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41,788,100
comment
ickelbawd
2024-10-09T14:01:52
null
This person seems to be suffering from the Curse of Knowledge. It’s unsurprising to me that non-technical users will gravitate towards the tools that look like what they know (packaged software with forms and buttons) instead of something that they’ve never once looked at (except perhaps in anguish).
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41,775,238
41,775,238
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41,788,101
comment
stonethrowaway
2024-10-09T14:01:55
null
It’s a genre of fiction, and should be classified as such.
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41,788,087
41,786,818
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41,788,102
comment
jerf
2024-10-09T14:02:02
null
Backend code lives together better too. It&#x27;s trivial for me to set up a frontend web server that points one URL to a handler in Python, another in Go, another in Java, and whatever else I like. Said frontend can also do a lot of useful abstraction over things like login and authentication, and even to a limited extent authorization. Backend does not compose perfectly but it composes together reasonably well. This architecture may be problematic for other reasons, but it isn&#x27;t intrinsically a huge problem right out of the gate.<p>Frontend, you largely have to pick a team. Trying to run multiple frontends in the same page has a number of problems, if nothing other than each of them gets so large that even just one can impact performance, but they will also fight over events, and you can&#x27;t cross the streams, etc. The whole structure is more winner-take-all, by its nature.
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41,783,901
41,781,457
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41,788,103
comment
alex_john_m
2024-10-09T14:02:13
null
I say the EU should adopt the Romanian language. It&#x27;s spoken the same way as it is written.<p>That should solve all spelling problems forever. :)))
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null
41,787,647
41,787,647
null
[ 41788911, 41789705 ]
null
null
41,788,104
comment
aitchnyu
2024-10-09T14:02:20
null
Do you use a copy paste detector to find third copy?
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null
41,785,443
41,758,371
null
null
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null
41,788,105
comment
consteval
2024-10-09T14:02:24
null
You can verify that a particular camera produced a particular photograph. Essentially, the camera would sign the photograph. Random internet person to other random internet person it wouldn&#x27;t matter, I imagine. But for, say, a news paper, they can verify that a particular image was produced by a particular camera at a particular time.
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null
41,782,042
41,767,648
null
null
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null
41,788,106
comment
ooFieTh6
2024-10-09T14:02:35
null
I mean, the .su TLD which was for the USSR, still exists, and still taking registrations, so I don&#x27;t think a region stopping existing as far as ISO country codes are concerned, is <i>always</i> going to be fatal - Mauritius I imagine could petition ICANN to keep it alive (and make some revenue from it)
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41,787,719
41,787,719
null
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41,788,107
comment
matrix2003
2024-10-09T14:02:42
null
All the major desktop OS have AV engines built by excellent teams. I do trust this more than McAfee or Norton. I also trust it not to take my machine down as much as CrowdStrike.
null
null
41,787,272
41,779,952
null
[ 41790529 ]
null
null
41,788,108
comment
rsanek
2024-10-09T14:02:48
null
[flagged]
null
null
41,787,525
41,785,265
null
[ 41789364 ]
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41,788,109
story
burgerrito
2024-10-09T14:02:55
Ask HN: How do you write OpenAPI docs?
The way I see it, there are at least two ways of doing this: via codegen&#x2F;programmatically or writing it manually. Which side are you on?<p>If you use codegen or similar, what tool do you use? For example there is `swaggo` in Go language, utoipa in Rust, Fastify (JavaScript) can has built-in way to write schema IIRC.<p>If you write the JSON&#x2F;YAML manually, how do you write it? Honestly, I want to write it manually but the lack of IDE autocomplete makes it very hard.<p>Or is there any other way to write it, lemme know.
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3
null
41,788,109
3
[ 41788169, 41788133, 41788448 ]
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null
41,788,110
story
bo0tzz
2024-10-09T14:02:55
Ethical Data: Balancing User Privacy and Trust
null
https://futo.org/blog/telemetry-position/
2
null
41,788,110
1
[ 41788205 ]
null
null
41,788,111
comment
dekhn
2024-10-09T14:02:59
null
I wasn&#x27;t expecting to see David Baker in the list (just Demis and John). But I&#x27;m really glad to see it... David is a great guy.<p>At CASP (the biannual protein structure prediction competition) around 2000, I sat down with David and told him that eventually machine learning would supplant humans at structure prediction (at the time Rosetta was already the leading structure prediction&#x2F;design tool, but was filled with a bunch of ad-hoc hand-coded features and optimizers). he chuckled and said he doubted it, every time he updated the Rosetta model with newer PDB structures, the predictions got worse.<p>I will say that the Nobel committee needs to stop saying &quot;protein folding&quot; when they mean &quot;protein structure prediction&quot;.
