id
int64
0
12.9M
type
large_stringclasses
5 values
by
large_stringlengths
2
15
time
timestamp[us]
title
large_stringlengths
0
198
text
large_stringlengths
0
99.1k
url
large_stringlengths
0
6.6k
score
int64
-1
5.77k
parent
int64
1
30.4M
top_level_parent
int64
0
30.4M
descendants
int64
-1
2.53k
kids
large list
deleted
bool
1 class
dead
bool
1 class
41,791,500
comment
Narhem
2024-10-09T19:06:15
null
[flagged]
null
null
41,784,287
41,784,287
null
null
null
true
41,791,501
comment
bjacobso
2024-10-09T19:06:26
null
I&#x27;ve had a very similar experience, and have been slowly moving from zod and ts-rest to @effect&#x2F;schema and @effect&#x2F;platform&#x2F;HttpApi as well as migration to Effect Match from ts-pattern. There is a learning curve but its a pretty incredible ecosystem once you are in it for a bit.<p>I think the real turning point was typescript 5.5 (May 2024). The creator of typescript personally fixed a bug that unlocked a more natural generator syntax for Effect, which I think unlocks mainstream adoption potential.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;twitter.com&#x2F;MichaelArnaldi&#x2F;status&#x2F;1785061608894451725" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;twitter.com&#x2F;MichaelArnaldi&#x2F;status&#x2F;178506160889445172...</a> <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;microsoft&#x2F;TypeScript&#x2F;pull&#x2F;58337">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;microsoft&#x2F;TypeScript&#x2F;pull&#x2F;58337</a>
null
null
41,791,316
41,764,163
null
[ 41791545, 41792966, 41792257 ]
null
null
41,791,502
comment
howard941
2024-10-09T19:06:31
null
This arbitration solution was designed as voluntary and intended for B2B. Somehow it became part of shrinkwrap consents. We deserve a consumer oriented carveout for mandatory arbitration.
null
null
41,785,529
41,785,529
null
null
null
null
41,791,503
story
charmaineklee
2024-10-09T19:06:35
User Snapchat AR Lenses Anywhere with Chrome Extension
null
https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/snapchat-camera-for-chrom/mgijmfgdpljgnhcmokgeokdibogckgoj
1
null
41,791,503
0
null
null
null
41,791,504
comment
fastball
2024-10-09T19:06:39
null
I didn&#x27;t realize the Nobel specified that the only work which mattered was that of the &quot;scientific&quot; variety.
null
null
41,786,842
41,786,101
null
null
null
null
41,791,505
comment
Tiberium
2024-10-09T19:06:40
null
I&#x27;ve started using Deno for some small hobby scripts and projects, and it&#x27;s been really good so far. Their LSP server and VSCode extension are way faster and better than the default one, and configuration for a new project is much easier. Plus all the things like `deno fmt`. In comparison Bun only ships the runtime, without any of the tooling niceties.<p>I think I wouldn&#x27;t use TypeScript without Deno now :)
null
null
41,789,551
41,789,551
null
null
null
null
41,791,506
comment
idle_zealot
2024-10-09T19:06:50
null
Interoperability is great, walled-garden integration is a trap like any sort of bundling. If someone wants to create a suite of products that work well together that&#x27;s fine so long as they employ means that allow other products to integrate as well. Google has gone the other route and created a suite of products and services that integrate in ways that exclude competitors.
null
null
41,790,648
41,784,287
null
[ 41791563 ]
null
null
41,791,507
comment
null
2024-10-09T19:06:55
null
null
null
null
41,791,377
41,791,377
null
null
true
null
41,791,508
comment
farmeroy
2024-10-09T19:07:05
null
I mean, when I first tried to open the website it just wouldn&#x27;t load on my iPhone, so I tried on the laptop. It took ~10 seconds to load. I just assumed the bitcrushing was more issues with bandwidth and badly compressed images rather than a design choice. But your comment made me sit through everything to see if i could really get it. I guess I can recognize the work that went into this and the concept behind it... having said that, I am definitely not the target audience for this website and am struggling not to write an extremely negative comment about green day and 90s nostalgia
null
null
41,791,328
41,790,295
null
[ 41791944, 41793107, 41792120, 41791934, 41792724, 41795387 ]
null
null
41,791,509
story
latchkey
2024-10-09T19:07:05
Benchmarking Llama 3.1 405B on 8x AMD MI300X GPUs
null
https://dstack.ai/blog/amd-mi300x-inference-benchmark/
11
null
41,791,509
3
[ 41792562, 41791523 ]
null
null
41,791,510
comment
ghaff
2024-10-09T19:07:13
null
Well, confirmations are essentially always emails. Your kids may not care about those but adults pretty much have to.<p>But yes I do generally like it even if a lot of chit chat, appointment reminders, and the like have migrated to messaging.
null
null
41,791,199
41,788,246
null
null
null
null
41,791,511
comment
null
2024-10-09T19:07:15
null
null
null
null
41,791,366
41,791,366
null
null
true
null
41,791,512
comment
j0hnyl
2024-10-09T19:07:17
null
There&#x27;s another thing that no one really mentions within this context and it&#x27;s that people who are saving usually want to retire into something better, not the same slog they&#x27;ve been living while saving. That&#x27;s why it&#x27;s ridiculous when you read these FIRE forums and people get feedback like &quot;Why do you need more money if your spending is only X&quot;.... well my spending is only X, because I&#x27;m saving to build a war chest for financial independence where I can actually live a better quality of life than I do presently.
null
null
41,790,780
41,786,211
null
null
null
null
41,791,513
comment
DonHopkins
2024-10-09T19:07:21
null
No, it is used to signal the person&#x27;s gender doesn&#x27;t matter. Being angry about other people not fixating on gender by demanding everyone always explicitly define it with every pronoun is used as sexism signaling, which is what you&#x27;re doing.<p>You don&#x27;t know why other people choose to use the words they do, yet you presume the worst and accuse people of being insincere and lacking virtue despite (and because of) their polite behavior, regardless of their true beliefs, when it&#x27;s actually none of your business to police and judge their grammar.<p>I&#x27;d rather work with someone who purposefully signals they have virtue than someone who purposefully signals they&#x27;re a sexist asshole, any day.
