Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | intervolz's commentslogin

Love this quote. In my youth, I attempted several times to use () for a thought within a larger sentence. My writing teacher at the time hated it! I never knew the correct way to do that or how to articulate it. "A parenthetical thought within a longer sentence" — I was so close!



Thanks, looks good! You should submit it


Submitted! Thank you for the encouragement.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46314672


Senior SWE, 7+ at Meta, ready to start tomorrow.

Location: San Francisco

CA Remote: Yes – hybrid preferred, but fully remote OK

Willing to relocate: No

Technologies: Python, JS, Automation, Linux, React, Three.js, RF Systems, Embedded Systems, Multithreading, AI Agent, Unity, Serial & Socket I/O

Website: https://intervolz.com

Resume: https://intervolz.com/downloads/mvolz_resume.pdf


Real-time systems engineer building insight from signals, sensors, and software.

Location: San Francisco, CA Remote: Yes – hybrid preferred, but fully remote OK Willing to relocate: No

Technologies: Python, TypeScript, Linux, WebSockets, React, Three.js, Blender, Postgres, Redis, RF Systems, Embedded Systems, Multithreading, Automation Frameworks, GLTF, Unity, Serial & Socket I/O

Website: [https://intervolz.com/resume.pdf](https://yourdomain.com/resume.pdf) Resume: [https://intervolz.com/downloads/mvolz_resume.pdf](https://intervolz.com/downloads/mvolz_resume.pdf) Email: maxwellvolz@gmail

---

I'm a senior software engineer with 10+ years of experience building full-stack systems at the intersection of hardware and software. Most recently I led AR/VR automation at Meta, built real-time performance tracing tools with Perfetto, and drove CPU/GPU profiling pipelines for next-gen wearable devices. Before that, I verified phased-array antenna hardware and built full-stack systems for the HAPS project (SoftBank acquisition).

I love turning messy real-world systems into interactive software tools. My skillset spans system design and integration, high-throughput automation, and modern tech stacks. I’m especially into creative 3D UIs, live visualization of physical systems, and tools that empower engineers and artists.

I'm looking for teams solving weird problems that may have physical interfaces, spatial tech, or just need a hacker who figures stuff out and makes it feel polished. Growth-stage startups or skunkworks teams are ideal.


"What happens when 4,500 people ask for the same feature? At Firefox, we build it."

What a weird flex. I think if you make >700 million dollars a year you should have someone driving instead of feature farming the comments section.


What a weird way to say they shouldn't listen to their users.


The parent is clearly bemoaning the lack of apparent creativity that comes from a FOSS golden child.

Yes, implement generic features like vertical tabs (but who wouldn't implement them at this point without nesting?), but some creative experiments in UI/UX that seek to improve the browsing experience might also be possible?


"These models have more than an individual mind could conceivably memorize."

...so what? Is memorization considered intelligence? Calculators have similar properties.

GeoGuessr is the modern nerds' Rubix Cube. The latest in "explore the world without risk of a sunburn".


Geoguessr is great fun, try it sometime.


does anyone care if they perform better or does even suggesting that make me a racist in the modern world?


If you read the complaint, the allegation is that controlling for performance evaluations, members of certain groups were preferred over others for promotion.


I don't have any insight, but given the culture that google projects, I would be skeptical of the integrity of their performance evaluations.


Why would group averages be helpful when making staffing decisions about individuals?


That's obvious, no?

If group X on average performs better than group Y, then objective hiring will lead to more group X bring hired. Then group Y takes you to court for discrimination.


It really depends on what assumptions you are making, your basis of comparison, and how you measure performance.

Does X perform better than Y in general or within the community. Does hiring match national population, the applicant pool, or the top 1% of the applicant pool? How do you measure performance?

These topics are rarely fleshed out in any public corporate policy. All I know is my bonus depends on increasing the % of minority employees.


I don’t think it’s obvious that summary statistics will be helpful unless they’re particularly carefully done. Where do averages come from? If individual data points are biased in the same direction (that is, not noise that cancels out) then the group average will be too.