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null
41,786,101
41,786,101
null
[ 41788364, 41788938, 41789304, 41789998 ]
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41,788,112
comment
sevensor
2024-10-09T14:03:00
null
I like to think about this as securing the perimeter. Inside, everything is typed, static analysis constrains what can happen, and I am never surprised as long as the code type checks. Outside, data is probably garbage. All the effort goes into locking down the interface. Pydantic is ok for this, although I find it too intrusive for my taste, and I think mixing arbitrary validity predicates with structural correctness is a mistake. Still, I’d much rather walk into a codebase that uses Pydantic than one that assumes its inputs are valid, because confidently writing business logic that can assume its inputs are correct is incredibly liberating.
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41,783,927
41,781,855
null
null
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null
41,788,113
comment
Spivak
2024-10-09T14:03:13
null
I actually go full-descriptivist on this and it erases all the posturing. If you&#x27;re a speaker of English, native or otherwise, and you say or write something purposefully and don&#x27;t consider it a mistake then it&#x27;s correct.<p>Wether other people will join you in your new usage is yet undetermined but also doesn&#x27;t really matter. AAVE is the perfect example of this happening large scale in the real world.
null
null
41,787,980
41,787,647
null
[ 41789000, 41788160 ]
null
null
41,788,114
comment
devjab
2024-10-09T14:03:21
null
I find that it’s typically the other way around as things like DRY, SOLID and most things “clean code” are hopeless anti-patterns peddled by people like Uncle Bob who haven’t actually worked in software development since Fortran was the most popular language. Not that a lot of these things are bad as a principle. They come with a lot of “okish” ideas, but if you follow them religiously you’re going to write really bad code.<p>I think the only principle in programming I think can be followed at all times is YAGNI (you aren’t going to need it). I think every programming course, book, whatever should start by telling you to never, ever, abstract things before you absolutely can’t avoid it. This includes DRY. It’s a billion times better to have similar code in multiple locations that are isolated in their purpose, so that down the line, two-hundred developers later you’re not sitting with code where you’ll need to “go to definition” fifteen times before you get to the code you actually need to find.<p>Of course the flip-side is that, sometimes, it’s ok to abstract or reuse code. But if you don’t have to, you should never ever do either. Which is exactly the opposite of what junior developers do, because juniors are taught all these “hopeless” OOP practices and they are taught to mindlessly follow them by the book. Then 10 years later (or like 50 years in the case of Uncle Bob) they realise that functional programming is just easier to maintain and more fun to work with because everything you need to know is happening right next to each other and not in some obscure service class deep in some ridiculous inheritance tree.
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null
41,785,314
41,758,371
null
[ 41793703 ]
null
null
41,788,115
comment
TheCoelacanth
2024-10-09T14:03:29
null
There was never a time when people had to fear for their life for not wanting to work at a concentration camp. It was a volunteer assignment. Transferring to a different assignment would lead to a loss of status, but not serious punishment.
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null
41,783,129
41,776,721
null
null
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null
41,788,116
comment
akater
2024-10-09T14:03:35
null
An ordered pair is a useful data structure, and it&#x27;s beneficial to have special short names for accessors to its elements. Humanity got very lucky with the names “car” and “cdr”. Naggum does point that out.<p>Any rule about any language could be labeled a barrier to its success because any such rule contributes to the cognitive load, making learning the language slightly more difficult than it would be without that rule. What matters more is how much cognitive load is there after you learn the rules. Common Lisp is very successful at it.
null
null
41,740,443
41,718,203
null
null
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41,788,117
story
dunyakirkali
2024-10-09T14:03:36
From Manager to Multiplier: Elevate Your Team with SOPA
null
https://blog.incrementalforgetting.tech/p/from-manager-to-multiplier-elevate
1
null
41,788,117
1
[ 41788118 ]
null
null
41,788,118
comment
dunyakirkali
2024-10-09T14:03:37
null
Engineering managers play a crucial role in amplifying their team&#x27;s impact. The key to becoming a multiplier lies in helping your team work more efficiently, boosting productivity. To aid managers in this, a simple yet effective method has been devised: &quot;See, Observe, Prioritize, Act.&quot;<p>See: Understand your sphere of influence within the organization and identify where you can make the most impact. Observe: Gather data by talking to your team and understanding their pain points. Prioritize: Use an impact vs. effort matrix to decide which issues to tackle first. Act: Implement solutions that maximize impact across the team. This method helps engineering managers drive greater team efficiency and achieve more with their resources.
