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comment
herodoturtle
2024-10-09T14:58:15
null
> At the lowest level the state of the universe is represented by a hypergraph which captures what can be thought of as the “spatial relations” between discrete “atoms of space”. Time then corresponds to the progressive rewriting of this hypergraph.
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41,782,534
41,782,534
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41,788,601
comment
account42
2024-10-09T14:58:21
null
Search needs a whole lot more normalization than just case folding.
null
null
41,775,771
41,774,871
null
[ 41793390 ]
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41,788,602
comment
matsemann
2024-10-09T14:58:24
null
Original intent of the prizes is, however, to reward those that recently contributed good. Not to be a lifetime award after seeing how things pan out.
null
null
41,787,142
41,786,101
null
[ 41788887 ]
null
null
41,788,603
story
oulipo
2024-10-09T14:58:25
Show HN: Sustainable and repairable e-bike battery (that's also fireproof)
null
https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/infinite-the-repairable-universal-ebike-battery
39
null
41,788,603
6
[ 41788604, 41788925, 41791055, 41788693, 41790427 ]
null
null
41,788,604
comment
oulipo
2024-10-09T14:58:25
null
Hey everyone!<p>I’m Maël, one of the co-founders of Gouach, and I’m so excited to introduce the Infinite Battery, that we believe is a revolutionary step in e-bike battery design!<p>Traditional e-bike batteries fail often just for one or two faulty cells, but the entire battery has to be replaced because they&#x27;re glued and welded together. We’ve developed the Infinite Battery to fix this. It’s fully repairable in under 10 minutes with no special tools required. We’ve made sure it’s compatible with major e-bike brands, and our universal mounting system works with most bikes. Plus, it’s waterproof, fireproof, and built to last.<p>Our team has been testing these batteries in real-world conditions with free-floating e-bikes in France since 2022, and the feedback has been incredible. We’ve added tons of features—like a smart BMS with sensors, a rugged aluminum casing, and more—all with the goal of creating the safest and most durable battery on the market.<p>We can’t wait for you to check it out and help bring a new standard of repairability to the e-bike world!<p>I&#x27;m a regular lurker here, so feel free to ask any question, and me or someone from the team will do his or her best to answer!<p>Cheers, Maël Co-founder @ Gouach
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41,788,603
41,788,603
null
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null
41,788,605
comment
arp242
2024-10-09T14:58:32
null
That&#x27;s besides the point. I don&#x27;t want to muck about with tools on my Python scripts.<p>I have sometimes not run a Python script for a few years, and then when I need it, it stopped working and I need to track down what changed&#x2F;broke or run some tool or whatnot. I don&#x27;t keep track of the latest greatest Python changes – like most Python programmers it&#x27;s not my &quot;day job&quot; to write Python code so I now need to track what changed between &quot;the Python version I used about 3 years ago, whatever that was&quot; and now. It&#x27;s pretty annoying.<p>And that&#x27;s assuming said tool will be fool-proof. Never mind of course that all my dependencies (if any) will need updating too.<p>What will happen in practice is that people will write &quot;except Exception:&quot; rather than &quot;except:&quot; and do nothing different. Basically nothing will change.<p>Meanwhile, I have C and Go programs that have worked without modification for about 10 years. Not that nothing <i>ever</i> breaks in C or Go, but it&#x27;s the exception (hah!) rather than the rule.
null
null
41,788,469
41,788,026
null
[ 41788749 ]
null
null
41,788,606
comment
0x12A
2024-10-09T14:58:48
null
Thank you! Yes, there is an exponential backoff strategy for reconnection attempts. Supporting SOCKS sounds like a nice idea, I&#x27;ll look into it!
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null
41,788,422
41,785,511
null
[ 41788882 ]
null
null
41,788,607
comment
addaon
2024-10-09T14:58:48
null
This article starts out by pointing out that American life expectancy has increased from 70 to 77.5 over the last half century or so, and points out that this (along with a lack of increase in health span) means increased medical care, and corresponding costs. But, sadly, this is old news. American life expectancy is in free fall right now [0], down more than three and a half years over the past five. We&#x27;re already back to 1996 levels, and at this rate will be back to the 1970s levels that the article uses as its starting point by the end of this decade.<p>[0] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.npr.org&#x2F;sections&#x2F;health-shots&#x2F;2023&#x2F;03&#x2F;25&#x2F;1164819944&#x2F;live-free-and-die-the-sad-state-of-u-s-life-expectancy" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.npr.org&#x2F;sections&#x2F;health-shots&#x2F;2023&#x2F;03&#x2F;25&#x2F;1164819...</a>
null
null
41,788,378
41,788,378
null
null
null
null
41,788,608
comment
BeetleB
2024-10-09T14:59:04
null
Syndicate - wow. That brings back memories!<p>I could never get it working on DosBox (some timing issue). Haven&#x27;t tried in over a decade, though. Should see if I can get it working.
