I've only seen a few of his talks, can't speak to his talks in general, but the ones I've seen have all been "big idea" talks, which (IMO) usually don't work well outside of Bret Victor-style inspirational talks. Most of these talks (w/any speaker) end up being a rorschach test.
-
-
I mean, some kind of justification is usually provided, but rarely one I find compelling. An example would be, types are pointless because you end up with function signatures like (float, float, float, ...) with 17 floats, which isn't helpful (actual example from a RH talk).
-
@threadreaderapp Kindly unroll. - 1 more reply
New conversation -
-
-
I’d dispute that about Go (I think it’s true of chess as well, but I know more about Go). Of course, we observe that a given player wins or loses, or is better than us. But we don’t necessarily have an adequate reasoned justification for why a move is good.
-
So the expert says “don’t play here, play here”, and the normal player says “it doesn’t make sense to me”, and the expert can’t really say anything convincing. They just have to say “trust me”.
- 4 more replies
New conversation -
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.