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null
41,788,117
41,788,117
null
null
null
null
41,788,119
comment
pluc
2024-10-09T14:03:49
null
They&#x27;ve already made their argument: WordPress.org has nothing to do with WordPress, Automattic or the WordPress Foundation. It&#x27;s owned and operated by Matt privately solely out of the kindness of his heart and his love for open-source.
null
null
41,787,561
41,791,369
null
[ 41793767 ]
null
null
41,788,120
comment
makeitdouble
2024-10-09T14:03:58
null
Just let me put a blinking &quot;under construction&quot; gif on my form page while I&#x27;m trying to figure how this cgi thing works.
null
null
41,786,297
41,775,238
null
null
null
null
41,788,121
story
yamrzou
2024-10-09T14:04:55
Governing the Commons by Elinor Ostrom (Book Review)
null
https://www.resilience.org/stories/2013-11-01/governing-the-commons-by-elinor-ostrom-review/
1
null
41,788,121
0
null
null
null
41,788,122
comment
itronitron
2024-10-09T14:04:57
null
I don&#x27;t know that I have ever seen that in the wild, but probably only because I refuse to accept that it exists.
null
null
41,788,006
41,787,647
null
[ 41788899, 41788154, 41788159 ]
null
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41,788,123
comment
oneeyedpigeon
2024-10-09T14:05:05
null
The term &quot;(green)grocer&#x27;s apostrophe&quot; refers to the misuse of the apostrophe in plurals, which seemingly occurs disproportionately on signs in those shops. It&#x27;s ironic that it contains a tricky-to-place apostrophe. Should the meaning be &quot;the apostrophe of the greengrocer&quot; or should it be &quot;the apostrophe that greengrocers misuse&quot;? Either works fine. For the same reason, I always have to check whether it&#x27;s &quot;mother&#x27;s day&quot; or &quot;mothers&#x27; day&quot; because... it&#x27;s both!
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41,788,076
41,787,647
null
null
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null
41,788,124
comment
phkahler
2024-10-09T14:05:12
null
&gt;&gt; Sadly the article didn&#x27;t get into power draw too much.<p>They covered power quite a bit, but claimed the biggest power draw comes from memory access. I got the impression they were blaming AMDs increased memory bandwidth on their smaller cache size and hence a form of inefficiency. But higher frame rates are going to require more memory accesses. The smaller cache should have less impact on the number of writes needed. IMHO just some top line power consumption numbers are good, but trying to get into <i>why</i> one is higher than the other seems fruitless.
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null
41,787,982
41,780,929
null
null
null
null
41,788,125
comment
endemic
2024-10-09T14:05:16
null
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.ph&#x2F;s2A8Z" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.ph&#x2F;s2A8Z</a>
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41,788,033
41,755,303
null
null
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null
41,788,126
comment
inglor_cz
2024-10-09T14:05:19
null
I meant &quot;niche&quot; in the same sense as fishing is. About 2 per cent of Czechs are fishers. At least 15 times as many smoke.<p>That said, I was too vague. There is a huge difference between the world where production of tobacco was <i>never</i> profitable vs. where production of tobacco, hypothetically, stopped being profitable yesterday.
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null
41,787,868
41,786,461
null
[ 41788265 ]
null
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41,788,127
comment
_heimdall
2024-10-09T14:05:21
null
The hot take here, and one I&#x27;d be really interested to see proven wrong, is that we can&#x27;t have cookies <i>and</i> privacy online.<p>User authorization is a very specific use case. Cookies are a generic solution, if we only care about that one use case there is likely a solution that wouldn&#x27;t open the door for the privacy-destroying tracking that we don&#x27;t want.<p>As far as SPAs go, without cookies SPAs could still have issues. User author tokens can be stored in local storage and included with all API requests, but that has its own security issues.
null
null
41,787,361
41,786,012
null
[ 41788373 ]
null
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41,788,128
comment
changliu
2024-10-09T14:05:22
null
I wonder how these market share analyses are counting the &quot;search market&quot;. As Google and other search players incorporate more answer-driven search, the boundaries between search and chat are getting really blurred.