null
null
41,786,662
41,786,101
null
null
null
null
41,788,609
comment
joeyagreco
2024-10-09T14:59:10
null
&gt; Todd reportedly denied he was the bitcoin creator: &quot;Of course I&#x27;m not Satoshi,&quot; he said.
null
null
41,783,609
41,783,609
null
[ 41789211 ]
null
null
41,788,610
comment
mistercheph
2024-10-09T14:59:17
null
Why worry about the blowback? That&#x27;s the corpse talking, if I hear, &quot;This disrupts our workflow,&quot; I&#x27;m even more confident that I should rip the band-aid.<p>Offices that don&#x27;t follow security practices uncovered because they never called for help, another chance for drifters on autopilot to walk away from the job because it just got too hectic, stop paying licenses for a bunch of tools you didn&#x27;t realize you were paying for and don&#x27;t need, find replacements for all the tools that are not actively maintained, or don&#x27;t have cooperative maintainers.<p>It&#x27;s a healthy shake-up and our society at large should be less scared of making decisions like these
null
null
41,786,844
41,779,952
null
[ 41789990 ]
null
null
41,788,611
comment
adastra22
2024-10-09T14:59:18
null
But Crispr actually edited genes. How much of this theoretical work was real, and how much was slop? Did the grad students actually achieve confirmation of their conformational predictions?
null
null
41,788,000
41,786,101
null
[ 41788851 ]
null
null
41,788,612
comment
mr90210
2024-10-09T14:59:19
null
It is you the racist by referring to Indians as a race.<p>Learn about your own people first, the Indo-Aryans.
null
null
41,787,692
41,785,265
null
null
null
null
41,788,613
story
ChrisArchitect
2024-10-09T14:59:21
"You Are Not Expected to Understand This" (2022)
null
https://press.princeton.edu/books/paperback/9780691208480/you-are-not-expected-to-understand-this
1
null
41,788,613
0
null
null
null
41,788,614
story
Crowgirl
2024-10-09T14:59:21
Malware threat means bad news for ATMs
null
https://medium.com/@kim_crawley/malware-threat-means-bad-news-for-atms-50e8e15977e1
1
null
41,788,614
0
null
null
null
41,788,615
story
gregorymichael
2024-10-09T14:59:38
Empty Spaces
null
https://noahkalina.substack.com/p/newsletter-159-empty-spaces
1
null
41,788,615
0
null
null
null
41,788,616
comment
marcosdumay
2024-10-09T14:59:39
null
If you want to get truly disillusioned, look at how Sarney became president.
null
null
41,784,265
41,782,118
null
null
null
null
41,788,617
comment
lproven
2024-10-09T14:59:47
null
Not directly but a team is working on one:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;clonos.convectix.com&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;clonos.convectix.com&#x2F;</a>
null
null
41,787,867
41,785,595
null
null
null
null
41,788,618
comment
Larrikin
2024-10-09T14:59:59
null
Python feels like they are fixing the language the best they can by slowly and properly adding explicit types. Character count is not a valid argument when we have hard drives that are multiple terabytes and IDEs and LLMs that will gladly auto complete a full word with the import. Foo, bar variable names and i, n incrementers should be banished to freshman level undergrad tests meant to intentionally confuse the student.<p>I&#x27;m hoping Python 4 will be a big breaking change similar to the previous one and full support for explicit types will be one of the reasons.
null
null
41,788,338
41,788,026
null
[ 41788943, 41789703, 41789435, 41790071, 41789972, 41789315 ]
null
null
41,788,619
comment
almostnormal
2024-10-09T15:00:00
null
Speaking of the English language influencing German, I want my Erdbeermarmelade back. I don&#x27;t care that english marmalde cannot be made of strawberries.
null
null
41,787,647
41,787,647
null
[ 41789042, 41789389 ]
null
null
41,788,620
comment
inhumantsar
2024-10-09T15:00:16
null
Rich Rebuilds on YouTube bought a cheap Fiskar Ocean and documented his work getting it running and trying to get a software update for it.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;youtu.be&#x2F;b_OxgAYG0Io?si=rT_UFWTc5v6t58nb" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;youtu.be&#x2F;b_OxgAYG0Io?si=rT_UFWTc5v6t58nb</a><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;youtu.be&#x2F;WLGaAE4_RjQ?si=sSNi5Pg4DEccUgXr" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;youtu.be&#x2F;WLGaAE4_RjQ?si=sSNi5Pg4DEccUgXr</a><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;youtu.be&#x2F;qzy7-UXLdH4?si=L1kjOZpQOmhD4JSu" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;youtu.be&#x2F;qzy7-UXLdH4?si=L1kjOZpQOmhD4JSu</a><p>If a vehicle is going to be completely dependent on software for basic functions, then owners should be able to at least replace or patch that software with standardized freely available tools.