This isn’t something you can just assume when you see someone quoting statistics. It could be a garbage study.


Is the Google applicant pool a representative sample of the group at large?


They generally aren't. See the ecological fallacy.


They can explain the "disparate impact".


He didn't say so


Exactly. You can't just simply assume that job performance is statistically independent of various seemingly unrelated traits. If you suspect age discrimination, you also can't just assume that age is uncorrelated with performance. Or being short sighted, or even things like weight or height. They may be uncorrelated, or they may be correlated.


Fun fact: You can almost always score at least $10-20k if you're fired from a job if you try hard enough.

I've been on the employer side of this... you fire someone who's performing badly, and then they come back 4 months later and sue the company for [insert made up thing here].

In our case, an ex-employee is suing us for not accommodating an anxiety and migraine disability, which they never disclosed and never requested accommodations for. So now we face a discrimination lawsuit (from a non-minority) based completely on falsehoods and things that never happened.

The reason people do this is because it works! Employers will almost always settle before it goes in front of a judge in order to avoid the hassle and cost of defending the claim.


It works, but court cases are public record. Good luck getting anyone to touch you with a ten foot pole afterwards, not like the candidate can prove why they weren't selected.


So HR pays to check this for every candidate? No wonder it's hard to get hired.


Lol in my state I can see every (unsealed) civil case with a simple online query. My landlords have pretty much all done it, I don't know if the background checks show it but it's an extra 15 seconds to hedge a 10k+ potential liability.


Though this problem seems to be mostly restricted to the US American legal system.


Job performance as measured, yes, it already accounts for all biases/traits, including age, appearance, personality, performance, race and all other known/unknown biases that the people measuring the performance have.


I think it matters, because minorities experience a lot of ways in which products fail them that probably would not have happened had their needs had been represented and prioritized. If a minority group is not represented in the development of a product, their needs are more likely to be neglected.


Products are developed for a specific market. If the market of the given minority group where large enough, there would be special providers only for that. If I go buy an Italian Pizza place, I expect to receive an Italian Pizza, and not an Italian Pizza with a Chinese nuance to it. That's when I go to a Fusion place. It's by definition impossible to make product that satisfies everyone.


I don't think I disagree, so this is perhaps a devil's advocate argument--to the extent a product is meant for somewhat general use, by integrating more perspectives during development, we might uncover blind spots and innovate in ways that resonate more deeply with their core audience, not less. Asking, “Whose needs might we be overlooking?” could be useful not because every minority requires a bespoke solution, but because overlooking them might mean missing opportunities to serve even the majority better.

From anecdotal experience with voice recognition software: early versions struggled with accents and also required training on your voice specifically, which limited their utility. Making models more flexible didn’t just help minority users with accents—I think it improved accuracy for everyone. Similarly, curb cuts on sidewalks, originally designed for accessibility users, now benefit parents with strollers and even those food delivery robots running around some cities.

Maybe one frame is to avoid unintentional exclusion? The pizza shop isn't obligated to, but could at least consider the fact that some people don't eat meat (or pork or whatever), and therefore keep the margherita on the menu to the benefit of everyone.


I agree that it's impossible to build a product that satisfies everyone, which is the issue with global tech companies. In my utopian world, we would educate people and develop tools so that communities can build their own tools to cater to their own needs (in the same spirit as unix). I think that's better than what we have today with technocrats in Silicon valley dictating how tech should look and function for the rest of the world.


It's obviously lacking a lot of controls if you arrive at the conclusion. Mostly just shows you are missing of a lot of context.


Your statement implies the assumption the minorities in this class action are underpaid because they perform worse than white and asian employees. I'm not sure that helps you not look like a racist.

The article doesn't go into details, so it's probably a safe bet not to make these sorts of assumptions at all.


Psychology has determined there is no non-racist way to evaluate performance: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43407157


this is an exceptional example of modern website. very nice job. may i ask what framework you are using for the UX?


Same. This is more than a nit. It's pretty much a need.



this post made me immediately reach out for a raise. im not good at this part of the job. i hate this part of the job. im an engineer. first, last, and most importantly.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: