Comment by claar

Comment by claar 18 hours ago

10 replies

I think many subscribe to this philosophy: https://distantprovince.by/posts/its-rude-to-show-ai-output-...

Your github research/ links are an interesting case of this. On one hand, late AI adopters may appreciate your example prompts and outputs. But it feels like trivially reproducible noise to expert LLM users, especially if they are unaware of your reputation for substantive work.

The HN AI pushback then drowns out your true message in favor of squashing perceived AI fluff.

simonw 17 hours ago

Yeah, I agree that it's rude to show AI output to people... in most cases (and 100% if you don't disclose it.)

My simonw/research GitHub repo is deliberately separate from everything else I do because it's entirely AI-generated. I wrote about that here: https://simonwillison.net/2025/Nov/6/async-code-research/#th...

This particular case is a very solid use-case for that approach though. There are a ton of important questions to answer: can it run in WebAssembly? What's the difference to regular JavaScript? Is it safe to use as a sandbox against attacks like the regex thing?

Those questions can be answered by having Claude Code crunch along, produce and execute a couple of dozen files of code and report back on the results.

I think the knee-jerk reaction pushing back against this is understandable. I'd encourage people not to miss out on the substance.

  • rpdillon 16 hours ago

    Counterpoint to the sibling comment: posting your own site is fine. Your contributions are substantial, and your site is a well-organized repository of your work. Not everything fits (or belongs) in a comment.

    I'd chalk up the -4 to generic LLM hate, but I find examples of where LLMs do well to be useful, so I appreciated your post. It displays curiosity, and is especially defensible given your site has no ads, loads blazingly fast, and is filled with HN-relevant content, and doesn't even attempt to sell anything.

  • lossolo 17 hours ago

    And again you're linking to your site. Maybe try pasting the few relevant sentences instead of constantly pushing your content in almost every comment. That's what people find annoying. Maybe link to other people's stuff more, or just write what you think here on HN.

    If someone wants to read your blog, they will, they know it exists, and some people even submit your new articles here. There's no need to do what you're doing. Every day you're irritating more people with this behavior, and eventually the substance won't matter to them anymore, so you're acting against your own interests.

    Unless you want people to develop the same kind of ad blindness mechanism, where they automatically skip anything that looks like self promotion. Some people will just see a comment by simonw and do the same.

    A lot of people have told you this in many threads, but it seems you still don’t get it.

    • simonw 13 hours ago

      I'm determined to normalize linking to one's own writing, provided it's relevant to the conversation.

      • lossolo 13 hours ago

        I think you're misreading what the "normalization" problem actually is and why my comment got a lot of upvotes.

        You're not pushing against an arbitrary taboo where people dislike self links in principle. People already accept self links on HN when they're occasional and clearly relevant. What people are reacting to is the pattern when "my answer is a link to my site" becomes your default state, it stops reading like helpful reference and starts reading like your distribution strategy.

        And that's why "I'm determined to normalize it" probably won't work because you can't normalize your way out of other people's experience of friction. If your behavior reliably adds a speed bump to reading threads forcing people to context switch/click out and wonder if they're being marketed to then the community will develop a shortcut I mentioned in my previous comment which basically is : this is self promo so just ignore.

        If your goal is genuinely to share useful ideas, you're better off meeting people where they are: put the relevant 2-6 sentences directly in the comment, and then add something like "I wrote more about it on my blog" or whatever and if anyone is interested they will scroll through your blog (you have it in your profile so anyone can find it with one click) or ask for a link.

        Otherwise you're not "normalizing" anything, you're training readers to stop paying attention to you. And I assure you once that happens, it's hard to undo, because people won't relitigate your intent every time. They'll just scroll. It's a process that's already started, but you can still reverse it.

  • gaigalas 15 hours ago

    > can it run in WebAssembly?

    You can safely assume so. Bellard is the creator of jslinux. The news here would be if it _didn't_.

    > What's the difference to regular JavaScript?

    It's in the project's README!

    > Is it safe to use as a sandbox against attacks like the regex thing?

    This is not a sandbox design. It's a resource-constrained design like cesanta/mjs.

    ---

    If you vibe coded a microcontroller emulation demo, perhaps there would be less pushback.