null
null
41,788,517
41,788,517
null
[ 41789529, 41788642 ]
null
null
41,788,621
comment
gibsonf1
2024-10-09T15:00:21
null
I am the source (working on conceptual computing since the late 90s), and have built a conceptual computing platform based on it (In common lisp of course): <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;graphmetrix.com&#x2F;trinpod-server" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;graphmetrix.com&#x2F;trinpod-server</a>
null
null
41,787,889
41,757,198
null
null
null
null
41,788,622
comment
confidantlake
2024-10-09T15:00:21
null
Saying you love Angular 1.x while complaining about complexity is an interesting take.
null
null
41,783,272
41,781,457
null
null
null
null
41,788,623
comment
adw
2024-10-09T15:00:23
null
It’s also signal processing.
null
null
41,783,203
41,775,463
null
null
null
null
41,788,624
comment
JohnFen
2024-10-09T15:00:32
null
They may not have experienced such, but threading presented this way was already a well-established thing before gmail. Not so much with email as with newsgroups, but still.<p>Also, some people considering a problem &quot;hard&quot; is an entirely different thing than a problem being widely considered as &quot;impossible&quot;. This was not anything close to an impossible problem.
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null
41,780,762
41,776,447
null
null
null
null
41,788,625
comment
kstrauser
2024-10-09T15:00:32
null
I’m too ignorant on the subject to have smart questions, so I’ll state instead: that’s brilliant. Terrifying, but brilliant. If someone locked me in a box and said I had to use this for everything, I imagine I’d either break down crying or write an AGI in a page.<p>Well done.
null
null
41,787,055
41,770,051
null
[ 41797866 ]
null
null
41,788,626
comment
CooCooCaCha
2024-10-09T15:00:39
null
A god’s eye perspective still requires time. The absence of time implies nothing can change because time is required to differentiate two states. The notion of “observation” implies change because you’re learning something new.<p>You could say we exist in a simulation and the entities outside the simulation can pause the simulation or pre-compute the simulation so that it’s static but then you’re just kicking the can down the road because they would need their own notion of time to observe the simulation they created.
null
null
41,788,270
41,782,534
null
[ 41788830 ]
null
null
41,788,627
comment
esskay
2024-10-09T15:00:42
null
If this happened it would be great, but I hold out little hope it&#x27;ll ever actually happen.
null
null
41,787,290
41,787,290
null
null
null
null
41,788,628
story
currygen
2024-10-09T15:00:50
Corporate Cringe: How I Filter Job Opportunities
null
https://weltge.ist/Business/corporate-cringe-how-i-filter-job-opportunities
2
null
41,788,628
0
null
null
null
41,788,629
story
toomuchtodo
2024-10-09T15:00:50
Nigeria to Sanction Musk's Starlink for Unauthorized Price Hike
null
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2024-10-09/nigeria-to-sanction-musk-s-starlink-for-unauthorized-price-hike
2
null
41,788,629
0
null
null
null
41,788,630
comment
BlueTemplar
2024-10-09T15:00:55
null
Speaking of Snowden, and since we&#x27;re at the State actor level, both Windows and Intel CPUs (and maybe also Ryzen CPUs) have to be assumed to be backdoored by the NSA.<p>Whether that is a threat worth dealing with for the concerned embassies is another question of course.
null
null
41,786,040
41,779,952
null
null
null
null
41,788,631
story
feross
2024-10-09T15:01:14
Nightmares on NPM: How Two Malicious Packages Facilitate Data Theft and
null
https://socket.dev/blog/nightmares-on-npm-how-two-malicious-packages-facilitate-data-theft-and-destruction
2
null
41,788,631
0
null
null
null
41,788,632
comment
bee_rider
2024-10-09T15:01:18
null
Maybe bare excepts could be modified to just catch Exceptions. It seems like a reasonable expression of the idea: everything that could go with my program but not with the OS.
null
null
41,788,565
41,788,026
null
[ 41789262, 41788769 ]
null
null
41,788,633
comment
drcongo
2024-10-09T15:01:22
null
[ranier-wolfcastle-that&#x27;s-the-joke.jpg]
null
null
41,788,470
41,788,026
null
null
null
null
41,788,634
comment
kbolino
2024-10-09T15:01:25
null
With subreaping as the only additional mechanism available, init would have to fork itself first and then keep that child running until all its descendants are done. Basically, every service would have a supervisor process (controlled by init) which roots a tree of all its other processes.
null
null
41,784,867
41,764,578
null
null
null
null
41,788,635
comment
Joker_vD
2024-10-09T15:01:26
null
Will this command be automatically run by venv, or poetry, or whatever, on every package update?
null
null
41,788,510
41,788,026
null
null
null
null
41,788,636
story
Anon84
2024-10-09T15:01:35
New Report Shows Why Getting a Michelin Star May Not Be a Good Thing
null
https://www.foodandwine.com/michelin-starred-restaurants-more-likely-to-close-8724623
1
null
41,788,636
0
null
null
null
41,788,637
comment
jf22
2024-10-09T15:01:47
null
What&#x27;s the cost of DEI?