null
null
41,790,254
41,787,647
null
[ 41794649 ]
null
null
41,791,514
comment
null
2024-10-09T19:07:24
null
null
null
null
41,784,133
41,780,569
null
null
true
null
41,791,515
comment
nine_k
2024-10-09T19:07:31
null
Why, it just should be opt-in:<p><pre><code> from __future__ import no_bare_except </code></pre> ...and enjoy.
null
null
41,790,856
41,788,026
null
[ 41791831 ]
null
null
41,791,516
comment
kragen
2024-10-09T19:07:39
null
The Python maintainers have switched from considering backward compatibility useful but costly to considering it actively harmful; there was a campaign a few years ago to convince library maintainers to stop making their code Python-2-compatible:<p>&gt; <i>The Python 3 statement was drawn up around 2016. Projects pledged to require Python 3 by 2020, giving other projects confidence that they could plan a similar transition, and allowing downstream users to figure out their options without a nasty surprise. We didn’t force people to move to Python 3, but if they wanted to stick with Python 2, they would stop getting new versions of our projects.</i><p>(<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;python3statement.github.io&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;python3statement.github.io&#x2F;</a>)<p>I know this sounds like a joke, and you probably think you&#x27;re misreading, but no. Projects <i>pledged to require Python 3 by 2020</i>. They <i>made a promise</i> to <i>break backward compatibility</i>. Not just a few minor projects, either; TensorFlow, Spark, IPython, Pandas, NumPy, SymPy, Hypothesis, etc.<p>Since that happened, everyone who considers backward-compatibility good (if costly), rather than evil, has abandoned Python.<p>The &quot;other users for whom python is an foreign, incidental, but indispensable part of their work (scientists, analysts, ...)&quot; would have to fork Python, but it&#x27;s probably too late for that; they can hardly hope to fork TensorFlow, Pandas, etc., as well.
null
null
41,789,903
41,788,026
null
[ 41791735, 41793241, 41799970 ]
null
null
41,791,517
comment
CatWChainsaw
2024-10-09T19:07:40
null
I can tell you&#x27;re high because #2. The only way Neuralink is secure is if we get rid of the system that incentivizes #1, aka capitalism, and not replace it with something equally bad or worse.<p>Oh, and Musk isn&#x27;t allowed a Neuralink tripwire to blow up your brain via his invention because he saw pronouns listed somewhere and got triggered.
null
null
41,784,860
41,779,952
null
[ 41791611 ]
null
null
41,791,518
comment
Eddy_Viscosity2
2024-10-09T19:07:48
null
&gt; All content on the internet gets linked to a legal ID<p>Identity theft would go through the roof.
null
null
41,784,210
41,767,648
null
null
null
null
41,791,519
comment
robotresearcher
2024-10-09T19:07:48
null
The citation has a large section on the impact of DNNs on physics research practice. They cite mega-projects that depend on this tech, for example. Hinton&#x27;s inventions are a contribution to physics, not a contribution in physics. Hopfield of course was a bone fide physicist.
null
null
41,776,253
41,775,463
null
[ 41791622 ]
null
null
41,791,520
comment
null
2024-10-09T19:07:54
null
null
null
null
41,791,477
41,791,477
null
null
true
null
41,791,521
comment
rootusrootus
2024-10-09T19:07:57
null
You inferred an awful lot from my comment. Which, I get it, makes a certain amount of sense given that you&#x27;re attributing &#x27;noble&#x27; to people using wealth as the metric.<p>I&#x27;m not focused on the person, nor how deserving they are individually, I care about how this benefits society.<p>Let me put this another way. I think that the majority of billionaires essentially won the lottery, and that a typical small business owner brings more real, actual value to society. For every one Musk or Bezos or Gates, how many equally intelligent people tried but were in the wrong place at the wrong time? I think the collective value of a lot of really intelligent people is much higher to society than the guys who got all the right things lined up at the right moment. Does Bezos have skill? Yes! Does he have skill proportionate to his wealth? Not a chance.<p>Hell, I&#x27;ll even admit that Musk is clearly skilled in business. Luck can&#x27;t necessarily explain all of it. But he rode the wealth rocket on the back of TSLA, a company he did not create. It wasn&#x27;t his idea to build electric cars, but maybe we can credit him for figuring how to make them a sexy and sought over status symbol.
null
null
41,791,262
41,789,751
null
[ 41793221 ]
null
null
41,791,522
comment
kqr
2024-10-09T19:08:08
null
When governments and related agencies implement this it is called <i>no wrong door</i>.<p>I like it. It doesn&#x27;t have to take any effort. When you hit reply on an email sent to the wrong person, add the correct email to the field with recipients. That&#x27;s it!<p>In something like Slack, you write the answer in the correct location for the question. That&#x27;s it.<p>These are tiny changes that don&#x27;t cost anything but can decrease friction a lot, because the nobody has to repeat themselves any time someone has gone through the wrong door.
null
null
41,765,127
41,765,127
null
[ 41792898, 41792647, 41792225 ]
null
null
41,791,523
comment
null
2024-10-09T19:08:08
null
null
null
null
41,791,509
41,791,509
null
null
true
null
41,791,524
comment
pier25
2024-10-09T19:08:14
null
Who knows but I doubt it.<p>It&#x27;s probably more about people complaining they can&#x27;t run Next or some other framework on Deno which directly impacts their business (Deno Deploy).
