There should be a way to flag and remove comments that don't violate any guidelines, but are just objectively wrong, in a way that doesn't penalize the author. Like "you tried, but nothing about this is correct, so it goes to the bottom of the comment section above all the dead/shadowbanned comments."
I prefer the back-and-forth the way it is now. I perversely enjoy reading a comment and "buying into it" only to realize from a reply that I was naive or too trusting. Or, at least, that there are more angles to the story.
This helps you build up an immune system that is skeptical. If most wrong answers were removed/flagged/hidden then the remaining wrong but unflagged would be even more a problem.
Assuming everyone is an idiot, and designing around that basis, seems like a great way to foster a community of idiots.
And unlike stackoverflow, there’s not really any good reason for anyone to think a top-level comment is somehow authoritative, especially because the best comments on HN tend to be replies
> I perversely enjoy reading a comment and "buying into it" only to realize from a reply that I was naive or too trusting.
Good for debate and free speech in general, but bad for your grasp of the facts in the case every time there don't happen to be any corrective replies.
Hard to weighs pros vs cons.
(ObSillyPun: Naah, just put them on the scales! But remember that a lighter pro will often beat a heavier con anyway!)
I want to avoid the downvotes, though. Downvoting is for things that are off topic or don't add to the conversation, or comments made in bad faith. Someone who just happens to be wrong may very well be commenting earnestly in good faith.
It seems like their point still stands. If there were 100 million mainframes, x86 would still have more, and the standards for skills and experience would still be different due to the nature of deployment.
Even small banks. Basically every bank that was around 20 or 30 years ago started with mainframes (or very large minis) and still uses them. I'm not in that business, but I've seen the server rooms, and I haven't heard of a bank switching over to a rack of PCs, yet. There might be, but that would still hundreds, perhaps a thousand banks in Europe alone running on large-ish iron.
There might be less mainframes in total, though. The bank where my parents worked had 4 at different sites, but now runs on a single one, AFAIK.
> I haven't heard of a bank switching over to a rack of PCs, yet.
Right. The main limitation is the core software platform. This is an extraordinarily complex system that requires expensive regulatory sign-off/audit/etc.
There are some vendors in the space who are trying to do a new bank + new core. Even if someone had an awesome x86 clustered core system with 100% regulatory approval, any existing mid-tier bank converting to it would be an ~8 figure ordeal.
But the OS, database, network definition and workflow languages are still proprietary. Which goes back to the original question: where is that knowledge store/discussed?
There are F500s that have 1k mainframes each, today, in 2022.