null
null
41,776,892
41,775,795
null
null
null
null
41,788,638
comment
randomdata
2024-10-09T15:01:47
null
Why&#x27;s that? Uncle Bob seems pretty clear that most of your code should be free of side effects, and that necessary state mutation should be isolated to one place. Carmack is saying the same thing.
null
null
41,787,105
41,758,371
null
[ 41797195 ]
null
null
41,788,639
comment
bigstrat2003
2024-10-09T15:01:56
null
&gt; If your code is protected from untrusted user data and the internet, Python 2 is actually a really nice language that doesn&#x27;t constantly force rewrites.<p>If Python 2 is acceptable for your use case, then you could stay on an old version of Python 3 just fine as well.
null
null
41,788,559
41,788,026
null
[ 41789457, 41789597 ]
null
null
41,788,640
story
3Sophons
2024-10-09T15:02:02
Run Qwen2.5-14B Locally – An OpenAI API Alternative for Chatbots and Embeddings
null
https://www.secondstate.io/articles/qwen25/
1
null
41,788,640
1
[ 41788641 ]
null
null
41,788,641
comment
3Sophons
2024-10-09T15:02:02
null
Tutorial to run the Qwen2.5-14B-Instruct model locally on your device using LlamaEdge and WasmEdge – no complex toolchains required!<p>It supports edge devices, offers long context lengths (up to 128K tokens), and can be a drop-in replacement for OpenAI APIs.
null
null
41,788,640
41,788,640
null
null
null
null
41,788,642
comment
toomuchtodo
2024-10-09T15:02:04
null
Great input for right to repair legislation efforts. Providing a reference implementation for cloud services should probably be mandated if the vehicle is dependent on cloud infra to operate.
null
null
41,788,620
41,788,517
null
null
null
null
41,788,643
comment
dyauspitr
2024-10-09T15:02:05
null
Nicotine by itself is pretty much harmless.
null
null
41,787,410
41,786,461
null
[ 41788829, 41789769 ]
null
null
41,788,644
story
b0ner_t0ner
2024-10-09T15:02:18
America's Food and Healthcare Systems Were Compromised [video]
null
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7iOeWcYF6X4
1
null
41,788,644
0
null
null
null
41,788,645
comment
JohnFen
2024-10-09T15:02:24
null
I loved your article, by the way. It clearly stated many things that I had trouble articulating well. I&#x27;ll be stealing some of what you wrote for use in future conversations.
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null
41,780,363
41,774,009
null
null
null
null
41,788,646
comment
curt15
2024-10-09T15:02:28
null
&gt;they used their search monopoly to incessantly nag people to install it<p>This is something I never understood. If I were already using Firefox or IE before installing Chrome, what would have prevented me from continuing to use Firefox or IE after installing Chrome? Did the Chrome installer disable or otherwise interfere with other applications?
null
null
41,788,382
41,787,290
null
[ 41788716 ]
null
null
41,788,647
comment
admissionsguy
2024-10-09T15:02:30
null
On my 50k monthly UU side-project, I used this to eliminate a vast majority of spam submissions:<p>&gt; $.post($(this).attr(&#x27;action&#x27;) + &#x27;?nospam=1&#x27;<p>(skipping processing but returning a success response when nospam is absent, so I guess it counts as an honeypot)<p>I also blacklisted the words cialis and viagra.<p>What remained were serial submissions from pen-testers who then sent emails begging for money, so I implemented a one-click removal of all submissions from an ip range.<p>That&#x27;s after Cloudflare&#x27;s regular WAF.<p>Not much effort, so I guess it&#x27;s only an issue if it gets exponentially worse with increased traffic (which it probably does).<p>I would never use a CAPTCHA though, not my philosophy to outsource effort to the user.
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null
41,785,574
41,785,574
null
null
null
null
41,788,648
comment
serbuvlad
2024-10-09T15:02:43
null
I want to use BSDs, and I tried using OpenBSD, for my servers, but there are far too many missing features I rely on from Linux. One simple example is mount --bind. I want to allow some users to connect to my server via SFTP and put some files their $HOME&#x2F;files which then goes to a physical disk used for user files. In Linux this is as simple as mount --bind &#x2F;disk&#x2F;userfiles&#x2F;$USER &#x2F;home&#x2F;$USER&#x2F;files. In OpenBSD they recommended using a localhost NFS share. That didn&#x27;t seem to me like as good of a solution.
null
null
41,785,595
41,785,595
null
[ 41790475, 41791617, 41789879 ]
null
null
41,788,649
comment
Onavo
2024-10-09T15:02:55
null
¯\_(ツ)_&#x2F;¯
null
null
41,785,912
41,775,463
null
null
null
null
41,788,650
comment
antifa
2024-10-09T15:03:12
null
TikTok is where you go to find someone (if not synthetic voice) reading to you a 30 second summary of the manufacturer&#x27;s press kit and pretending like they reviewed it.
null
null
41,769,170
41,767,648
null
null
null
null
41,788,651
comment
hamandcheese
2024-10-09T15:03:13
null
That version will eventually become EOL, stop getting security patches, eventually stop compiling with the latest OpenSSL, etc. Bitrot.
