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
41,791,900
comment
someluccc
2024-10-09T19:49:32
null
Please do tell us how Google is a burden to the whole country.<p>Is it the free maps? free mobile OS? free email? free cloud storage? free video service? free office suite? free desktop OS? free AI chat?
null
null
41,791,646
41,784,287
null
[ 41792354 ]
null
null
41,791,901
story
kk6mrp
2024-10-09T19:49:33
The Billy Project – In Pursuit of Artificial Intelligence (2006)
null
http://www.leedberg.com/glsoft/billyproject.shtml
1
null
41,791,901
0
null
null
null
41,791,902
story
cma
2024-10-09T19:49:58
null
null
null
1
null
41,791,902
null
null
null
true
41,791,903
comment
ChocolateGod
2024-10-09T19:49:58
null
&gt; Caddy plugins mean I have to download xcaddy and rebuild the server. I really do not want to rebuild services on my servers just because I need a simple layer 4 reverse proxy<p>That&#x27;s why containers exist.
null
null
41,791,794
41,790,619
null
[ 41792079 ]
null
null
41,791,904
comment
ValentineC
2024-10-09T19:50:17
null
&gt; <i>if you rely on a service provided by another organization external to your organization, get an SLA! Get a contract that guarantees you the provision of services you depend on.</i><p>Getting &quot;takers&quot; to pay for SLAs&#x2F;licences is pretty much what Automattic or whoever&#x27;s behind WordPress dot org wants.
null
null
41,791,267
41,791,369
null
[ 41797411 ]
null
null
41,791,905
comment
int_19h
2024-10-09T19:50:18
null
Slavic is somewhat more conservative and still has a bunch of archaic proto-Slavic and even proto-Indo-European stuff in it. Even most of the basic swearwords are still readily recognizable from PIE, which I always found particularly amusing:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wiktionary.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic&#x2F;xuj%D1%8C" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wiktionary.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic&#x2F;x...</a><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wiktionary.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic&#x2F;pizda" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wiktionary.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic&#x2F;p...</a><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wiktionary.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic&#x2F;jebati" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wiktionary.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic&#x2F;j...</a><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wiktionary.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic&#x2F;bl%C4%99d%D1%8C" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wiktionary.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic&#x2F;b...</a><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wiktionary.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic&#x2F;gov%D1%8Cno" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wiktionary.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic&#x2F;g...</a>
null
null
41,790,269
41,787,647
null
null
null
null
41,791,906
comment
bluGill
2024-10-09T19:50:26
null
&gt; People know what they need, and have always known<p>No we don&#x27;t. I need a better mouse trap, but I already have mouse traps that work, so if you make a better one you need me to find out about it otherwise I&#x27;ll just buy the same old not so good ones out of habit thinking they work as good as any other one. There are also problems that I don&#x27;t even know I have. There are a lot of houses with terrible insulation that the owners really need some advertisement to get them to upgrade - it will pay off in just a few years.
null
null
41,790,432
41,784,287
null
[ 41792136, 41794504 ]
null
null
41,791,907
comment
gnabgib
2024-10-09T19:50:26
null
Discussions<p>(189 points, 16 hours ago, 260 comments) <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=41784287">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=41784287</a><p>(84 points, 2 months ago, 98 comments) <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=41240716">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=41240716</a>
null
null
41,791,840
41,791,840
null
null
null
null
41,791,908
comment
leni536
2024-10-09T19:50:28
null
Another example is music (and relatedly, rythm games). With memorized music you have maximal anticipation of actions. The regular rithm only amplifies that anticipation. Musicians can be very consistent at timing (especially rithm section), and very little latency or jitter can throw that off.
null
null
41,791,062
41,758,371
null
[ 41797570 ]
null
null
41,791,909
comment
rolph
2024-10-09T19:50:40
null
there are practical digressions: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Green_wall" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Green_wall</a>
null
null
41,791,807
41,791,807
null
null
null
null
41,791,910
comment
KaoruAoiShiho
2024-10-09T19:50:40
null
Am I able to upload a book and have it respond truthfully to the book in a way that&#x27;s superior to NotebookLM or similar? Generally most long context solutions are very poor. Or does the data have to be in a specific format?
null
null
41,789,176
41,789,176
null
[ 41792065 ]
null
null
41,791,911
comment
77pt77
2024-10-09T19:51:09
null
&gt; and probably destroyed the credibility of the prize.<p>From now on I&#x27;ll always see it as just another nobel peace prize.<p>This is beyond ridiculous.