null
null
41,791,018
41,789,551
null
[ 41792414 ]
null
null
41,791,525
story
PaulHoule
2024-10-09T19:08:23
High-resolution images of RSV may expose stubborn virus's weak points
null
https://phys.org/news/2024-10-high-resolution-images-rsv-expose.html
1
null
41,791,525
0
null
null
null
41,791,526
comment
Timon3
2024-10-09T19:08:24
null
It seems I&#x27;m not the first person to make this observation: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;fabian-hiller&#x2F;valibot&#x2F;issues&#x2F;687">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;fabian-hiller&#x2F;valibot&#x2F;issues&#x2F;687</a><p>I honestly don&#x27;t want my validation library to &quot;tell a story&quot; at the expense of documentation clarity. It&#x27;s absolutely fine that this project uses it, I don&#x27;t want to impose my view on them - I guess it&#x27;s just not the validation library for me.
null
null
41,790,952
41,764,163
null
null
null
null
41,791,527
comment
pachico
2024-10-09T19:08:25
null
I wish there was an alternative to Kong API gateway where I didn&#x27;t need to write my plugins in Lua (the go and js sdks seem abandoned and are incomplete).
null
null
41,790,619
41,790,619
null
[ 41791581, 41792511, 41796294, 41791561, 41793400, 41791851 ]
null
null
41,791,528
comment
aupra
2024-10-09T19:08:27
null
Have you tried Paddle? They handle all the taxation for you.
null
null
41,791,366
41,791,366
null
[ 41792230 ]
null
null
41,791,529
story
hn_acker
2024-10-09T19:08:32
Florida Judge Blocks Paper from Publishing Video of Deputies Killing an Inmate
null
https://www.techdirt.com/2024/10/09/florida-judge-blocks-paper-from-publishing-video-showing-deputies-killing-an-inmate/
3
null
41,791,529
1
[ 41791530 ]
null
null
41,791,530
comment
hn_acker
2024-10-09T19:08:32
null
The original title of the article was:<p>&gt; Florida Judge Blocks Paper From Publishing Video Showing Deputies Killing An Inmate
null
null
41,791,529
41,791,529
null
null
null
null
41,791,531
comment
ChrisArchitect
2024-10-09T19:08:50
null
[dupe] More discussion: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=41780347">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=41780347</a>
null
null
41,791,376
41,791,376
null
null
null
null
41,791,532
comment
nervousvarun
2024-10-09T19:09:06
null
Apologies, a little slow here (probably because I was in high school when this album came out)...what are you actually buying for those listed prices?
null
null
41,791,326
41,790,295
null
[ 41791585 ]
null
null
41,791,533
comment
beloch
2024-10-09T19:09:11
null
There&#x27;s a whole industry based on overpriced, &quot;limited edition&quot; nostalgic merch. Traditionally, &quot;prints&quot; (i.e. posters) for bands, movies, and even individual star trek episodes are <i>huge</i>. If you set the limit right, you&#x27;re barely limiting sales at all while convincing people what they&#x27;re buying is somehow more special and worth more money.<p>Art of the past is cheap and plentiful. Instead of doing multiple runs of an unlimited poster and bothering to keep it in stock, you do <i>one</i> run can call it &quot;limited edition&quot;. Then you move on and mine the next anniversary.<p>This site is unusually slick for such a venture, but Dookie is a bigger deal than most albums, and the prices correspond to that.
null
null
41,791,326
41,790,295
null
[ 41791682 ]
null
null
41,791,534
story
gnabgib
2024-10-09T19:09:14
Google uncovers how quantum computers can beat today's best supercomputers
null
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-03288-3
4
null
41,791,534
0
null
null
null
41,791,535
comment
justtinker
2024-10-09T19:09:20
null
No, he really did mean Matlock. Grey hair guy in a white suit lecturing...Fictional Lawyer. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.alamy.com&#x2F;stock-photo&#x2F;matlock-tv-andy-griffith.html?sortBy=relevant" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.alamy.com&#x2F;stock-photo&#x2F;matlock-tv-andy-griffith.h...</a><p>Reboot on TV this year.
null
null
41,791,111
41,789,242
null
[ 41792271 ]
null
null
41,791,536
comment
JoeyBananas
2024-10-09T19:09:25
null
You are making loaded statements using Orwellian weaponized terminology. Now that I have the time, allow me to explain.<p>One conspiracy that I beleive is that there&#x27;s a deliberate campaign to conflate the nation-state of Israel, the religion of Judaism, and a particular ethnicity (Ashkenazi). These three things are not the same.<p>Even in isolation, these three concepts are ambiguous. For example, the nation-state known as &quot;Israel&quot; cannot be equated with the biblical nation of &quot;Israel.&quot; The &quot;religion of Judaism&quot; cannot be equated with &quot;Rabbinical judaism.&quot; The concept of Jewish as an ethnicity does not exist because there are multiple Jewish ethnicities.<p>Another conspiracy that I believe is that The conduct of the the nation-state known as &quot;Israel&quot; is largely the responsibility of a specific group of oligarchs who hide behind the meaningless word &quot;Jew&quot; to fabricate a false narrative and evade justice. This specific group of oligarchs associated with the nation-state called &quot;Israel&quot; happens to practice a particular interpretation of rabbinical Judaism, and they employ the tactic of monopolizing mass media to wage information warfare. They also influence world governments and perpetrate genocide, among many other immoral schemes that are exceedingly evil and sophisticated.
