Awesome puzzles

Awesome puzzles

Do you enjoy those little brain teaser puzzles made out of wood, metal, nails, horseshoes, and other everyday objects?

Puzzle Master is an amazing website with all kinds of puzzles. Everything from simple $10 packs full of wire puzzles, up to multi-thousand dollar works of art. Give it a look.

Coding Co-pilot

Coding Co-pilot

And just like that programmer’s were replaced by machine learning and pressing tab.

GitHub Copilot is a development plugin that uses AI to auto-complete what you’re coding. The AI was trained using github projects as its learning source. You start coding, press tab, and it gives you a list of what it thinks you might want next based on what it matches you might be developing.

Nick Chapsas tries out a number of programming tasks from basic data structures, creating an API, a calculator, and even fully implemented fizzbuzz. It does *shockingly* well.

I think this is the next obvious level of auto-completion we’ve had for years. I bet it almost certainly will come to mainline development tools in the next 5 years. It does, however, bring up some interesting legal points if someone unknowingly auto-completes a blob of code from an GPL or closed source project. This treads the fine line of auto-generated code and downright copying. My guess is that using IP violation code scanning tools to detect problems will be even more important.

Brian Williams Raps

Brian Williams Raps

Journalist and anchorman Brian Williams signed off for the final time last night after 28 years with NBC. You can see his farewell from last night’s episode of The 11th Hour on MSNBC. We wish him the best in his retirement.

Over the years, Jimmy Fallon’s crew at The Tonight Show has had a lot of fun with Williams’ news footage, editing him word by word into popular rap songs.

These are genius (warning: some explicit lyrics).

No End House

No End House

NoEnd House is an amature creepy-pasta short story from a few years back. It tells of a haunted house that has 6 progressively scarier rooms. Supposedly nobody who has made it to room six has ever been seen again.

The short story has a great premise, but many argue that Channel Zero’s version is an even better telling of the story. The six part series starts with them finding out about the haunted house and taking a visit. What happens next is some good story telling, but I thought the final chapters were a bit weaker than the first ones. The first few episodes are definitely worth a watch.

On a tangent, I think this is what Hollywood should be doing these days: taking promising but flawed ideas and working them into great ones. I understand why studios rehash tried and true IP’s like Star Trek, Star Wars, Marvell, etc. They always sell. But it doesn’t demonstrate any real talent to try and reboot old classics with tropey time travel, alternate universe takes, harmful revisionist cannons, or even political/social agendas. Most of the time they only succeeded in ruining critical themes, diluting, damaging, and turning classics into distasteful cash grabs. Lets wake up here Hollywood – there’s lots of great ideas out there if you have the eyes to see them.

Saturn

Saturn

Cassini mission to Saturn has to be one of the most amazing space adventures that has happened in my lifetime. I’m a huge fan of Saturn – from it’s hexagonal polar storms, to its rings, to its incredible moons. I would hang on every new picture that came from the mission. However, the below shot is one of the best of the lot.

Read more about the picture, the different planets you can see in it, as well as download the full-sized 90mb tiff version here: https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/images/pia17172-the-day-the-earth-smiled

Realistic retirement numbers

Realistic retirement numbers

Now mid-career, I have been doing some math and adjustments to my retirement planning. One question that always gets asked is ‘When can I retire?’. This first boils down to ‘How much money do I need to have to retire’ (then in what ways can I arrange/distribute that money in a tax/minimal penalty way)

You read a lot about FIRE (Financial Independence, Retire Early) folks that are ‘retiring’ in their 30’s. I say ‘retiring’ in quotes because it’s not your traditional retirement. The idea is that you carefully examine and reduce expenses to the point you are saving up to 70% of your income, and then retiring when your expenses reach the return on savings/investment. While there are variants, many folks are retiring on around $1M (or even less) in the 30’s to 40’s.

As a frugal person myself, I have been intrigued by the FIRE movement, but often found their calculations and assumptions to be very optimistic. Aggressive FIRE calculations work well in low-inflationary, 8% return markets we’ve had for the last 20 years. They do much worse in high inflation and lower returning markets that are being predicted the next 5-10 years.

Enter Brian Fry, a certified financial planner, who ran a bunch of interesting simulations to give you a much more realistic set of values if you want to retire at certain ages to ensure income well into retirement. I found his assumptions (listed in the artcle) to be MUCH more realistic than the $1M and retire numbers that I often see come out of FIRE calculations.

How much money you need to have invested to retire early