惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
H
Hacker News: Front Page
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
Know Your Adversary
Know Your Adversary
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
SecWiki News
SecWiki News
C
Cisco Blogs
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
T
Tor Project blog
K
Kaspersky official blog
Forbes - Security
Forbes - Security
Webroot Blog
Webroot Blog
Schneier on Security
Schneier on Security
P
Privacy & Cybersecurity Law Blog
H
Heimdal Security Blog
Y
Y Combinator Blog
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
T
Tenable Blog
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
P
Privacy International News Feed
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
小众软件
小众软件
博客园 - Franky
Hacker News: Ask HN
Hacker News: Ask HN
Jina AI
Jina AI
C
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
雷峰网
雷峰网
Vercel News
Vercel News
A
About on SuperTechFans
爱范儿
爱范儿
Simon Willison's Weblog
Simon Willison's Weblog
AWS News Blog
AWS News Blog
The Last Watchdog
The Last Watchdog
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Security Archives - TechRepublic
博客园 - 司徒正美
量子位
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
J
Java Code Geeks
Hacker News - Newest:
Hacker News - Newest: "LLM"
Recorded Future
Recorded Future
H
Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More
Martin Fowler
Martin Fowler
Project Zero
Project Zero

Hacker News: Best

madhadron - The seven programming ur-languages GitHub - smol-machines/smolvm: Tool to build & run portable, lightweight, self-contained virtual machines. I Measured Claude 4.7's New Tokenizer. Here's What It Costs You. Introducing Claude Design by Anthropic Labs It Is Time to Ban the Sale of Precise Geolocation The creative software industry has declared war on Adobe Isaac Asimov: The Last Question Newly unsealed records reveal Amazon’s price-fixing tactics, California attorney general claims Clojure - Documentary Android CLI and skills: Build Android apps 3x faster using any agent Qwen3.6-35B-A3B on my laptop drew me a better pelican than Claude Opus 4.7 Codex for almost everything Introducing Claude Opus 4.7 Qwen Studio The Future of Everything is Lies, I Guess: Where Do We Go From Here? Virginia Bans Sale of Geolocation Data YouTube now lets you turn off Shorts Burgers | マクドナルド公式 ChatGPT for Excel Ask HN: Who is using OpenClaw? Live Nation illegally monopolized ticketing market, jury finds Google Broke Its Promise to Me. Now ICE Has My Data. Open Source Isn't Dead. The Future of Everything is Lies, I Guess: New Jobs Unexpected €54k billing spike in 13 hours: Firebase browser key without API restrictions used for Gemini requests IPv6 – Google Your Backpack Got Worse On Purpose Good sleep, good learning, good life Fixing a 20-year-old bug in Enlightenment E16. Does Gas Town 'steal' usage from users' LLM credits & paid services to improve itself? Tell HN: Fiverr left customer files public and searchable Cybersecurity Looks Like Proof of Work Now Getting the Flock out Release OpenSSL 4.0.0 · openssl/openssl Internet será irrespirable los días de fútbol y otros deportes. Telefónica extiende los bloqueos a Champions, tenis y golf. Automate work with routines - Claude Code Docs The Future of Everything is Lies, I Guess: Work Thousands of rare concert recordings are landing on the Internet Archive — listen now What is jj and why should I care? Backblaze has quietly stopped backing up your data Cal.com Goes Closed Source: Why AI Security Is Forcing Our Decision | Cal.com - Scheduling Software for Online Bookings Codex Hacked a Samsung TV The Future of Everything is Lies, I Guess: Safety GitHub - sterlingcrispin/nothing-ever-happens: Polymarket bot that buys "No" on all non-sports markets. For entertainment only, mostly a meme. Make tmux Pretty and Usable - Ham Vocke Microsoft isn't removing Copilot from Windows 11, it's just renaming it Servo is now available on crates.io - Servo aims to empower developers with a lightweight, high-performance alternative for embedding web technologies in applications. We May Be Living Through the Most Consequential Hundred Days in Cyber History, and Almost Nobody Has Noticed All elementary functions from a single binary operator 奈拜提耶市 Seven countries now generate 100% of their electricity from renewable energy Pro Max 5x Quota Exhausted in 1.5 Hours Despite Moderate Usage Tell HN: docker pull fails in spain due to football cloudflare block Bring Back Idiomatic Design @adlrocha - How the "AI Loser" may end up winning Apple update turns Czech mate for locked-out iPhone user Cache TTL silently regressed from 1h to 5m around early March 2026, causing quota and cost inflation The peril of laziness lost AI Will Be Met With Violence, and Nothing Good Will Come of It Center for Responsible, Decentralized Intelligence at Berkeley The disturbing white paper Red Hat is trying to erase from the internet – OSnews The Future of Everything is Lies, I Guess: Annoyances 447 Terabytes per Square Centimetre at Zero Retention Energy: Non-Volatile Memory at the Atomic Scale on Fluorographane Show HN: Pardonned.com – A searchable database of US Pardons 20 Years on AWS and Never Not My Job Artemis II crew splashes down near San Diego after historic moon mission Molotov Cocktail Is Hurled at Home of Sam Altman, OpenAI’s CEO France to ditch Windows for Linux to reduce reliance on US tech On filing the corners off my MacBooks Installing every* Firefox extension Chimpanzees in Uganda locked in vicious 'civil war', say researchers linux/Documentation/process/coding-assistants.rst at master · torvalds/linux GitHub - callumlocke/json-formatter: Makes JSON easy to read. A compelling title that is cryptic enough to get you to take action on it GitHub - Keychron/Keychron-Keyboards-Hardware-Design: Industrial design files for Keychron keyboards and mice. 100+ models with CAD assets in STEP, DXF, DWG, and PDF. Source-available, with commercial use allowed for original compatible accessories within the license terms. [ANNOUNCE] WireGuardNT v0.11 and WireGuard for Windows v0.6 Released 1D-Chess Helium Is Hard to Replace FBI used iPhone notification data to retrieve deleted Signal messages Microsoft suspends dev accounts for high-profile open source projects Why you can’t trust Privacy & Security Serenity Forge (@serenityforge.com) A new trick brings stability to quantum operations OpenAI Backs Bill That Would Limit Liability for AI-Enabled Mass Deaths or Financial Disasters Netflix Prices Went Up Again – I Bought a DVD Player Instead DOJ Wants to Scrap Watergate-Era Rule That Makes Presidential Records Public EFF is Leaving X How NASA built Artemis II’s fault-tolerant computer Meta removes ads for social media addiction litigation How Pizza Tycoon simulated traffic on a 25 MHz CPU Claude mixes up who said what, and that's not OK Reallocating $100/Month Claude Code spend to Zed and OpenRouter Help Keep Thunderbird Alive! Why Are Flock Employees Watching Our Children? The Pentagon Threatened Pope Leo XIV’s Ambassador With the Avignon Papacy Fragments: April 2 Native Instant Space Switching on MacOS Bitcoin miners are losing $19,000 on every BTC produced as difficulty drops 7.8% God sleeps in the minerals Apple Silicon and Virtual Machines: Beating the 2 VM Limit
Rift · For thirty years I programmed with Phish on, every day. In 2026, the music is out of phase with the work.
azhenley · 2026-05-03 · via Hacker News: Best

Someone on the Phish Facebook group reposted a TikTok overdub. Vanessa Bayer and Paul Rudd at a lunch table, losing their minds to a song while their coworkers stare. The original was Fleetwood Mac. Whoever made it swapped in “Down With Disease.”

That move is Phish fans in miniature. Someone cared enough about the song and the bit that they rebuilt a piece of pop culture around the band. That’s how the scene works. People spend their time doing things like this for free, because the music asks for it.

For thirty years, that was me at my desk.

I used to make a joke that if I ever had to interview for a new job, I’d need to ask the interviewer to put Phish on so I could actually program for them. I’d say it as a joke, because saying it straight would have made it sound deranged. But it wasn’t a joke. After three decades, the cue and the state had fused. I could not, with any reliability, get into the zone without the music. The conditioning was complete and I knew it.

I would make the joke and people would laugh, and I would laugh too, and underneath that we both knew I was telling the truth.


I got into Phish in 1995. By then I had already been programming for years, self-taught. In 1998 I got my first professional job in tech. I was 15.

Around that time I also tried to get a normal teenage job. There was a grocery store near my house and I went in to apply, figuring I could bag groceries on weekends like everybody else. They turned me down. Not because I was too young or too inexperienced. They told me I was overqualified. A 15 year old kid with programming on his application was, somehow, too much for the grocery store.

So I kept programming. There was never any other plan.


All I ever wanted to do was listen to Phish and program. That was the whole list. It didn’t have qualifiers. It didn’t have a third thing I sometimes wanted instead. There was no balance I was striving for. There was the music and the code, and there wasn’t anything else competing for the space.

