I had a Roomba about 10 years ago. It was OK but required a lot of “handholding” to not run over cords, kids toys, etc. It just was not really worth it to use it in an environment where you can’t keep everything nailed down and off the floor at all times. Relocated it to a basement level where we had much more empty but sill finished space. The cat angrily pooped just outside her litter box and the Roomba ran right over it and shredded them turds all over the floor. Since then it has lived in my mind as the dumbest smart product. The real problem for me has been that I want something to straighten out my living spaces, not to vacuum the floors. Vacuuming is quick and a good vacuum cleaner (old school bagged kind, not a silly filter one), will do a far better job than a little battery powered gizmo anyways. But a robot capable of picking up the toys my kids like to leave out, or bringing abandoned coffee mugs to the sink (can you tell I live with multiple adults and children?) would be worth quite a bit to me. A robot capable of washing my dishes and putting away my laundry would be worth more. One capable of preparing meals would be worth more to me than a car. Of course they would have to be 100% open source with easily replaceable and repairable components, which is where I think most of these types of projects go wrong. I remember seeing the Chefee demo and it was very cool but the main problem is that you aren’t buying a product, you are investing in the idea that the company behind it won’t go belly up in two years and brick your $60,000 chef/cabinet/fridge thing and that it won’t sell itself to e.g. Google which will cram it full of ads and spyware.
She won the Turing Award. That's hardly being forgotten. Is this an interview with her, purportedly made five years after her death? Yes, apparently. At the very end, it says: > This interview transcript is a work of dramatised historical reconstruction. Frances Allen died on 4th August 2020, and cannot speak. The words, reflections, and responses attributed to her in this document are constructed from historical records, published interviews, biographical materials, technical papers, and documented accounts of her life and work – but they are not her actual words, spoken in real time. > What preceded this was a fictional dramatisation, constructed with the intention of being historically responsible and intellectually faithful to what is known of Frances Allen’s thinking, her work, her values, and her reflections on her career. The interview format was used to explore her contributions, challenges, and insights in a narrative form – one that aims to capture the nuance, personality, and candid self-reflection that archival records alone rarely convey. > This is an imaginative reconstruction of what Frances Allen might have said, had she been able to sit down for an extended conversation in December 2025, with the benefit of hindsight and the perspective of someone reflecting on a complete career arc. It draws on: ... > This is not a transcript of actual words she spoke. It is not a formal biography. It is not an attempt to present speculation as fact or to invent details about her life that are not grounded in historical evidence. But how many people will read far enough to spot that note? This stinks of AI slop. There's an actual 75-minute interview with Allen made in 02008 at https://www.computerhistory.org/collections/catalog/102701969/ , with an 18-page transcript.
↙ time adjusted for second-chance
Ask HN: What Are You Working On? (December 2025)
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