null
null
41,776,252
41,775,463
null
null
null
null
41,791,912
comment
null
2024-10-09T19:51:11
null
null
null
null
41,791,426
41,791,426
null
null
true
null
41,791,913
story
davecb
2024-10-09T19:51:17
Your Network Is Slow (:-)) [video]
null
https://vimeo.com/1017926413
1
null
41,791,913
1
[ 41791914 ]
null
null
41,791,914
comment
davecb
2024-10-09T19:51:17
null
I have another article in the &quot;You Don&#x27;t Know jack&quot; series from the ACM, now in the November Communications of the ACM (the print magazine), and a 5-minute video about it at <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;vimeo.com&#x2F;1017926413" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;vimeo.com&#x2F;1017926413</a><p>This is a follow-on from Dave Taht&#x27;s &quot;bufferbloat&quot; work, now a project called LibreQoS, where QoS stands for Quality of Service.<p>If you are having trouble with unintelligible con-calls or gaming lag, have a peek.
null
null
41,791,913
41,791,913
null
null
null
null
41,791,915
comment
naming_the_user
2024-10-09T19:51:18
null
It also seemingly completely ignores that the theoretical person is not an island that is born and dies.<p>If I pass $0 on to my children I&#x27;d consider that to be one of the biggest failings of my life.
null
null
41,790,780
41,786,211
null
null
null
null
41,791,916
comment
nyeah
2024-10-09T19:51:39
null
I loved it, but I think I know what you mean. I feel like there&#x27;s a lot of unrealized potential.
null
null
41,778,043
41,756,432
null
null
null
null
41,791,917
comment
llamaimperative
2024-10-09T19:51:41
null
For real. Ever since they sold out Petco Park ummm... last week... they&#x27;ve been super irrelevant.
null
null
41,791,830
41,790,295
null
[ 41792661 ]
null
null
41,791,918
story
emiago123
2024-10-09T19:51:43
null
null
null
1
null
41,791,918
null
null
null
true
41,791,919
story
jazzyjackson
2024-10-09T19:51:45
OpenAI to reveal secret training data in copyright case – for lawyers' eyes only
null
https://www.theregister.com/2024/09/26/openai_training_data_author_copyright_case/
3
null
41,791,919
0
null
null
null
41,791,920
comment
gnabgib
2024-10-09T19:51:45
null
Article H1: <i>How Much Does a Headshot Cost in 2024? A Detailed Guide</i>
null
null
41,791,813
41,791,813
null
null
null
null
41,791,921
comment
cl42
2024-10-09T19:51:51
null
Was looking for a solution like this for a few weeks, and started coding my own yesterday. Thank you for launching! Excited to give it a shot.<p>Question: when do you expect to release your Python SDK?
null
null
41,789,176
41,789,176
null
[ 41792069, 41791947 ]
null
null
41,791,922
comment
raincom
2024-10-09T19:51:57
null
Produce kids on American soil. These kids can sponsor parents once a kid reaches 18 years of age.
null
null
41,787,316
41,785,265
null
[ 41795741, 41797747 ]
null
null
41,791,923
comment
mulmen
2024-10-09T19:51:59
null
Competition should solve this. The government’s role is to cultivate competitive markets, not to get bogged down in implementation details.
null
null
41,791,057
41,784,287
null
[ 41800901 ]
null
null
41,791,924
story
gigatexal
2024-10-09T19:52:02
A skeptic's take on LLMs: Spoiler: now a fan
null
https://gigatexal.blog/pages/coming-around-to-llms/coming-around-to-llms.html
2
null
41,791,924
0
null
null
null
41,791,925
comment
Dumblydorr
2024-10-09T19:52:11
null
The drug development process takes around 10+ years typically, a lot of long planning of multiple phases of studies needs to be done. This will help in the initial steps and in finding good starting points, and in theory should help the subsequent stages be more successful. I wouldn’t expect new drugs this decade.<p>Other aspects of biotech and research could well be affected far faster than the consumer drug market, but again you’ll need a few years for those early stage developments to aid real world applications.
null
null
41,791,738
41,786,101
null
null
null
null
41,791,926
comment
ezekg
2024-10-09T19:52:12
null
I personally believe using AGPL in that way is dishonest, because it foregoes the spirit of open source and instead adopts AGPL as a thinly-veiled non-compete propped up on ambiguity and FUD, which is exactly what this essay delves into i.r.t. dishonesty in commercial open source.
null
null
41,790,781
41,788,461
null
null
null
null
41,791,927
comment
rsynnott
2024-10-09T19:52:16
null
&gt; and the business is still a cash generating juggernaught.<p>Current Tesla P&#x2F;E: 67.78 (even for a large SaaS company, this would be very high; for a consumer goods manufacturer it’s virtually unheard of).<p>Current VW AG P&#x2F;E: 3.14.<p>Like, people buying Tesla presumably aren’t buying primarily based on its earnings. There is an expectation of something more.
null
null
41,789,466
41,789,358
null
[ 41792037 ]
null
null
41,791,928
comment
fauxir
2024-10-09T19:52:36
null
Cheers, appreciate that.<p>I&#x27;ve worked quite a lot on the tool itself to make it functional without spending too much on the UI, since it&#x27;s just an alpha for now.<p>By the end of the week, I should have a proper landing page with compelling copy and documentation on how it works.
null
null
41,791,806
41,791,685
null
null
null
null
41,791,929
comment
feelandcoffee
2024-10-09T19:52:39
null
I miss old contextual advertising. Like you read a sports website, you see ads for matches, sports gear, etc, all based on the content not the user preferences.
null
null
41,791,355
41,784,287
null
[ 41792062, 41795028 ]
null
null
41,791,930
comment
wren6991
2024-10-09T19:52:42
null
Someone needs to set up a Clockwork Orange-style viewing session with the Python developers and Linus&#x27; WE DO NOT BREAK USER SPACE email: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;linuxreviews.org&#x2F;WE_DO_NOT_BREAK_USERSPACE" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;linuxreviews.org&#x2F;WE_DO_NOT_BREAK_USERSPACE</a><p>I help maintain a small Python codebase at work (bulk of my work is in Verilog) and the number of times somebody&#x27;s PEP science fair project has broken production code following a Python version upgrade is too damn high.
null
null
41,788,026
41,788,026
null
null
null
null
41,791,931
comment
ein0p
2024-10-09T19:52:57
null
Not even single batch. If you want reasonable latency per token (TPOT) even larger batches do not give you high compute utilization during extend. It’s only when you don’t care about TPOT at all, and your model is small enough to leave space for a large batch on an 8 GPU host, that’s when you could get decent utilization. That’s extend only - it’s easy to get high utilization in prefill.
null
null
41,786,798
41,784,591
null
null
null
null
41,791,932
comment
77pt77
2024-10-09T19:53:01
null
Still more of a Nobel Prize than the one for Economics.
null
null
41,775,998
41,775,463
null
null
null
null
41,791,933
comment
quesomaster9000
2024-10-09T19:53:15
null
I for one use uint32 where it makes sense, because it&#x27;s a good trade-off with packed struct size and besides - by the year 2106 arrives I will (hopefully) be dead and it won&#x27;t be my problem anymore.<p>I wonder if the decision behind using signed int32 was similar? &quot;By 2038 I&#x27;ll be dead and it won&#x27;t be my problem lol&quot;.
null
null
41,785,359
41,785,359
null
null
null
null
41,791,934
comment
null
2024-10-09T19:53:18
null
null
null
null
41,791,508
41,790,295
null
null
true
null
41,791,935
comment
criddell
2024-10-09T19:53:19
null
Lots of people try to police English as well. It wasn&#x27;t that long ago whenever any use of &quot;begs the question&quot; to mean &quot;raises the question&quot; would get plenty of reaction from the prescriptivists. Fortunately, that war seems to have ended.
null
null
41,790,161
41,787,647
null
null
null
null
41,791,936
comment
alphabettsy
2024-10-09T19:53:26
null
Boulevard has to be compiled at some point. Wouldn’t it extremely simple to setup a GitHub Action to build Caddy in the way you desire?
null
null
41,791,794
41,790,619
null
[ 41792071 ]
null
null
41,791,937
story
YeGoblynQueenne
2024-10-09T19:53:35
null
null
null
1
null
41,791,937
null
null
null
true
41,791,938
comment
commandlinefan
2024-10-09T19:53:41
null
&gt; a lot of negativity about Indians<p>There isn&#x27;t, though. There&#x27;s a lot of negativity about _H1B_s in the comments here, but you conflate that with Indian.
null
null
41,786,888
41,785,265
null
[ 41792671 ]
null
null
41,791,939
comment
int_19h
2024-10-09T19:54:16
null
I can see how &quot;unnecessary&quot; periods could be considered excessively formal in some contexts like texting, but ... arrogant?
null
null
41,790,034
41,787,647
null
[ 41792107 ]
null
null
41,791,940
comment
vineyardmike
2024-10-09T19:54:30
null
I’m not arguing they should be doing things from “scratch” (although kids have been making music from scratch for all of mankind). If you think a child needs weeks or months to have fun making music some weekend, you’re taking it too seriously. A kid can bang around in GarageBand for an hour or two and have fun making something. It doesn’t need to be good enough to monetize on Spotify, and if that’s their goal.. then years learning may actually be the reasonable approach.<p>Kids <i>making</i> something, with any tool, is better than <i>consuming</i> something. Because making something is creative. They don’t need to know music theory to have fun making things, it doesn’t even need to be good. The AI tool should allow a kids creativity to go further, not replace it.<p>The original post was about a parent using an LLM to write a podcast to entertain their kids, which is just another way for kids to passively consume low-quality crap. The proposed alternative was to make a “podcast” with your kid, using any tool you have available at home.<p>The point was don’t automate the creativity and leave your kids to consume passively.
null
null
41,774,002
41,761,497
null
null
null
null
41,791,941
comment
milesskorpen
2024-10-09T19:54:32
null
It&#x27;s not clear to me how you can be a full-time employee and be doing full-time child care. I understand the need for schedule flexibility, but if going back to the office means you need to find child care it seems to suggest some of these people weren&#x27;t really working full time on those days.
null
null
41,791,570
41,791,570
null
[ 41792033, 41791980, 41792041, 41791968, 41791959, 41792022, 41792258, 41792318, 41792114, 41792286, 41792009, 41792193, 41795105, 41792144, 41792011, 41792220, 41792043 ]
null
null
41,791,942
comment
idontwantthis
2024-10-09T19:54:37
null
Can you elaborate? I’ve always been fascinated by their existence.
null
null
41,791,844
41,790,295
null
[ 41792232 ]
null
null
41,791,943
comment
rqtwteye
2024-10-09T19:54:39
null
As far as I understand Public Benefit is as meaningless as non profit. The names are extremely misleading. A public benefit corporation doesn’t necessarily have to provide benefits for the public and non profits can be extremely profitable for the right people.
null
null
41,790,981
41,790,026
null
null
null
null
41,791,944
comment
fkyoureadthedoc
2024-10-09T19:54:51
null
Always at least one every thread.<p>&gt; Sorry but this site is trash because it took 10s to load on my One Laptop Per Child running LFS connected to my 3g hotspot. I literally cannot imagine why anyone could ever like this.
null
null
41,791,508
41,790,295
null
[ 41792994 ]
null
null
41,791,945
comment
neilv
2024-10-09T19:54:51
null
I often try to practice something like this, but context affects how actively helpful&#x2F;meta I am.<p>Someone who&#x27;s new, or seems overwhelmed, or has shown some effort... might get more hand-holding help... than someone who seems to be, say, ignoring the single-source-of-truth-for-most-all-things wiki that was impressed upon them, and just trying to knock off a task as easily as possible, with no consideration for others&#x27; time.<p>A suspected former is more likely to get my best customer service, team player help. &quot;Have you met Jane? I think she&#x27;s started a new product feature for that, but there&#x27;s also a related tailoring that Sales has been doing. Let me introduce you to Jane, and we can see which thing you should be you should be working with today. I&#x27;m curious myself.&quot; (Goals are to unblock this person, have everyone on the right tracks, and set the culture for team-orientedness.)<p>A suspected latter, I&#x27;ll play it by ear, for exactly how to see whether they checked the wiki (or did whatever is the thing everyone should know from onboarding they&#x27;re supposed to do first), and try to nudge them into the right meta thinking if they need it, while also <i>not</i> sending the cultural message to <i>not</i> be very helpful.
null
null
41,765,127
41,765,127
null
[ 41796869 ]
null
null
41,791,946
story
zhengiszen
2024-10-09T19:54:55
null
null
null
3
null
41,791,946
null
[ 41792592 ]
null
true
41,791,947
comment
felix089
2024-10-09T19:54:57
null
Very happy to hear, please do reach out to us with any feedback or questions via [email protected]
null
null
41,791,921
41,789,176
null
null
null
null
41,791,948
story
melenaboija
2024-10-09T19:55:00
Great Circle Map
null
https://www.greatcirclemap.com/
3
null
41,791,948
0
null
null
null
41,791,949
comment
77pt77
2024-10-09T19:55:08
null
&gt; If you read a physics textbook from the early 1900s, they didn&#x27;t really have multivariate calculus and linear algebra expressed as concisely as we do now.<p>This is completely incorrect.
