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Hack (coder), n./adj. — bad
Hacker, n. –good or bad
To hack (code), v. — ambiguously good or bad
Hacked (code), adj. — ambiguously good or bad
Hacky (code), adj. — usually bad
What is fascinating to consider, is how the notion of a bend, hook, curve came to mean different things with opposite connotations. Then, over time, two or three currents of meaning were brought together in a new human endeavor of logical thinking, binary logic and clear lines — the world of computing. This new endeavor is equal parts tedious, destructive, violent, daring and creative with some amounts of evil sprinkled in.
Ironically (or predictably), harnessing ambiguity—the natural enemy of computing—is now the goal of the tech world. In the modern world of computing we are trying to build machines that behave in this distinctly non-binary, highly-stochastic way.
Neural nets, or more broadly AI, work because they are a mimesis of the squishy, non-binary, probabilistic brains that created all the meanings of “hack” from one original noun.
And yet, the image of the human brain is still one that connotes a meaning of utmost intelligence for us.
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