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null
41,783,331
41,783,331
null
null
null
null
41,788,129
story
tie-in
2024-10-09T14:05:28
The Management Team (2012)
null
https://avc.com/2012/02/the-management-team-guest-post-from-joel-spolsky/
1
null
41,788,129
0
null
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41,788,130
comment
voxic11
2024-10-09T14:05:28
null
This seems to have pretty modern high end hardware <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.techradar.com&#x2F;pro&#x2F;phone-communications&#x2F;kyocera-duraforce-pro-3-review" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.techradar.com&#x2F;pro&#x2F;phone-communications&#x2F;kyocera-d...</a><p>Sadly seems to be only available through Verizon though.
null
null
41,787,633
41,765,098
null
[ 41788226 ]
null
null
41,788,131
story
hooverd
2024-10-09T14:05:40
Put yourself anywhere in the world speaking about anything you want
null
https://twitter.com/levelsio/status/1843683876935479623
1
null
41,788,131
0
null
null
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41,788,132
comment
consteval
2024-10-09T14:05:43
null
I&#x27;m speaking to cultural biases in the west, I&#x27;m not speaking from a personal perspective. Physical laborers are percieved as humans of lesser value, and that&#x27;s why the bar or standard for what is mistreatment of them is much higher. We do the same with, for example, prisoners. They are humans of lesser value, so the standard for mistreatment is really high. We can force them to work, physically hurt them, starve them a bit, and the average person doesn&#x27;t care. We have to do something really bad for people to start caring.<p>That&#x27;s why your office worker can take a 15-minute walk and nobody bats an eye. But the grocery store cashier wants to sit down, and millions of people lose their mind.
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null
41,782,888
41,776,861
null
null
null
null
41,788,133
comment
wg0
2024-10-09T14:05:48
null
- Break OpenAPI files into different files and use swagger-cli to combine them.<p>- Generate server&#x2F;client for go using oapi-codegen and for Typescript using OpenAPI.<p>The tooling on the IDE side certainly lacks a bit but you don&#x27;t miss it much.<p>I have yet to evaluate <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;typespec.io&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;typespec.io&#x2F;</a> if that fits the purpose.
null
null
41,788,109
41,788,109
null
null
null
null
41,788,134
comment
knodi
2024-10-09T14:05:50
null
&gt; I feel like our programming tools are pretty good for programming in the small, but I suspect we&#x27;re still waiting for a breakthrough for being able to actually make complex software reliably. (And, no, I don&#x27;t just mean yet another &quot;framework&quot; or another language that&#x27;s just C with a fancier type system or novel memory management)<p>Readability is for human optimization for self or for other people&#x27;s posterity and code comprehension to the readers mind. We need a new way to visualize&#x2F;comprehension code that doesn&#x27;t involve heavy reading and the read&#x27;s personal capabilities of syntax parsing&#x2F;comprehension.<p>This is something we will likely never be able to get right with our current man machine interfaces; keyboard, mouse&#x2F;touch, video and audio.<p>Just a thought. As always I reserve the right to be wrong.
null
null
41,786,948
41,758,371
null
[ 41789386 ]
null
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41,788,135
story
yamrzou
2024-10-09T14:05:50
Software design lessons from "How Buildings Learn"
null
https://haresfaiez.github.io/2021/08/25/software-design-lessons-from-how-buildings-learn.html
1
null
41,788,135
0
null
null
null
41,788,136
comment
oneeyedpigeon
2024-10-09T14:05:52
null
Different words. &quot;His dog&quot; means the dog belonging to him. &quot;He&#x27;s a dog&quot; means &quot;he is a dog&quot;.
null
null
41,788,045
41,787,647
null
[ 41788857 ]
null
null
41,788,137
comment
teamonkey
2024-10-09T14:06:03
null
You cannot separate the human equation from the technology.<p>As I said: &quot;The big problem with nuclear is not technological, it’s guaranteeing that whoever is responsible for it will be competent, capable and solvent for hundreds of years.&quot;
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null
41,779,009
41,765,580
null
null
null
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41,788,138
comment
JohnFen
2024-10-09T14:06:04
null
Indeed so. I&#x27;ve never stopped using pseudonyms on the internet. I have a few of them I&#x27;ve used consistently for decades. I think the important thing in internet identity is continuity of the identity, not whether or not it corresponds with real-world identity.<p>I have never used my real-world identity on the internet, and won&#x27;t start now. I think it&#x27;s a bit nuts that people are willing to, but to each their own.
null
null
41,780,166
41,776,065
null
null
null
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41,788,139
comment
Mistletoe
2024-10-09T14:06:06
null
If there was a drug with similar outcomes as social media would it remain legal?
null
null
41,787,845
41,787,845
null
[ 41788274, 41788746 ]
null
null
41,788,140
comment
nat
2024-10-09T14:06:08
null
I would definitely prefer this. I&#x27;ve never wanted to see the &quot;cache&quot; stores for all (XDG-compliant) apps, but often want to see everything for a single app.
