesting publication seems to have turned into yet another tatfest.

Doesn't look good for it's longevity as a source of decent reads, a shame.

Ps. Thanks to the submitter though for taking the time to add an archive link.


No. In the long term, the third particularly reduces sentient beings to the position of slaves.


As a convinced idler I've long thought this is the case; this was a reflection on my own flaws prompted by my strong belief that significant presentations in other people of what in the old days would be called "weak character",eg obesity must be majorly down to underlying mental disorders or weaknesses because nobody would choose to be like that, right?

The neural or mental cause hypothesis for the latter has been pretty much proven by the success of drugs like Ozempic; it's really not a great stretch to see other deadly sins as similarly significantly brain-derived in addition to (and possibly sometimes dominating) environmental and cultural influences.

The important thing though - if you believe this - is not to claim victimhood as a sufferer but to grasp the opportunity that comes from identifying a challenge, and investigating the tools and techniques available to counter and - with perseverance - defeat it.


> nobody would choose to be like that, right?

I can't say I'm obese, but I am proudly lazy, and I am firmly convinced our entire models of character, personality, mental illness, etc is rooted in culturally relative values. There's no particular reason we should look to productivity (or the west at all, really) for a source of values or reference of health.


Not sure this covers popular mixes, eg WSL or considers AI clients.

My IDE is Windows (VSCode or Cursor); but I'm also using ChatGPT in the browser and various Linux command line tools (connecting through Windows Terminal to WSL Redhat).

There should probably be a fully hybrid option in the poll.


It does, if you use WSL you're OS is Windows.


But he's de facto developing on a Linux machine.


It's not a linux machine. The computer is booted and managed by Windows. Linux is an application running on the Windows machine.


The question is not about booting, it's about which OS is running the environment where development happens (writing code, compiling code, testing code, etc).

> Clarification: the operating system where e.g. your IDE runs on

If you're developing on a Linux VM that you connect to via a browser tab opened from your Windows laptop, you're developing on Linux for all intents and purposes.

That is, Windows was not doing enough for you so you switched to Linux for dev tasks.

By the same token, if your IDE is running in WSL, for all intents and purposes you're developing on Linux. A virtual machine, sure, but the virtualized OS is a Linux variant. Because installing the IDE on Windows itself was not doing enough for you.


WSL2 is a full blown Linux VM under the hood, running a real Linux distro and real Linux kernel. It's Linux in every way that matters.


Yes, but the poll is specifically about the system your IDE runs on. Most WSL users are running their IDE in Windows.


I wouldn't consider Chrome the "operating system" that I am primarily developing on, even though it is really the VM under the hood. Windows is really the one facilitating running the Chrome application, or the Linux WSL application.


To be way too pedantic, if WSL2 (and therefore Hyper-V) is enabled then Windows actually boots into bare-metal Hyper-V first, which then launches the Windows kernel as a VM under itself, side-by-side with the WSL2 VMs if any are installed, so if the lowest level facilitator is what counts then you're really developing "on Hyper-V". I don't think that's a very useful distinction though.


Hyper-V is windows, just stripped down to be a supervisor OS, but same kernel bits. So, still Windows.


Well I'm extremely pedantic, so I'm going to say that UEFI is the real operating system!


I mean, that's a debatable definition, one could agree or not.

I program on Windows + WSL 2 e.g. and I have no idea how to develop on windows and barely used powershell in my life, but I know the ins and outs of Linux.

I'm not saying you're wrong and I'm right, I'm merely stating that we have different definitions and AFAICT there's no ISO standard saying what qualifies as developing on Linux and what not.


it is a Linux environment (Windows is just a host – could be anything, really)


I can't even imagine doing development in Windows without WSL anymore. I think Microsoft even requires it for some of their stuff.


I guess it depends on what you do. I do python, rust, and web frontend in Windows. I have a personal bias against Docker, which'd otherwise be the primary WSL draw for me since if I want/need Linux, I can SSH into the majority of the machines in my house.

I'll throw out my unpopular opinion/experience here, too: I haven't liked any "desktop experience" I've seen or used for a Linux distro, and they all look and feel very similar to me: foreign, basic, and difficult for me to tweak and produce with. I greatly dislike the React stuff both on the web and in Windows, and use Classic Shell, which I'm satisfied with. Windows is easy to customize and almost everything can be tailored without even needing a reboot, many even with registry options already made and just waiting for a bit to be flipped.

It helps my puny, smooth brain, too, to just think of Windows being graphical and Linux being text-based; helps me remember what I'm doing.


I think I'd count WSL as Linux.

Cloud based development and browser hosted environments would certainly be worth measuring. I imagine the numbers are tiny compared to other platforms.

Arduino IDE probably counts as something with decent numbers. Wokwi also makes for an interesting candidate in that area.


Surprised this is apparently the less popular stack. IDE (VS Code) on windows working out of WSL has been so good for a long time now.


No suprise to see self-congratulations and more "I'm the only person who ever questioned genAI" nonsense as the key parts of this article. What a bore Marcus is.


Congrats OP, good story. Don't let any kneejerk negative responses from those who don't like his worldview get you down.


Unless its open source I can't really see the point with bragging about it being in Rust. Its just another product, and its either faster or its not - the underlying language or platform is pretty irrelevant.


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