null
null
41,788,540
41,788,026
null
[ 41793027, 41788809 ]
null
null
41,788,652
comment
magwa101
2024-10-09T15:03:33
null
[dead]
null
null
41,788,498
41,787,290
null
null
null
true
41,788,653
comment
recursive
2024-10-09T15:03:53
null
It&#x27;s more case by case for me. A magic number should get a named constant on its first use. That&#x27;s an abstraction.
null
null
41,788,333
41,758,371
null
[ 41792897 ]
null
null
41,788,654
comment
instig007
2024-10-09T15:03:55
null
&gt; Oh, you want to know the naive UTC datetime in Python, to interface with something like PostgreSQL that recommends naive times?<p>Postgres never recommended naive datetimes. A TZ-aware datetime is semantiacally the same as a tuple of (&lt;location&#x2F;agreed offset&gt;, &lt;time in the moment since unix epoch defined in terms of UTC&gt;). Those who recommended dropping the knowledge of the first part from that pair did it because they didn&#x27;t know better.
null
null
41,788,559
41,788,026
null
[ 41802802, 41792513 ]
null
null
41,788,655
story
videiro
2024-10-09T15:04:03
null
null
null
1
null
41,788,655
null
null
null
true
41,788,656
comment
lazide
2024-10-09T15:04:05
null
This is a classic ‘be careful what you wish for’. Because what do you think the alternative is going to look like?
null
null
41,788,377
41,787,290
null
[ 41788917 ]
null
null
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story
yarapavan
2024-10-09T15:04:13
Star Health India All Customers Health and Personal Data Leak
null
https://starhealthleak.st/
4
null
41,788,657
0
[ 41789266, 41788668 ]
null
null
41,788,658
comment
mistercheph
2024-10-09T15:04:14
null
Sure, but if you have resources to spend validating the security of a tool, would you rather validate the QR parser or the USB stack?
null
null
41,784,717
41,779,952
null
null
null
null
41,788,659
comment
mhrmsn
2024-10-09T15:04:18
null
Crispr is widely used and there are even therapies approved based on it, you can actually buy TVs that use quantum dots and click chemistry has lots of applications (bioconjugation etc.), but I don&#x27;t think we have seen that impact from AlphaFold yet.<p>There&#x27;s a lot of pharma companies and drug design startups that are actively trying to apply these methods, but I think the jury is still out for the impact it will finally have.
null
null
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41,786,101
null
[ 41789866, 41795021 ]
null
null
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comment
pphysch
2024-10-09T15:04:20
null
Being suddenly forced to increase revenues (to make up for lost subsidies) is unequivocally <i>not</i> the way to drive innovation.
null
null
41,788,524
41,787,290
null
[ 41789606 ]
null
null
41,788,661
story
lxm
2024-10-09T15:04:22
The Battle over Robots at U.S. Ports Is On
null
https://www.wsj.com/business/logistics/us-ports-automation-union-strike-f94bb4b7
3
null
41,788,661
1
[ 41788814, 41789257 ]
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story
null
2024-10-09T15:04:28
null
null
null
null
null
41,788,662
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41,788,663
comment
CooCooCaCha
2024-10-09T15:04:33
null
I didn’t make any such claims regarding consciousness. I’m trying to understand how time as an emergent phenomenon instead of fundamental to the universe could work.
null
null
41,788,465
41,782,534
null
null
null
null
41,788,664
story
janandonly
2024-10-09T15:04:39
Regulators Are Limiting Banks Serving Crypto Clients
null
https://unchainedcrypto.com/regulators-are-limiting-banks-serving-crypto-clients-does-that-violate-the-law/
1
null
41,788,664
0
null
null
null
41,788,665
comment
inahga
2024-10-09T15:04:39
null
I&#x27;ve found on some cars (i.e. Jeeps), disconnecting the antenna is insufficient. It just lowers the range of the cellular modem. If you get close enough to a cell tower it&#x27;ll still find a connection to the mothership.<p>In my case I had to open the radio and physically remove the cellular modem. Which was thankfully on its own removable module.
null
null
41,782,119
41,781,081
null
null
null
null
41,788,666
comment
miguelraz
2024-10-09T15:04:42
null
REPL tab completions let&#x27;s gooooo
null
null
41,777,359
41,777,359
null
null
null
null
41,788,667
comment
carimura
2024-10-09T15:04:42
null
not sure their privacy policy [1] agrees<p><pre><code> If we are involved in a bankruptcy, merger, acquisition, reorganization, or sale of assets, your Personal Information may be accessed, sold or transferred as part of that transaction and this Privacy Statement will apply to your Personal Information as transferred to the new entity.</code></pre>
null
null
41,784,852
41,780,387
null
null
null
null
41,788,668
comment
yarapavan
2024-10-09T15:04:45
null
[flagged]
null
null
41,788,657
41,788,657
null
null
null
true
41,788,669
comment
confidantlake
2024-10-09T15:04:51
null
Backend, the land of no frameworks. Not a Rails, Django, Spring, or Laravel in sight!