null
null
41,787,828
41,785,511
null
[ 41790755, 41791353 ]
null
null
41,788,141
comment
drewbitt
2024-10-09T14:06:13
null
&gt; was this due to them speaking in a different language in actual professional meetings<p>This happened frequently at a WITCH I worked at out of college. The meeting would be in English then have segments change in the middle as certain speakers switched languages. Luckily, I often had a coworker stand up for me to mention to use English although I did miss many conversations.
null
null
41,786,949
41,785,265
null
[ 41791212 ]
null
null
41,788,142
comment
wrp
2024-10-09T14:06:15
null
Searching for explanation, I wouldn&#x27;t focus on recent trends. Continentals have been remarking on the high crime rate in urban England for centuries. As for Japan, the Tokugawa regime (1603-1868) was a draconian police state and the tradition of heavy social control has continued in various forms. It would be more interesting to examine urban societies that have a low crime rate along with more relaxed social control.
null
null
41,787,986
41,785,023
null
null
null
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41,788,143
story
xen0f0n
2024-10-09T14:06:28
Spectral Reflectance Newsletter #93
null
https://www.spectralreflectance.space/p/spectral-reflectance-newsletter-93
2
null
41,788,143
0
[ 41788144 ]
null
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41,788,144
comment
null
2024-10-09T14:06:28
null
null
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41,788,143
41,788,143
null
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true
null
41,788,145
comment
l72
2024-10-09T14:06:46
null
I had a similar issue, of moving from the US to Germany in 2000 and my spouse bringing her favorite DVDs with us. However, once we got there, she was unable to watch any of them, as all the DVD players were for the EU region, while her DVDs were for the US.<p>She is not a technical person, but she is now very acutely aware of B.S. restrictions like this (and later DRM on mp3s) and how to get around them.
null
null
41,785,599
41,784,069
null
null
null
null
41,788,146
story
selmetwa
2024-10-09T14:06:48
Writing Arabic in English
null
https://sherifelmetwally.com/writing/writing-arabic-in-english
2
null
41,788,146
1
[ 41788147 ]
null
null
41,788,147
comment
selmetwa
2024-10-09T14:06:48
null
Journey in creating a phonetic Arabic keyboard
null
null
41,788,146
41,788,146
null
null
null
null
41,788,148
comment
consteval
2024-10-09T14:07:09
null
Neither the pricing nor the rating are transparent. They&#x27;re just kind of transparent, and you&#x27;re relying on trust in Uber.
null
null
41,781,237
41,776,861
null
[ 41789693 ]
null
null
41,788,149
comment
t0mas88
2024-10-09T14:07:16
null
Brilliant move, then use the money to support those that are less well off. You can have the ultra-rich bragging about how much they paid, while those that need it most are benefitting. A real win-win.
null
null
41,783,821
41,780,569
null
null
null
null
41,788,150
comment
mglz
2024-10-09T14:07:24
null
People get upset about this while you encounter statements like &quot;life your live&quot; regularly, sometimes even on TV.
null
null
41,787,647
41,787,647
null
null
null
null
41,788,151
comment
teamonkey
2024-10-09T14:07:35
null
And yet it was not. Can you guarantee that the operating board resposible for a future reactor would not make a similar mistake?
null
null
41,773,376
41,765,580
null
null
null
null
41,788,152
comment
lchengify
2024-10-09T14:07:46
null
Didn&#x27;t know he worked on Black &amp; White. Black &amp; White was really ahead of it&#x27;s time for 2001, it did a much better job of having NPC simulations in groups based on how you played as a god.
null
null
41,786,662
41,786,101
null
null
null
null
41,788,153
comment
itronitron
2024-10-09T14:08:03
null
So is this the proper form?<p>-&gt; it&#x27;s putting the lotion on its skin
null
null
41,787,790
41,787,647
null
null
null
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41,788,154
comment
oneeyedpigeon
2024-10-09T14:08:15
null
I believe the term originated here in the UK, where it&#x27;s actually pretty common. Although, ironically, greengrocers aren&#x27;t so much anymore.
null
null
41,788,122
41,787,647
null
null
null
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41,788,155
comment
null
2024-10-09T14:08:27
null
null
null
null
41,759,175
41,759,175
null
null
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null
41,788,156
comment
1970-01-01
2024-10-09T14:08:35
null
The keyboard and mouse were probably USB.
