I've had to re-learn math skills long forgotten to help my kids with their school work. It's been an interesting experience.
The expectations for home schooling are different and are, in some ways, aimed more towards reality. My son finishes the bulk of his work in an hour most days and then has time for 2 instruments, learning C++, Rust, and Python, community/church participation and more.
I think the point is that part of having a functioning society (civic life, engagement, tolerance of others) is having people mix together. School is one of the prime places where that happens.
If you allow a lot of people to pull away from that "forced" engagement with others then you start to stress a lot of societal bonds.
I don't know a single homeschooler that sits at home all day long. They work in family businesses, participate in bands, sports, and co-ops. Many belong to churches where families come from all different strata: our church has surgeons, line cooks, programmers, self-employed handymen, disabled vets. They interact with everyone—including kids. They do things like "kid markets" where they have a business. They watch their parents learn how the house works and how to manage finances.
There is no forced engagement—in fact the peer pressure is often completely gone. They are in an environment (their family) where they are much freer to be themselves.
The best functioning society that I experienced was when 90% of the people were (presbyterian) Christians. We replaced that with something very, very disfunctional.
the purpose of education is largely opposite of indocrination (plus few other things). if your kid is being educated is such an environment you should move (or pay for private education).
I get where you're coming from but I think your statement is a bit naive.
Education systems as we know them today are absolutely about indoctrination in so many ways. Capitalism, love of country, views on family units, beauty and aaesthetics, what has cultural value and what does not etc etc. Not to mention many school systems just straight up having classes on religion, allowing armed forces into schools to recruit and the like.
Whether you're worried about left wing or right wing indoctrination, it still holds true. All kids are being indoctrinated every time they go to school same as every time they watch TV.
Exactly. Which history lessons get taught, which books get assigned as reading, which clubs are available, etc. Even if they are taught to be critical of the assignments they get, if the selection is limited enough, kids will not have the breadth of knowledge to even see the alternatives.
I pay a lot of money for my 12-year to not be in the system you are describing and am grateful I can provide this for her more than I am grateful for just about anything else
I watched the show but if I remember correctly they actually didn’t die. They survived.
> The reality is much more positive than the myth, with all three men escaping such a grisly fate. Indeed, Alexei Ananenko and Valeri Bespalov are believed to be both still alive as of 2024, while Boris Baranov lived until 2005 when he passed away from heart disease.
We live in an age where the commercialization/cheapening of sex is celebrated by society but the natural result of that commercialization/cheapening isn't wanted.
When doing web development I will occasionally connect my local code base to a remote SQL server via SSH.
This adds enough latency to be noticeable and I’ve found pages that were “OK” in prod that were unbearable in my local environment. Most of the time it was N+1 queries. Sometimes it was a cache that wasn’t working as intended. Sometimes it simply was a feature that “looked cool” but offered no value.
I’m not sure if there is a proxy that would do this locally but I’ve found it invaluable.
I do networked game development on Windows and I've found the clumsy program to be very valuable to simulate adverse network conditions. You can set it up to simulate arbitrary network latency, packet loss and so forth.
I’m not sure if you’re saying the latency was introduced in client <-> server hops or server <-> db hops, but chrome dev tools (I’m sure all browsers too) can simulate different network conditions with a few clicks! Useful for something similar to what you’ve said, but in the end I think you meant server <-> db latency is what you want to inject
> I’m not sure if there is a proxy that would do this locally but I’ve found it invaluable.
If you're on Linux, you can use iptables to randomly drop a fraction of packets to simulate bad connections - even for localhost. The TCP retransmits will induce a tunable latency. You have to be careful with this on a remote host or you may find yourself locked out, unless you can reboot out of band
macOS has embedded feature that allows slowing down network calls. Similar to the IP/netfilter suite Linux has. PF handles most of the magic behind the scenes.
Even better because there is an UI to configure it. You just need to download Xcode additional tools package, there is a NetworkConditioner.prefpane inside. Install that and various settings will show up in the regular System Settings/Preferences...
I've been allowing LLMs to do more "background" work for me. Giving me some room to experiment with stuff so that I can come back in 10-15 minutes and see what it's done.
The key things I've come to are that it HAS to be fairly limited. Giving it a big task like refactoring a code base won't work. Giving it an example can help dramatically. If you haven't "trained" it by giving it context or adding your CLAUDE.md file, you'll end up finding it doing things you don't want it to do.
Another great task I've been giving it while I'm working on other things is generating docs for existing features and modules. It is surprisingly good at looking at events and following those events to see where they go and generating diagrams and he like.
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