null
null
41,787,017
41,783,867
null
[ 41794677 ]
null
null
41,791,537
comment
burningChrome
2024-10-09T19:09:26
null
As someone who spent time researching the Ma Bells breakup and being knee deep in the local telecom deregulation, I see a lot of the same proposals when discussing the breaking up of Google and Facebook.<p>This is the short story of what happened in the local telecom deregulation, which I&#x27;m pretty sure will happen if you were to break up Google. Consider this took place over the course of 20+ years, but I see the same things happening.<p>After the Ma Bells breakup, there was a huge push to deregulate the regional carriers to increase local market competition. This was put in place in the late 90&#x27;s here in Minnesota. Suddenly anybody could start a local telecom, lease lines from Qwest Communications (now CenturyLink), resell them and then compete with them in the local market.<p>This spawned hundreds of companies that were living on razor thin margins. Many were able to exist up to the 2000 initial dot com bust. Many went out of business during the recession. Those who survived? Many of those merged with each other, or were bought by larger regional carriers who wanted to get into the Minneapolis market.<p>This is what I see happening. You break Google up into smaller companies and within a decade, they will have all merged back together in some form, under different names, or they&#x27;ll be bought by other companies seeking an advantage by using their technology. Its the same thing I saw happen in telecom. They tried to increase competition by deregulating the market and all it did was create a short-term gold rush and long-term crash.<p>The problem will be the same with Google. Qwest at the time owned the infrastructure and hardware. Nobody had the financial resources to build out an entirely new network to compete with them so they took the path of least resistance. Which lead to a myriad of other problems. Billing, installation, nefarious things Qwest would do to hamper competitors from switching their lines, etc.<p>You can break up Google, but over a few decades, we&#x27;ll look back and understand it wasn&#x27;t worth it.
null
null
41,784,287
41,784,287
null
[ 41793055, 41802468, 41792314 ]
null
null
41,791,538
comment
null
2024-10-09T19:09:36
null
null
null
null
41,790,947
41,790,947
null
null
true
null
41,791,539
comment
acdha
2024-10-09T19:09:36
null
I worked with a number of organizations which built public web apps. Nobody really asked about support for mobile browsers before the iPhone - some people checked that, say, an order form was technically functional but the assumption was that if it was slow or hard to read that was more to be expected than something they were going to pay to improve.
null
null
41,786,847
41,769,657
null
null
null
null
41,791,540
comment
CatWChainsaw
2024-10-09T19:09:54
null
Props for sticking to your guns but also fuck you.
null
null
41,728,825
41,659,458
null
null
null
null
41,791,541
comment
crazygringo
2024-10-09T19:09:54
null
But Unicode code points aren&#x27;t supposed to represent semantics, they&#x27;re supposed to represent... well, &quot;abstract characters&quot; that are either glyphs or get combined into glyphs, which can have multiple (ambiguous) semantic meanings.<p>That&#x27;s why there aren&#x27;t two different period characters to represent the end of a sentence vs. a decimal point, or two different em dashes where one represents a pause while the other comes at the end of dialog to indicate the sentence was interrupted (literally the opposite of a pause, it&#x27;s being cut off).<p>So since the apostrophe and the right single quote are visually identical, Unicode stays consistent in recommending that they be the same character. The name Unicode gives to a character is intended to represent <i>one</i> of its semantic meanings, not <i>all</i> of them.<p>(Unicode <i>does</i> have plenty of visually identical characters, but they generally belong to totally different languages, like the English &quot;o&quot; and the Greek omicron &quot;ο&quot;.)
null
null
41,791,358
41,787,647
null
[ 41793555 ]
null
null
41,791,542
story
bertman
2024-10-09T19:09:56
Two Nobel Prizes for AI, and Two Paths Forward
null
https://garymarcus.substack.com/p/two-nobel-prizes-for-ai-and-two-paths
3
null
41,791,542
0
null
null
null
41,791,543
comment
int_19h
2024-10-09T19:10:10
null
There is no evidence for &quot;biological inclination&quot; towards certain languages. Take a Spanish kid and raise them on Chinese, and they&#x27;ll speak it natively just fine, and vice versa.<p>However, natural languages evolve <i>naturally</i>, which means that they don&#x27;t just suddenly randomly change, and that change is very gradual. So things tend to get stuck in historically-motivated local maximums that can be very different for different languages because of their different histories.<p>There are some plausible theories around biologically motivated language features, but this tends to be about the environment - e.g. some sounds seem to be more common in languages spoken in high-altitude areas.
null
null
41,790,615
41,787,647
null
null
null
null
41,791,544
comment
gavindean90
2024-10-09T19:10:11
null
There are purists that complain. Importantly, we don’t let them edit the dictionaries.
null
null
41,790,858
41,787,647
null
null
null
null
41,791,545
comment
morbicer
2024-10-09T19:10:28
null
I feel like Effect is today&#x27;s Ramda. So cool but it&#x27;s going to be regretted by you and people coming after you in few years. Me and my team reverted to more stupid code and we are happier.
null
null
41,791,501
41,764,163
null
[ 41795345, 41795921, 41792186, 41799577, 41793956, 41793752, 41794405, 41791565 ]
null
null
41,791,546
comment
int_19h
2024-10-09T19:10:31
null
But the King is basically German. ~
null
null
41,790,342
41,787,647
null
null
null
null
41,791,547
comment
vineyardmike
2024-10-09T19:10:39
null
0. The book you linked to <i>is a joke</i>.<p>1. You can’t take things language related from France at face value - they probably have a bias. They have a strong cultural pride and protection over their language. They also have a strong history of political agendas pushing their language as the “international” language. I say this as a non-French speaker of the French language, and I mean no disrespect to the French people. It’s just a cultural element formed over hundreds of years of government policy.<p>2. The origins of English is not French, but there are many words in English derived from French. But today they’re English words, with a French history. There are many more words that are <i>not</i> French in origin, so it’s quite disingenuous to call English an “incorrect” or “mispronounced” French. Why is it not an “evolved” or “improved” French? (See point 1).<p>3. English is conjugated, it’s just different than French. “I am, you are, he is”. “I look, you look, he looks”. Or more obviously “I jump, I jumped, I am jumping”. Most of the French-origin words are also probably not verbs but nouns. That said, I have no data to back that up.