null
null
41,787,095
41,779,952
null
[ 41788572 ]
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null
41,788,157
comment
Zababa
2024-10-09T14:08:37
null
In that specific article, &quot;OOP&quot; seems to be mostly about dependency injection and structural typing, ie you can pass to a function a Logger, all Loggers have the same interface but they do different things.<p>In Go this could be a function or a constructor (that are also functions) that takes a Logger interface.<p>I only have vague knowledge of Haskell but I think you could achieve this by having Logger be a record, containing the different functions, and pass different &quot;implementations&quot; of Logger to functions that need them?
null
null
41,786,840
41,786,840
null
null
null
null
41,788,158
comment
DevX101
2024-10-09T14:08:48
null
If you gave the $300,000 Bezos got from his father to 10,000 random Americans in 1994, none of them would have created a company the equivalent of Amazon&#x27;s scale.
null
null
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null
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null
null
41,788,159
comment
automatic6131
2024-10-09T14:08:50
null
If you could of seen some of the spelling mistakes I of, you would of run away screaming, and there&#x27;s nothing else you should of done.
null
null
41,788,122
41,787,647
null
[ 41788924 ]
null
null
41,788,160
comment
oneeyedpigeon
2024-10-09T14:09:03
null
&quot;Wether&quot;—I see what you did there...
null
null
41,788,113
41,787,647
null
null
null
null
41,788,161
comment
PaulDavisThe1st
2024-10-09T14:09:08
null
When the notion of what a &quot;string&quot; is differs so much from language to language, i18n is never going to be an effective part of POSIX.
null
null
41,785,502
41,774,871
null
null
null
null
41,788,162
comment
jrochkind1
2024-10-09T14:09:20
null
I had to read and think carefully enough about what you just explained (on second try!) to feel like I understood it, so I&#x27;m not at all surprised if other people are confused about or misinterpret what they are seeing! (I&#x27;m not an htmx user though).<p>Actually, I guess, then, OP just had an off-by-one error? Imagine requests [r0, r1, r2 ... rN], where r0 is still in flight... OP thought r0..r(n-1) would be cancelled, in fact just r1..r(n-1) will be cancelled (I think?). Or maybe OP understood it but just mis-described it!<p>I am curious to hear the reasoning&#x2F;use cases for this choice being the default strategy.
null
null
41,782,482
41,781,457
null
[ 41793434 ]
null
null
41,788,163
comment
hsyehbeidhh
2024-10-09T14:09:31
null
[dead]
null
null
41,786,663
41,785,265
null
null
null
true
41,788,164
story
strict9
2024-10-09T14:09:36
Large French ski resort to close as snow shortage leaves it struggling
null
https://www.cnn.com/2024/10/09/travel/alpe-du-grande-serre-france-ski-resort-closes-climate-crisis/index.html
3
null
41,788,164
1
[ 41788299 ]
null
null
41,788,165
comment
liotier
2024-10-09T14:09:41
null
I had a PS&#x2F;2 keylogger disguised as an extension cable, controllable by specific keystroke and it would dump its records as typed text... Simple and efficient !
null
null
41,787,610
41,779,952
null
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41,788,166
comment
null
2024-10-09T14:09:53
null
null
null
null
41,787,589
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null
null
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null
41,788,167
comment
hanjeanwat
2024-10-09T14:10:06
null
excellent longread on the development of AlphaFold - with interviews with Baker + Jumper and more: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.quantamagazine.org&#x2F;how-ai-revolutionized-protein-science-but-didnt-end-it-20240626&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.quantamagazine.org&#x2F;how-ai-revolutionized-protein...</a>
null
null
41,786,101
41,786,101
null
null
null
null
41,788,168
comment
pvg
2024-10-09T14:10:10
null
That&#x27;s addressed in the Show HN rules, take a look at <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;showhn.html">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;showhn.html</a>
null
null
41,785,031
41,784,952
null
null
null
null
41,788,169
comment
ooFieTh6
2024-10-09T14:10:11
null
Depends rather on the project.<p>So, in my current role (Go) I generate part of the code for new APIs that I am implementing, <i>from</i> OpenAPI specs. I just write those JSON specs manually in my IDE - The JetBrains tools (not sure if it&#x27;s a plugin?) have a real-time preview you can have up side by side, which is good enough, with the openapi standard open on the other monitor.<p>While in an old role we had a legacy (Java) system which was a bit of a pain for others to integrate with, so we did the reverse - With a little bit of work we had an endpoint serving up a Swagger UI with autogenerated API docs (based on our comments&#x2F;annotations) for people to read, for all those old existing APIs.