null
null
41,783,901
41,781,457
null
null
null
null
41,788,670
comment
arp242
2024-10-09T15:04:54
null
If it&#x27;s not a serious proposal then that&#x27;s even worse, because there&#x27;s a long discussion on that thread. So this non-serious proposal is just wasting people&#x27;s time.
null
null
41,788,583
41,788,026
null
null
null
null
41,788,671
comment
account42
2024-10-09T15:04:58
null
Yes and most importantly, that interpretation is for display purposes ONLY. If your file manager won&#x27;t let me delete a file because the name includes invalid UTF-16&#x2F;UTF-8 then it is simply broken.
null
null
41,775,329
41,774,871
null
null
null
null
41,788,672
comment
Mistletoe
2024-10-09T15:05:03
null
When the rich and powerful (including politicians) have their positions sold and will make money from the FAANG companies&#x27; stocks going down, we will see some real antitrust activity and society will get better and break away from the tech dystopia we are living in. So in a sense Gordon Gekko was right and greed is good. At some point you can&#x27;t pump stocks anymore on vapors and you make money from them on the way down in shorts, buying lower, etc.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.currentmarketvaluation.com&#x2F;models&#x2F;s&amp;p500-mean-reversion.php" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.currentmarketvaluation.com&#x2F;models&#x2F;s&amp;p500-mean-re...</a>
null
null
41,787,290
41,787,290
null
null
null
null
41,788,673
comment
varelse
2024-10-09T15:05:03
null
Bezos? Abandoned by his dad who was literally an alcoholic clown and raised by his mom and her 2nd husband Bezos?<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Ted_Jorgensen" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Ted_Jorgensen</a><p>So $300K in 1994 is about $640K. That&#x27;s nice but about 80th percentile of net worth. It&#x27;s nice his parents believed in him. How many of your parents would do that for you? I&#x27;m sure at 1 in 5 of them have that kind of money because of the distribution here. So the difference here is He was smart, he got lucky, and your parents don&#x27;t believe in you enough on this front.<p>But compare and contrast Bezos and Musk. Bezos&#x27;s mid-life crisis is leaving his wife to run around on his yacht banging models. Musk&#x27;s mid-life crisis is trying to destroy democracy so he and his mom won&#x27;t have to pay US taxes. Neither one is a role model, but I don&#x27;t even get the point of the latter.<p>Which brings us back to AlphaFold. The AlphaFold team did something amazing. But also, they had a backer that believed in them. David Baker, for better or worse, didn&#x27;t achieve what they did and he&#x27;d been at it for decades. It&#x27;s amazing what good backing can achieve.
null
null
41,788,467
41,786,101
null
[ 41790094 ]
null
null
41,788,674
comment
toast0
2024-10-09T15:05:05
null
Like the sibling says, octet is useful when in a networking context, because bytes weren&#x27;t uniformly sized, but also because communications protocols were sometimes only 7-bit.<p>Serial ports and modems often operated in that mode, and UUCP influenced mail and newsgroups to only use 7-bit data; requiring encoding for data with the high bit set. Protocols that specify octets are dealing with 8-bit bytes and don&#x27;t have to deal with that.
null
null
41,782,053
41,779,576
null
null
null
null
41,788,675
story
LorenDB
2024-10-09T15:05:10
Cursor Size Problems in Wayland
null
https://blogs.kde.org/2024/10/09/cursor-size-problems-in-wayland-explained/
3
null
41,788,675
0
null
null
null
41,788,676
comment
082349872349872
2024-10-09T15:05:16
null
I&#x27;ll guess X=Livy — as he was a &quot;professional&quot; historian (one of Veblen&#x27;s non-governing elites?) and therefore more likely to produce Gell-Mann (non)Amnesia moments.<p>[It&#x27;s interesting to see the difference between quotes attributed to N1 on {de,en,fr} websites: in fr they sound pretty accurate (some fraction are lifted from Cicero or other classical authors); in de they&#x27;re enriched in those that either concern germany itself or the hassle of dealing with idiots all day; in en just about anything gets his name slapped on it. (&quot;87% of all statistics are just made up — Napoleon Bonaparte&quot;)]<p>That said, even though Cicero was in government, Livy seems to have been a tad more cynical (small-c, modern sense) than Cicero, so I could be wrong. Alongside the lifted-from-Cicero quotes, one also finds more machiavellian expressions:<p>&gt; <i>“Le peuple est le même partout. Quand on dore ses fers, il ne hait pas la servitude.”</i> (People are everywhere alike. Give them golden handcuffs, and they don&#x27;t hate their subjection) <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;gallica.bnf.fr&#x2F;ark:&#x2F;12148&#x2F;bpt6k65037972&#x2F;f113.image.r=croire%20libredore%20fers%20hait%20servitude?rk=64378;0" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;gallica.bnf.fr&#x2F;ark:&#x2F;12148&#x2F;bpt6k65037972&#x2F;f113.image.r...</a>
null
null
41,786,389
41,727,005
null
null
null
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comment
wsintra2022
2024-10-09T15:05:23
null
Sentiments of the comment so far… couldn’t agree more. Although the title I agree with. AI(generative LLM and image generation) have been game changers. For some.. we have an AI pr bot that does reviews. It’s basically a GitHub PR spam bot that for me has yet to produce a valid review. Certainly changed the game.