null
null
41,790,384
41,787,647
null
[ 41799047 ]
null
null
41,791,548
comment
solarmist
2024-10-09T19:10:44
null
There are more jobs, but also a lot more weird stuff is thrown in. Overall, the industry treats it like hiring a single bad engineer will singlehandedly and inevitably sink your entire company.<p>And the &quot;boring&quot; jobs copy their recruiting practices from the FAANG companies. So you have a 5 round interview that could ghost you any time.<p>The current problem is that huge numbers of companies are in a hiring freeze, but still posting jobs on job boards, so you have to submit countless resumes to get a human to contact you.<p>So yes, there are a lot more jobs available, but every step seems designed to discourage and frustrate job seekers.
null
null
41,715,095
41,714,672
null
null
null
null
41,791,549
comment
baking
2024-10-09T19:10:46
null
The nonprofit will hold stock in the BPC. I think the effect of this is that the nonprofit board, which is independent of Altman, will be restricted from selling their shares. However the nonprofit will eventually convert from a public charity to a private foundation and will be required to give away a percentage of their assets every year. I&#x27;m not sure how that will work with a BPC.
null
null
41,791,051
41,790,026
null
null
null
null
41,791,550
comment
ioblomov
2024-10-09T19:10:54
null
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.ph&#x2F;Yjzha" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.ph&#x2F;Yjzha</a>
null
null
41,791,488
41,791,488
null
null
null
null
41,791,551
comment
pavlov
2024-10-09T19:11:02
null
Such a nice, simple landing page. I could immediately understand and appreciate what this app does by first looking at the picture where the flow is defined, then seeing the flow executed on video.<p>It&#x27;s like the old Apple commercial: &quot;There is no step three.&quot;<p>Congratulations on the launch!
null
null
41,789,633
41,789,633
null
[ 41795974, 41798084 ]
null
null
41,791,552
comment
amai
2024-10-09T19:11:18
null
Market monopolies make it possible.
null
null
41,789,751
41,789,751
null
null
null
null
41,791,553
story
prophetbard
2024-10-09T19:11:22
Growing up in a hyper-connected, unlimited Internet age
null
https://rethinkingyouth.beehiiv.com/p/growing-up-unlimited-internet-age
1
null
41,791,553
0
null
null
null
41,791,554
comment
null
2024-10-09T19:11:25
null
null
null
null
41,790,988
41,789,242
null
null
true
null
41,791,555
comment
szarapka
2024-10-09T19:11:30
null
Unless you have a wild use-case that hasn&#x27;t been tackled by what&#x27;s out there, why on earth would rolling your own be a good idea? Building a proper, secure, and performant API gateway is NOT a few dozen lines of code.<p>There are some super robust (and fast) Go API gateways that take care of all the things you didn&#x27;t think about when trying to roll your own.
null
null
41,791,371
41,790,619
null
[ 41792774 ]
null
null
41,791,556
comment
nunez
2024-10-09T19:11:36
null
Surprising take.<p>Their sound and ethos is undeniably pop punk.<p>They played Gilman St, a punk mecca in Berkeley. See some of their shows in the 90s and 00s. If you don&#x27;t think that&#x27;s punk, I don&#x27;t know what to tell you.<p>They didn&#x27;t do much fast skate punk type stuff like NOFX and No Use did, but punk is a super wide genre anyway; to me, it&#x27;s about what you are, not how you play (see also: second wave ska a la Reel Big Fish and No Doubt, or country cow-punk, like Hank Williams III)<p>They leaned harder on the &quot;pop&quot; aspect of pop punk (American Idiot is widely considered one of the first punk operas ever made and is one of the best-selling rock albums ever) and experimented with their sound over the years (check out their stuff from the 2010s) but they never lost their edge, IMO (They dropped Saviors this year; incredible album.)<p>Regardless, they inspired a zillion punk bands of all kinds. Hell, FOD, one of my favorite pop punk bands from The Netherlands, was inspired by FOD, which is on this record!
null
null
41,791,045
41,790,295
null
[ 41791791, 41793762 ]
null
null
41,791,557
comment
nickthegreek
2024-10-09T19:11:42
null
Looks like it was originally submitted to HN back in May, prior to the public availability of notebooklm.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=40293141">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=40293141</a>
null
null
41,790,859
41,788,290
null
[ 41791645 ]
null
null
41,791,558
comment
lazide
2024-10-09T19:11:46
null
why would they do that when they can take over the gov’t and steal everyone else’s stuff? (see Russia, Venezula, China, and many others)<p>Notably, the biggest thefts seem to happen when they can convince people that the gov’t is doing it for ‘the good of the people’, and they’re ‘going after the rich people’, and then they can pocket it when no one is looking.
null
null
41,790,673
41,780,569
null
[ 41793932 ]
null
null
41,791,559
comment
howard941
2024-10-09T19:11:47
null
We&#x27;d be a lot better off if HOA covenants against ham antennas went away. (Milton target)
null
null
41,783,238
41,783,238
null
null
null
null
41,791,560
comment
adamc
2024-10-09T19:11:47
null
This, in a huge way. Especially given all the code that already exists.
null
null
41,791,450
41,788,026
null
null
null
null
41,791,561
comment
null_deref
2024-10-09T19:11:55
null
I used kong on premise is there a use case for it when aws and the likes offer API gateway solutions?
null
null
41,791,527
41,790,619
null
[ 41791586 ]
null
null
41,791,562
comment
thefaux
2024-10-09T19:12:07
null
That still doesn&#x27;t prove that Kay worked there because of the financial incentives. I don&#x27;t think that 20% is nearly enough for most top talent to bail to an otherwise less attractive company if they deeply care about what they&#x27;re working on so long as they aren&#x27;t wildly underpaid. There needs to be a combination of incentives to drive movement.
null
null
41,790,015
41,784,287
null
[ 41791619 ]
null
null
41,791,563
comment
ruthmarx
2024-10-09T19:12:10
null
&gt; Interoperability is great,<p>Yup, and that&#x27;s what people want. So what is the integrated service you are saying exists that can be a drop in replacement for the way so many organizations use Google&#x27;s integrated services?