null
null
41,788,109
41,788,109
null
null
null
null
41,788,170
story
brideoflinux
2024-10-09T14:10:16
MX Linux: Hurricane Milton Will Affect Package Updates
null
https://fossforce.com/2024/10/mx-linux-hurricane-milton-will-affect-package-updates/
2
null
41,788,170
0
null
null
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41,788,171
comment
RegnisGnaw
2024-10-09T14:10:18
null
What they need is learn from Canada and have a language police. Go around and fine business that don&#x27;t follow the rules of German properly.
null
null
41,787,647
41,787,647
null
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null
null
41,788,172
comment
wodenokoto
2024-10-09T14:10:25
null
It’s called “self documenting code” and the way you self document code it is by taking all your comments and make them into functions, named after your would-be comment.<p>I’m not a fan either.
null
null
41,787,915
41,758,371
null
[ 41788747 ]
null
null
41,788,173
comment
kyledrake
2024-10-09T14:10:42
null
Indeed there&#x27;s really nothing positive to be had from coming out as Satoshi at this point regardless of who it is. Criminals and governments will be falling over each other to try to get their take.
null
null
41,784,755
41,783,609
null
[ 41790176 ]
null
null
41,788,174
comment
matrix2003
2024-10-09T14:10:44
null
What’s wrong with the brand-name AV engines and security controls shipped with the OS? To me, it’s mostly just a lack of trust on the part of management.
null
null
41,785,335
41,779,952
null
[ 41789618 ]
null
null
41,788,175
comment
jeffbee
2024-10-09T14:10:51
null
Can we get the other half to convert? Gendered articles are so annoying to remember, especially if you have to travel between German-speaking places that don&#x27;t agree on all the noun genders. English speakers cannot be expected to understand this!
null
null
41,788,017
41,787,647
null
[ 41789390 ]
null
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41,788,176
story
geox
2024-10-09T14:11:19
Pilot dies mid-flight, prompting emergency landing at JFK
null
https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/turkish-airlines-pilot-dies-jfk-emergency-landing/5871494/
2
null
41,788,176
0
[ 41788180 ]
null
null
41,788,177
story
mh_
2024-10-09T14:11:22
Vendor Booths don't have to suck (and why your startup should reconsider them)
null
https://blog.thinkst.com/2024/10/rsac-blackhat-booths-dont-have-to-suck.html
1
null
41,788,177
0
null
null
null
41,788,178
comment
pjot
2024-10-09T14:11:22
null
The difference lies in how we conceptualize the noun:<p>- Computer code is seen as a continuous substance or body of work, like &quot;writing&quot; or &quot;music.&quot;<p>- Other types of codes are seen as discrete units or systems.<p>It&#x27;s similar to how we say &quot;information&quot; (uncountable) but &quot;facts&quot; (countable), even though they&#x27;re related concepts.
null
null
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null
[ 41789960, 41790033 ]
null
null
41,788,179
comment
barbazoo
2024-10-09T14:11:24
null
Interesting. So no USB camera, headset, etc either?
null
null
41,785,675
41,779,952
null
[ 41788423, 41788363 ]
null
null
41,788,180
comment
null
2024-10-09T14:11:40
null
null
null
null
41,788,176
41,788,176
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null
41,788,181
comment
zorked
2024-10-09T14:11:42
null
Brazil had a bad problem with technical books being translated by generalist translators who just looked up the word in the dictionary and used the first translation they saw. So many translations are extremely hard to read because of that.
null
null
41,783,564
41,779,576
null
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null
null
41,788,182
comment
mannykannot
2024-10-09T14:11:48
null
I see this is developing news, and interesting in its own right, though without a clear resolution yet. Regardless, one only needs the outcome of the event to be aware of the possibility of a common-mode failure disrupting both electrical and pipelined natural gas supplies at the same time.
null
null
41,787,456
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null
[ 41788486 ]
null
null
41,788,183
comment
null
2024-10-09T14:11:53
null
null
null
null
41,788,081
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null
41,788,184
comment
regisso
2024-10-09T14:12:03
null
I&#x27;ve been using it for while, recommended.
null
null
41,749,680
41,749,680
null
null
null
null
41,788,185
comment
Maken
2024-10-09T14:12:09
null
The optimizations described could easily work on other models, not just transformers. Following your analogy, this is optimizing plumbing, pistons and valves on steam engines, it could be useful for whatever follows.
null
null
41,787,834
41,784,591
null
null
null
null
41,788,186
comment
halfcat
2024-10-09T14:12:14
null
“Counter app” is basically “hello world”, not how best practice is conveyed.<p>If you’re using an HTTP request to update a counter, it would be to update the persistent server-side state of that counter (which you’d also do if you’re using React and a JSON API).<p>No one is advocating for using HTMX for purely client-side state. They’ve been very consistent about this, recommending Alpine, vanilla JS, Stimulus, Vue, and so forth when you need pure client-side state.
null
null
41,784,880
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null
null
null
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41,788,187
comment
null
2024-10-09T14:12:15
null
null
null
null
41,787,990
41,787,990
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null
41,788,188
comment
jrochkind1
2024-10-09T14:12:18
null
I think part of the issue is that the &quot;boring stable&quot; choice for front-end, React, is disliked by many, and often doesn&#x27;t actually seem very boring (if that means easy to understand how to do it right) or stable (if that means doens&#x27;t drastically change much) to many.
null
null
41,784,034
41,781,457
null
null
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41,788,189
comment
twoodfin
2024-10-09T14:12:21
null
CM-Lisp was closer to that vision, though it was never (TMK) fully implemented, unlike StarLisp.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;dl.acm.org&#x2F;doi&#x2F;pdf&#x2F;10.1145&#x2F;319838.319870" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;dl.acm.org&#x2F;doi&#x2F;pdf&#x2F;10.1145&#x2F;319838.319870</a>
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null
41,785,621
41,770,051
null
null
null
null
41,788,190
comment
beanjuice
2024-10-09T14:12:43
null
Entire fields are based upon the existence of crispr now, it demonstrated its impact. It has been 2? 3? years, people who were making papers anyway have implemented AlphaFold, it hasn&#x27;t exactly spawned a new area.
null
null
41,787,893
41,786,101
null
null
null
null
41,788,191
comment
amai
2024-10-09T14:12:48
null
&#x27;retep&#x27; for peter backwards? That is kind a lame.
null
null
41,784,567
41,783,503
null
[ 41788355 ]
null
null
41,788,192
comment
null
2024-10-09T14:12:49
null
null
null
null
41,788,039
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null
41,788,193
comment
consteval
2024-10-09T14:12:53
null
I am very much being objective here. Uber won despite having an objectively worse economic model, because they cheated via venture capital. It happens all the time in the tech world.<p>Tech company comes in, &quot;innovates&quot; by providing a product that&#x27;s 2x as convenient for 10x the cost, and undercuts competitors by cheating.<p>To be very clear, Uber IS absolutely a better experience than taking a cab, and I&#x27;ve noted this multiple times. I believe, however, it&#x27;s not convenient ENOUGH to justify the extreme infrastructure costs.<p>From an economic standpoint, Uber does not make sense. If you wanted to run an Uber service at that scale, it would be beyond expensive. Customers don&#x27;t want to pay 20 bucks to go a few blocks down. So if that was the case from the beginning, Uber would have been dead in the water.<p>You&#x27;re greatly underestimating how cost sensitive consumers are. Most people will willingly take a less convenient and shittier option if it&#x27;s cheaper.
null
null
41,780,315
41,776,861
null
[ 41794291 ]
null
null
41,788,194
comment
arethuza
2024-10-09T14:12:56
null
That argument sounds awfully like Drew McDermott&#x27;s <i>A Critique of Pure Reason</i> from 1987 which was one of the things that made me get out of the &quot;good old fashioned&quot; AI world in the mid 1990s.
null
null
41,787,204
41,757,198
null
null
null
null
41,788,195
comment
null
2024-10-09T14:13:01
null
null
null
null
41,788,039
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null
true
null
41,788,196
comment
null
2024-10-09T14:13:31
null
null
null
null
41,787,940
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null
41,788,197
comment
mjcurl
2024-10-09T14:13:35
null
Prices are updated once a day. Sellers include battery life and weight, but they are often inaccurate. I&#x27;ll need a better dataset.
null
null
41,787,532
41,787,051
null
null
null
null
41,788,198
comment
quadrifoliate
2024-10-09T14:13:37
null
&gt; And that&#x27;s just false. And rude.<p>Sorry, I&#x27;m just going to have to go with the consensus of the majority of scientific study on this one: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Native_Americans_in_the_United_States" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Native_Americans_in_the_United...</a>.<p>I&#x27;m sure you&#x27;ll find some like-minded people that share your worldview and are not &quot;rude&quot;.
null
null
41,787,602
41,785,265
null
null
null
null
41,788,199
comment
null
2024-10-09T14:13:40
null
null
null
null
41,787,936
41,787,936
null
null
true
null