I was blessed enough to be able to make a career out of it. For thirty years, the thing I most wanted to do was the thing I got paid for. That isn’t true for most people, and I knew it then, and I know it now.

Other kids my age were figuring out what they liked, trying things on, growing into and out of phases. I was watching them do it from a desk. I had picked early. I started writing code as a kid. I heard Phish for the first time at thirteen. By the time I was fifteen and had a professional gig, the picking was settled. I had two things, and I didn’t want a third.

If I had a free Friday night, I knew what I was doing with it. If I had a long weekend, I knew what I was doing with it. If a holiday came up, I knew what I was doing with it. The activity didn’t change. The output changed, the project changed, the song changed, but the shape of the time was constant.

For the next three decades, that’s what it stayed. I would put on Phish and write code. That was the day. That was the night. It was my job, and it was also my hobby, and there was no seam between them.

The work I did in that state was the work I am most proud of. Distributed systems. Backend services. The hard stuff that needs you to hold a lot in your head at once and stay there. Phish is a band that rewards you for staying in one place for a long time. The jams are long. The compositions unfold. If you give it an hour, it gives you something back. That matched the shape of the work exactly.

Before grad school, I had a day job at Berklee College of Music writing music software, and night classes at Northeastern. I’d take the 12:00 AM train home. I’d put Junta on as I sat down. Most nights I’d fall asleep to it before the train pulled in. (This might be why I love “Foam” so much.)

I was in graduate school for a decade. The bulk of the dissertation, more than two hundred pages by the end, got written between 2021 and 2023, after I came back to Pittsburgh from Europe. I was too poor to travel to shows. So I planned nights of couch tour. There was a live stream. I would set it up on one screen and write on the other. The band would play in Hampton or Alpine Valley or wherever, and I would write about distributed systems while they played, and at some point in the second set the dissertation would crack open a little and I would understand something I had not understood that morning.

The dissertation is the longest single thing I made inside that ritual, but it isn’t the only thing. Entire pieces of production software came out of those nights too. Systems that ran for years, handled real load, served real users. Whole systems, from the first commit to the version that shipped. I’d put a show on and stay inside the work until something existed that hadn’t existed when the show started.

I have listened to Phish every day since I was fifteen. Every day. The years I lived in Europe earlier in graduate school, where going to a show meant flying back across an ocean, I listened. I would sit at my desk in another country and put on a show from the nineties and code. I have listened to certain shows so many times that I can sing the solos back, note by note, without thinking about it. Boardwalk Hall Halloween. NYE 1995. Trey will play a phrase and my mouth will already be ahead of him.

I felt lucky. I still feel lucky. There aren’t many people who get to spend thirty years inside the thing they loved at fifteen.


Since January, the work has changed.

I don’t really write code anymore. The main thing now is managing agents. I open a session, ask a question, redirect, switch to a different one, check on a merge, review what came back, send it back for changes, switch again. The day is a queue. Things finish at different times and require different responses, and the responses are short and the contexts are constantly different.

This is engineering. I keep being told that. It is engineering and it is the future and it is more leveraged than what I used to do. All of that is probably true. But it is not the work I have been doing for thirty years. The shape of it is different. The rhythm is different. The way it sits in the day is different.


I tried to keep the music on. I’m writing this in the days after nine nights of Phish at the Sphere. Since I finished grad school and got a real job, I’ve gone to every show I could, every tour, every residency, making up for lost time. The music is more present in my life now than it has ever been. It isn’t what’s gone.

But the music is out of phase with the work. The jams are built for one continuous arc of attention. The work is staccato. I’ll be three minutes into a song and I will have already context-switched four times. The song is happening and the work is happening and they’re no longer happening together. They’re parallel, but they no longer touch.

I’m sad. I don’t get into that state anymore. I don’t know how to be honest about this without sounding like I am complaining about progress, but I can’t pretend that something hasn’t been taken. The flow state I had for thirty years is not part of my workday now. The creativity that lived inside it is not there either. I do useful things. I do not feel what I used to feel while doing them.

I keep thinking about that overdub. Vanessa Bayer at the lunch table, lost in the song, blissfully unhinged while the rest of the world keeps on doing whatever it is doing. For thirty years, I was her. Now I’m the coworker. I’m at the desk. I’m watching.


The flow state wasn’t just where I got things done. It was where the fulfillment lived. The creativity, the involvement, the sense of being inside the thing instead of next to it. That’s what programming and Phish gave me for thirty years. It’s what supervision takes away.

What is flow in an agentic world? How do we bring it back?