null
null
41,791,506
41,784,287
null
[ 41791817 ]
null
null
41,791,564
comment
drpossum
2024-10-09T19:12:23
null
You can find examples of game engines going back into the 80s. It&#x27;s not a particularly new concept.
null
null
41,786,868
41,779,519
null
[ 41792383 ]
null
null
41,791,565
comment
bjacobso
2024-10-09T19:12:36
null
that is certainly a possibility
null
null
41,791,545
41,764,163
null
null
null
null
41,791,566
comment
vintermann
2024-10-09T19:12:40
null
As I recall, Kickstarter was a very early Public Benefit Corporation. If nothing else, it probably gives a card to activist employees who think the corporation is hurting the public in some particular way.
null
null
41,791,288
41,790,026
null
null
null
null
41,791,567
comment
metaphor
2024-10-09T19:12:51
null
This.<p>For example, in the Mariana Islands, there are two independent othography committees that have been low-key duking it out over an indigenous language with less than 50k native speakers; see these brief highlights[1; p. 11 onward] from a recognized scholar of the language for a small sampling.<p>In the CNMI, the language is routinely spoken (i.e. English is a second language in most households) and the CNMI&#x27;s othography committee has taken a conservative approach, focusing on simple written rules that capture sound as spoken, and biasing its orthography towards serving as an optimal language preservation mechanism...which makes objective sense given its target population is overwhelmingly fluent.<p>In Guam, however, the spoken language was nearing generational extinction largely driven by American colonial influence not dissimilar to the going concern of native Hawaiians. Ironically, Guam&#x27;s better funded orthography committee has taken a much more liberal approach in establishing new written rules and spellings (e.g. <i>CHamoru</i> is the official spelling of the language&#x2F;people written into law as of 2017; yes, the letter <i>CH</i> is now entirely capitalized in a proper noun; previously <i>Chamoru</i>, as opposed to the prevailing and historically consistent <i>Chamorro</i> in the CNMI).<p>There&#x27;s also been a recent resurgence of language adoption by the native youth cohort on Guam largely motivated by grassroots sociopolitical identity movement. This hipster generation has taken it upon themselves to replace an ever growing number of established words adopted during colonial rule hundreds of years ago with all but forgotten words of the ancient tongue...which I suppose is fair game as language evolution goes, but it&#x27;s gotten to a point of irony where these changes are throwing off the elder native-speaking generation responsible for passing on the language to their progeny, e.g. <i>family</i> (English) --&gt; <i>familia</i> (Spanish adopted) --&gt; <i>manggåfa</i> (antiquated is the new hip). In contrast, no such shift in zeitgeist is happening in the CNMI.<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;people.ucsc.edu&#x2F;~schung&#x2F;orthog_differences.pdf#page=11" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;people.ucsc.edu&#x2F;~schung&#x2F;orthog_differences.pdf#page=...</a>
null
null
41,790,416
41,787,647
null
null
null
null
41,791,568
comment
ruthmarx
2024-10-09T19:13:00
null
No one is denying alternatives exist, people are denying alternatives exist that are anywhere near as good.
null
null
41,791,440
41,784,287
null
null
null
null
41,791,569
comment
ChrisArchitect
2024-10-09T19:13:20
null
These Brain guys giving MSCHF vibes (i.e. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;deadstartuptoys.com&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;deadstartuptoys.com&#x2F;</a>)
null
null
41,790,295
41,790,295
null
[ 41792876 ]
null
null
41,791,570
story
achristmascarl
2024-10-09T19:13:33
Dell's sudden 5-day RTO order leaves parents scrambling to find childcare
null
https://www.businessinsider.com/dell-staff-return-office-order-sparks-panic-parents-childcare-wfh-2024-10
59
null
41,791,570
90
[ 41791975, 41792203, 41791941, 41791961, 41792221, 41792417, 41792337, 41792348, 41792401, 41792109, 41798054, 41791892, 41792116, 41792064, 41792002, 41791884, 41792125 ]
null
null
41,791,571
comment
nikki93
2024-10-09T19:13:35
null
GCC and clang (and maybe others) have &#x27;statement expressions&#x27;: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;godbolt.org&#x2F;z&#x2F;sqYnbh4Ej" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;godbolt.org&#x2F;z&#x2F;sqYnbh4Ej</a>
null
null
41,788,962
41,758,371
null
null
null
null
41,791,572
comment
kragen
2024-10-09T19:13:37
null
I do think it&#x27;s a better page, but I wouldn&#x27;t change the link if I were in charge. On the other hand, I think everyone is grateful that you&#x27;re in charge of HN and not me. <i>Especially</i> not me. So I think you should use your judgment.
null
null
41,791,410
41,758,371
null
null
null
null
41,791,573
comment
bmgoau
2024-10-09T19:13:40
null
My living standard is a function of my personal wealth&#x2F;income and the health of the society and the functions the government provides.<p>Elon Musks income (realised when he takes out personal loans against his equity), taxed at marginally higher rates trending to 100% above say $1 billion, would deliver more money to the government for schools, hospitals, transport, science, mental health etc, That would benefit everyone and not really change Mr Musk&#x27;s purchasing patterns or standard of living due to the way &quot;propensity to consume&quot; works at extreme wealth levels. Significant personal luxury, mansions, jets, art, yachts, etc can be had for under $1 billion per year in realised income.<p>So while it is true my personal wealth is not lessened by Mr Musk&#x27;s success, my possible living standard and that of my countrymen is below what is possible by not effectively taxing him and deploying that money into government functions.<p>Not to mention the way he and other high net worth individuals use their wealth to influence elections and lobby government legislation and policy...