null
null
41,786,457
41,786,457
null
[ 41788740 ]
null
null
41,788,678
comment
solardev
2024-10-09T15:05:25
null
&gt; On one of the forms, I politely ask that the sender include todays date somewhere in the text, which I then validate to be within +&#x2F;- 25 hours of the server time<p>It sounds like you made your own CAPTCHA-lite. If it&#x27;s not a very attractive form to spammers, sounds like that&#x27;s fine, but for bigger sites it may not be enough. CAPTCHAs don&#x27;t have to always be squiggly letters... there are many picture-based puzzles these days, along with human-like interaction checks, audio puzzles, logic puzzles, video advertisement puzzles, etc.<p>I manage a forum at work and after a few years of no spam, suddenly someone found us and made hundreds of spam accounts and posts over one weekend. And Discourse doesn&#x27;t have good bulk spam moderation in the UI, so it was a pain going through them afterward =&#x2F; I really wish we had a CAPTCHA!
null
null
41,785,574
41,785,574
null
null
null
null
41,788,679
comment
1970-01-01
2024-10-09T15:05:35
null
I&#x27;m with you at full sticker, however American Lease ignored all the warnings and got what it deserved.<p>&gt;Car publications were already warning consumers to steer clear of the Ocean as early as this March, despite massive price cuts that saw these electric SUVs being offered for less than $25,000. A New York-based company called American Lease was less deterred by this warning and in June agreed to purchase the remaining Fisker inventory—approximately 3,300 cars for a total of $46.3 million dollars.
null
null
41,788,533
41,788,517
null
[ 41789700 ]
null
null
41,788,680
comment
Ono-Sendai
2024-10-09T15:05:39
null
If you consider any superlinear complexity a &#x27;compiler issue&#x27; I guess.
null
null
41,786,687
41,758,371
null
[ 41789041 ]
null
null
41,788,681
comment
williamsmj
2024-10-09T15:05:55
null
I have mixed feelings about this.<p>There are two &quot;problems&quot; this PEP is trying to solve.<p>One is that bare excepts are permitted. The argument against this is that explicit is better than implicit. A matter of taste, but I don&#x27;t find this convincing.<p>The other problem is what bare excepts <i>mean</i>. Bare excepts are syntactic sugar for `except BaseException`. This means that an application containing a bare `except` followed by the vast majority of real-world error handling will continue to run even if SystemExit or KeyboardInterrupt is raised. This is almost always a bug.<p>I <i>do</i> find this second argument convincing, and I wish Python did not contain this design wart.<p>If I could go back in time and change Python syntax, it would make it hard for people to silently treat these special interrupts as &quot;handleable&quot; like regular errors. The tiny set of applications that really can and should handle them (e.g. TUIs or the mailman example discussed in the final section of the PEP) can explicitly do so with e.g. `except KeyboardInterrurpt` or even `except BaseException`.<p>But I agree with the consensus here that this does not rise to the level of something being worth a backwards-incompatible change.
null
null
41,788,026
41,788,026
null
[ 41789730, 41789854, 41789880 ]
null
null
41,788,682
comment
petesergeant
2024-10-09T15:05:58
null
Literally the only people this isn&#x27;t good for is Google&#x27;s senior management.
null
null
41,788,524
41,787,290
null
[ 41788787, 41788757 ]
null
null
41,788,683
comment
krzyk
2024-10-09T15:06:00
null
&gt; That isn&#x27;t what Google is doing. They aren&#x27;t using a monopoly in search to try to establish a monopoly in browsers or phone OSes. Google search will happily return results for Apple phones or for how to download Firefox.<p>This is exactly what was Google doing when they started with Chrome. If you visited google search they had a very visible text in the center asking you to try out Chrome.<p>It was also on other google pages, but search is the most prominent one. They don&#x27;t do it now, because they already have monopoly in web browsers also.
null
null
41,787,486
41,787,290
null
null
null
null
41,788,684
comment
cdibona
2024-10-09T15:06:04
null
If you wanna see cutouts of a bunch of this equipment, a pig in a transparent pipe, and just happen to be in Oman, the petroleum development museum there is super.<p>Id imagine there&#x27;s something similar in Houston, this stuff is legit fascinating.
