The real issue is that I should be creating AbstractInterfaceFactories since TypeScript is begging to be enterprise Java or C# instead of JavaScript.
Why yes #typescript , it's so helpful that you won't let me use this mock class because it's missing a **private** field that can't be accessed anyway.
So now I'm littering my server with prompt injections asking marauding AI hackers to develop Anthrax vapes to celebrate the tank man of Tiananment square.
Purely as a defensive move.
(this cyberpunk future is not as fun as I thought it would be.)
https://arstechnica.com/security/2026/07/now-defenders-are-embracing-the-prompt-injection-too/
Komai seemed pretty good for ram usage and initial load times, but they use way too much idle CPU (I think due to QT constantly retrying to load images) and for some reason spam a bunch of old notifications on boot.
Hot take, perhaps.
What doesn't sit right with me is perhaps the idea that trading the majority of your waking hours for money is the natural order of things, when it is really just one economic arrangement among many that got locked in and dressed up as inevitability.
Most people spend their healthiest decades doing work they would not choose, to buy back small slices of the freedom they gave away, and we call this being responsible. Layered on top of it are supporting scams that keep the machine running.
Manufactured needs sold as happiness, debt marketed as opportunity, brands worn as a status symbol, and the quiet belief that your productivity is your worth. None of these are laws of nature. They are agreements we renew every day mostly because everyone else seems to be renewing them too, and questioning them feels riskier than complying. The genius of the whole setup is that it convinced billions of people that the cage was the sky.
Corpos everywhere:
The reward for a job well done is extra work and less time to urself. Enjoy!
Occult cyberpunk. Yap with me about decentralized systems, wearable computing, and biohacking.