null
null
41,790,599
41,789,751
null
null
null
null
41,791,574
comment
Retric
2024-10-09T19:13:44
null
The Bofors RBS 56 BILL (1988), FGM-148 Javelin and similar missile systems exploited weak top armor long enough ago to result in changes to modern tank designs.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Top-attack" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Top-attack</a><p>The KF51 Panther revealed 2022 should represent the current state of the art. <i>comprising a hard-kill element of extending the coverage of the ADS to the roof of the vehicle for protection against ATGMs and unguided anti-tank rockets launched from higher elevations, as well as a soft-kill element for protection against threats such as loitering munitions.[4]</i> <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Panther_KF51" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Panther_KF51</a><p>Obviously getting 100% accurate information on current tank armor isn’t realistic but at minimum these drones aren’t breaking new ground.
null
null
41,780,070
41,769,971
null
null
null
null
41,791,575
comment
int_19h
2024-10-09T19:13:48
null
FWIW while comma vs period for decimal fractions is a point of significant variability globally, the use of comma to group digits is fairly uncommon, whereas period is universally understood as a decimal separator even in countries where comma is normally used for that purpose (thanks to calculators and computers). And, on the other hand, space-separated groups are self-explanatory for those used to comma for that purpose. So using spaces for grouping + period for fractions is indeed the way to go to maximum readability worldwide.
null
null
41,789,798
41,787,647
null
null
null
null
41,791,576
comment
hinkley
2024-10-09T19:13:48
null
That’s undoubtedly a Zelda Fitzgerald quote (her husband plagiarized her shamelessly).<p>As a consequence of the Rule of Three, you are allowed to have rules that have one exception without having to rethink the law. All X are Y except for Z.<p>I sometimes call this the Rule of Two. Because it deserves more eyeballs than just being a subtext of another rule.
null
null
41,785,113
41,758,371
null
null
null
null
41,791,577
comment
robotresearcher
2024-10-09T19:13:50
null
This prize isn&#x27;t for inventing computers. It&#x27;s for some fundamental ANN ideas.
null
null
41,776,810
41,775,463
null
null
null
null
41,791,578
comment
null
2024-10-09T19:13:56
null
null
null
null
41,789,779
41,786,101
null
null
true
null
41,791,579
story
bytebach
2024-10-09T19:13:57
Show HN: Dust – Actors for Java 21 – Part 2
Dust now has a collection of libraries for doing fun stuff - LLM &#x2F; Embeddings interfaces, RSS Feeds, Web site crawling, SearXNG interface.
https://github.com/dust-ai-mr/dust
2
null
41,791,579
0
null
null
null
41,791,580
comment
outworlder
2024-10-09T19:13:59
null
For some definition of &#x27;understanding&#x27;.
null
null
41,788,536
41,786,101
null
null
null
null
41,791,581
comment
szarapka
2024-10-09T19:14:06
null
Have you tried KrakenD? <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.krakend.io&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.krakend.io&#x2F;</a> - plugins are written in Go
null
null
41,791,527
41,790,619
null
null
null
null
41,791,582
comment
bee_rider
2024-10-09T19:14:33
null
&gt; Any literal composed entirely of M, D, C, L, X, V and I characters that does not follow this format will raise a syntax error, because explicit is better than implicit.<p>Good as a reminder that rules like “explicit is better than implicit” should not be followed all the way to the most absurd possible conclusions.
null
null
41,791,253
41,788,026
null
null
null
null
41,791,583
comment
CatWChainsaw
2024-10-09T19:14:40
null
Can&#x27;t wait to see the contortions Altman pulls to retain a Zuckerberg-tier grip on the company, they&#x27;ll put Cirque do Soleil to shame.
null
null
41,790,026
41,790,026
null
[ 41792801 ]
null
null
41,791,584
comment
svara
2024-10-09T19:14:49
null
&gt; The obvious fix is to not step up basis on death.<p>And that&#x27;s how it&#x27;s done in many parts of the world, works perfectly fine. There&#x27;s really no reason to step up basis except to provide that loophole, which is probably exactly the reason it&#x27;s done.
null
null
41,784,208
41,780,569
null
null
null
null
41,791,585
comment
hluska
2024-10-09T19:14:51
null
You get exactly what it says. For example, if you put $99 down and win the draw, you can get an actual Teddy Ruxpin that sings Chump. Or for $79 you can win a Big Mouth Billie Bass that sings Basket Case. If you click through to the previews, there are videos.
null
null
41,791,532
41,790,295
null
[ 41791596 ]
null
null
41,791,586
comment
kryptn
2024-10-09T19:15:04
null
we&#x27;re using the kong gateway controller on aws eks, it&#x27;s pretty neat. I prefer to manage it via argocd&#x2F;gitops over terraform.
null
null
41,791,561
41,790,619
null
null
null
null
41,791,587
comment
null
2024-10-09T19:15:05
null
null
null
null
41,791,432
41,790,295
null
null
true
null
41,791,588
comment
zahlman
2024-10-09T19:15:05
null
&gt;actually remove syntactic sugar and force more characters for the same functionality. I fail to see how this is even being considered.<p>Python is not APL. Getting at the functionality in fewer characters is not a design goal - it&#x27;s just a usually consequence of the actual design goal.<p>This is being considered because &quot;Explicit is better than implicit.&quot; and because it helps avoid a common class of error (e.g. `except: continue` prevents aborting a loop with Ctrl-C, which is often not intentional).<p>Or as the PEP puts it:<p>&gt; While this syntax can be convenient for a “catch all” handler, it often leads to poor coding practices: &gt; &gt; 1. It can mask important errors that should be propagated. &gt; 2. It makes debugging more difficult by catching and potentially hiding unexpected exceptions. &gt; 3. It goes against the Python principle of explicit over implicit.<p>Python isn&#x27;t any other language, either. It <i>certainly</i> isn&#x27;t taking design guidance from JavaScript (which runs in an environment where the page is expected to show something coherent, and not a loud screaming error, no matter how absurd the input data and&#x2F;or code).<p>As for how much code it would break, you made me curious:<p><pre><code> ~&#x2F;Desktop&#x2F;dev$ find . -name &quot;*.py&quot; | wc -l 49433 ~&#x2F;Desktop&#x2F;dev$ grep --include=&#x27;*.py&#x27; -rnw . -e &#x27;except.*:&#x27; | wc -l 109801 ~&#x2F;Desktop&#x2F;dev$ grep --include=&#x27;*.py&#x27; -rnw . -e &#x27;except:&#x27; | wc -l 5692 ~&#x2F;Desktop&#x2F;dev$ grep --include=&#x27;*.py&#x27; -rnw . -e &#x27;except[ \t]*:&#x27; | wc -l # just to make sure 5692 </code></pre> But drilling down further, over 2&#x2F;3 of those bare excepts are in local copies of Python itself (i.e., multiple versions of the standard library) that I built from source. Probably all the rest are in dependencies. I don&#x27;t write code like that myself if I&#x27;m even remotely paying attention. (Of course, that only tells me how many <i>occurrences</i> there were, not how many files have them. But the first two results imply an average of about 2 `except`s per file, so.)
null
null
41,788,338
41,788,026
null
null
null
null
41,791,589
comment
throw3638
2024-10-09T19:15:08
null
[flagged]
null
null
41,791,298
41,745,798
null
[ 41791871 ]
null
true
41,791,590
story
Cloud98
2024-10-09T19:15:10
null
null
null
1
null
41,791,590
null
[ 41791591 ]
null
true
41,791,591
comment
Cloud98
2024-10-09T19:15:10
null
So, the big takeaways for me from this discussion about distributed databases are:<p>- Efficiency is key, and there are ways to leverage existing knowledge (like from game development) to make data processing faster. - Cost reduction doesn’t mean sacrificing performance, and in fact, Oxla seems to be proving that it’s possible to be both fast and affordable. - Trust and security are crucial, especially in big industries like energy or cybersecurity where any failure can be catastrophic.
null
null
41,791,590
41,791,590
null
null
null
null
41,791,592
comment
hightrix
2024-10-09T19:15:18
null
I fully understand that advertising enables many businesses.<p>But there have been businesses based on lead pipes for drinking water plumbing, asbestos for residential insulation, and so on. You could make an argument that these technologies enabled many businesses as well. That doesn’t mean we should allow lead pipes for drinking water or to use asbestos in residential homes.
null
null
41,791,463
41,784,287
null
[ 41791759, 41799061, 41792053, 41793305 ]
null
null
41,791,593
comment
criddell
2024-10-09T19:15:33
null
It could be very high on the scale. Like punks, bankers often don&#x27;t ask for permission.
null
null
41,791,432
41,790,295
null
null
null
null
41,791,594
comment
sieste
2024-10-09T19:15:36
null
This guest post reminds me of what slatestarcodex was like until a few years ago, before he moved to substack. A long winded, confusing, seemingly goalless introduction, but entertaining and filled with personal anecdotes, culminating in some grand theory that is deeply twisted and far fetched and perfectly reasonable and obvious at the same time.<p>I&#x27;m off to the archives, see you in a few days.
null
null
41,787,645
41,787,645
null
null
null
null
41,791,595
comment
neilv
2024-10-09T19:15:36
null
There&#x27;s also the subtitle on the article:<p>&gt; <i>ChatGPT maker considers largely untested company model to protect chief executive Sam Altman from outside interference</i><p>Or maybe the motivation is some other technical maneuver.<p>Or maybe the motivation is PR&#x2F;optics.<p>Is there anyone who trusts OpenAI to be honest about their intentions, at this point?
null
null
41,790,026
41,790,026
null
null
null
null
41,791,596
comment
nervousvarun
2024-10-09T19:15:45
null
I mean I thought that at first, then thought no way because that&#x27;s just a one off product but yeah, that&#x27;s incredible.<p>If anything the prices are far too low.
null
null
41,791,585
41,790,295
null
[ 41792929, 41792024 ]
null
null
41,791,597
comment
wtallis
2024-10-09T19:15:45
null
For Meteor Lake, Intel provided slides to the press that clearly labeled media blocks on the SoC tile, not the GPU tile. The hardware encode and decode also definitely does not use the shader execution units.
null
null
41,790,484
41,780,929
null
null
null
null
41,791,598
comment
zoezoezoezoe
2024-10-09T19:15:50
null
HTMX is an idea that I never understood. HTML over the wire sounds like the most egregious idea I could have ever thought of. If you want a sub par SPA experience just build an SPA with PHP ;), and if you want a real SPA that doesnt have 600 ms of latency when I click a button that for some god forsaken reason calls an api endpoint, use React or Vue or Svelte like we always have. Is it perfect? Trust me, as someone who is trying to build something that delivers an actual SPA experience with SSR without Node.js, it&#x27;s not, but a real SPA is miles better than streaming HTML over the wire.
null
null
41,766,882
41,766,882
null
[ 41793050 ]
null
null
41,791,599
comment
enoch_r
2024-10-09T19:15:52
null
This:<p>&gt; imagine no market volatility - everything is constant (e.g you&#x27;ve bought bounds)<p>is where everything breaks down.<p>Yes, if you keep all your money under your mattress, which is what&#x27;s actually modeled here (bonds bear interest!) then as long as you don&#x27;t run out, the unspent amount doesn&#x27;t matter.<p>But that would be absolutely bonkers and no one would do it. Instead, you invest in interest-bearing assets. The current inflation-adjusted <i>risk-free</i> rate of return is 1.76%. So if you have a net worth of $2M, you could invest it in bonds and spend $35k a year forever and still pass on the entire principle when you die, essentially guaranteed. If you have a net worth of $500k, on the other hand, you could invest it in bonds and spend $8,800 a year forever.<p>Of course this would still be crazy - you can get higher yield by taking <i>some</i> risk (and notably, having a higher net worth will allow you to take more risks and get more reward without the risk of running out of money) - but even in the &quot;just buy bonds&quot; scenario, you&#x27;re much better off with $2M than $500k.
null
null
41,786,211
41,786,211
null
null
null
null