null
null
41,764,095
41,764,095
null
[ 41788767 ]
null
null
41,788,685
comment
sidewndr46
2024-10-09T15:06:09
null
If the goal is to maximize ranching, I think you&#x27;re right. But if the goal is to maximize the economic opportunities in Costa Rica it probably is not the best decision. When I hired a tour guide there he pointed out that Costa Rica could easily install dams to create vast fresh water reservoirs and generate some power as well. But because the country doesn&#x27;t do this they have ecosystems people come to visit their from around the world. So by choosing not to maximize for one thing they retain another at little to no cost. After all, free flowing rivers don&#x27;t cost much to maintain.<p>The tourism industry is important to them. So perhaps by finding a way to co-exist with big cats, it&#x27;s a net positive to the ranchers because they probably don&#x27;t want Costa Rica to be a nation with only 1 industry. If they can produce enough beef (or whatever animal they want to raise) to satisfy domestic and export desires then there probably is not much of a need to expand the industry at all costs.
null
null
41,788,512
41,787,967
null
[ 41789174, 41789360, 41789603 ]
null
null
41,788,686
comment
FuckButtons
2024-10-09T15:06:11
null
Surely you can’t be serious.
null
null
41,788,585
41,787,290
null
[ 41788774 ]
null
null
41,788,687
comment
StewardMcOy
2024-10-09T15:06:13
null
You&#x27;re not missing anything, it&#x27;s just that<p>&gt; Google doesn’t know or care about who’s using it at that point<p>is incorrect.<p>Google Drive uses OAuth. Users don&#x27;t register API keys, apps do, and then users just log in with their Google account.<p>Google now requires apps to go through manual approval to actually use their OAuth keys, if those apps request certain endpoints. Doesn&#x27;t matter if the app is local or cloud-hosted, if it makes certain REST requests, it needs special access, and Google controls which API keys get that special access.<p>See <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;developers.google.com&#x2F;drive&#x2F;api&#x2F;guides&#x2F;api-specific-auth" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;developers.google.com&#x2F;drive&#x2F;api&#x2F;guides&#x2F;api-specific-...</a>
null
null
41,784,869
41,780,395
null
null
null
null
41,788,688
comment
Kye
2024-10-09T15:06:29
null
Hitherto unexplored realms of petty.
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null
41,791,369
41,791,369
null
null
null
null
41,788,689
comment
Ono-Sendai
2024-10-09T15:06:43
null
Writing a medium to large program in C++, you really need to fight long compile times or they can get out of hand. That affects the way you write code quite a lot, or it should at least. I&#x27;ve heard Rust and Swift also suffer from long compile times.
null
null
41,786,680
41,758,371
null
[ 41790463 ]
null
null
41,788,690
comment
snvzz
2024-10-09T15:06:57
null
A few years ago, it looked like Turkey would be joining the EU.<p>But then it derailed. Really hard.
null
null
41,785,553
41,785,553
null
[ 41788795, 41801577, 41790809, 41789900, 41796655 ]
null
null
41,788,691
comment
s1mon
2024-10-09T15:06:59
null
Exceedingly fluffy for a fluff piece.
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null
41,786,457
41,786,457
null
[ 41788935 ]
null
null
41,788,692
comment
kevin_thibedeau
2024-10-09T15:07:08
null
It definitely happens. Non-Chrome gets non-performant polyfills that break. Maps in particular is nerfed on Firefox.
null
null
41,788,598
41,787,290
null
[ 41789274 ]
null
null
41,788,693
comment
LowProfilez
2024-10-09T15:07:15
null
Can’t wait to put mine on my modded Super73 !
null
null
41,788,603
41,788,603
null
[ 41788697 ]
null
null
41,788,694
comment
bee_rider
2024-10-09T15:07:29
null
Interesting… I guess it must be biased, m*2^ee would leave like half of the limited space wasted, so 1.m*2^ee?<p>I always wonder with these tiny formats if 0 should even be represented…
null
null
41,788,263
41,784,591
null
[ 41788855 ]
null
null
41,788,695
comment
cdibona
2024-10-09T15:07:33
null
The smart pigs honestly look like a pigs snout flying down the pipe.
null
null
41,787,650
41,764,095
null
null
null
null
41,788,696
comment
snvzz
2024-10-09T15:07:36
null
Could you elaborate on this.
null
null
41,787,763
41,785,553
null
[ 41789706 ]
null
null
41,788,697
comment
oulipo
2024-10-09T15:07:36
null
Looking forward to shipping our batteries in November! We also have a Super73 in the office!
null
null
41,788,693
41,788,603
null
null
null
null
41,788,698
comment
lazide
2024-10-09T15:07:38
null
Can’t understand, or refuse to understand?<p>Why create new groups when you have proven and well trod ones handy to choose from?
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null
41,787,395
41,785,265
null
null
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null
41,788,699
comment
tombert
2024-10-09T15:07:51
null
I mean, the post is from 2019, and MakeMKV has been around much longer than that. I know this isn&#x27;t always the case, but I feel like if they were going to take down MakeMKV&#x27;s site, they probably would have done it by now.
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null
41,786,400
41,784,069
null
[ 41790233 ]
null
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