null
null
41,776,075
41,775,463
null
null
null
null
41,791,950
comment
aleph_minus_one
2024-10-09T19:55:08
null
$150B is just a (somewhat arbitrary) estimate of the current value of OpenAI.
null
null
41,791,024
41,790,026
null
null
null
null
41,791,951
comment
giantg2
2024-10-09T19:55:10
null
&quot;Or in other words: when someone you don’t like is screwed over, be prepared for that next someone to be you.&quot;<p>This is incredibly relevant to my own life. I wish people would contemplate this more - at work, with proposed laws, etc.
null
null
41,791,884
41,791,570
null
null
null
null
41,791,952
comment
FrustratedMonky
2024-10-09T19:55:12
null
There are a lot of downvotes going around because a large contingent is thinking the Nobel Prize for &quot;Physics&quot; should not go to something involving Computer Science. That it was awarded as it was, was an error.<p>Seemingly because even if the math or algorithms came from a physicist solving physics problems . Since it didn&#x27;t involve some theoretical particles, it isn&#x27;t physics&#x27;y enough to get a Nobel in Physics.
null
null
41,778,645
41,775,463
null
null
null
null
41,791,953
comment
sumtechguy
2024-10-09T19:55:15
null
I remember buying cable tv because it had &#x27;no ads&#x27;.
null
null
41,790,853
41,784,287
null
null
null
null
41,791,954
comment
camgunz
2024-10-09T19:55:22
null
Leave this in linters.
null
null
41,788,026
41,788,026
null
null
null
null
41,791,955
comment
johnea
2024-10-09T19:55:22
null
According to:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.iso-accelerator.co.uk&#x2F;news&#x2F;post&#x2F;how-many-iso-standards-are-there" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.iso-accelerator.co.uk&#x2F;news&#x2F;post&#x2F;how-many-iso-sta...</a><p>&quot;The ISO Standards Catalogue comprises more than 25 thousand standards&quot;<p>Maybe the author could start out by specifying which ISO standard they&#x27;re refering to?
null
null
41,784,668
41,784,668
null
null
null
null
41,791,956
comment
SamBam
2024-10-09T19:55:24
null
Klimt is one of those artists that I feel primed to dislike, because it&#x27;s so reproduced that&#x27;s it&#x27;s turned cheesy. I&#x27;ve probably seen more <i>Kiss</i> posters and fridge magnets and whatevers than any other painting in the world.<p>But good god are they beautiful. They just make me so happy to see them. Or sad.<p>My favorites are probably the birch forests, though, perhaps <i>Birch Forest (1903)</i> [1]<p>1. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.wikiart.org&#x2F;en&#x2F;gustav-klimt&#x2F;farmhouse-with-birch-trees-1903" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.wikiart.org&#x2F;en&#x2F;gustav-klimt&#x2F;farmhouse-with-birch...</a>
null
null
41,761,409
41,761,409
null
null
null
null
41,791,957
comment
HideousKojima
2024-10-09T19:55:31
null
&gt;Truman Doctrine<p>Wait, why would the Soviet Union see a pledge to protect nations from authoritarian threats as aggression?
null
null
41,789,858
41,776,721
null
[ 41800765 ]
null
null
41,791,958
comment
timbit42
2024-10-09T19:55:57
null
Is the internet, &#x27;hugely centralized&#x27;, or is it just the web that is?
null
null
41,786,369
41,786,012
null
null
null
null
41,791,959
comment
rich_sasha
2024-10-09T19:56:02
null
I guess depends how far you are from the office, and how much time you&#x27;ll end up burning on commutes. Childcare may be a 5 minute walk from home but a 1+hr unreliable commute from the office.
null
null
41,791,941
41,791,570
null
null
null
null
41,791,960
story
jprohov
2024-10-09T19:56:11
null
null
null
1
null
41,791,960
null
null
null
true
41,791,961
comment
Someone1234
2024-10-09T19:56:16
null
This is just downsizing while suppressing negative PR&#x2F;investor fear. I&#x27;d caution anyone who invests or any of these companies that RTO, you should treat this like any other layoff from the perspective of company performance -- because it is.
null
null
41,791,570
41,791,570
null
[ 41791992, 41792164 ]
null
null
41,791,962
comment
munificent
2024-10-09T19:56:19
null
<i>&gt; You&#x27;ve seen games running at 120Hz and at 60Hz. The difference is obvious, isn&#x27;t it?</i><p>Honestly, I have not. I&#x27;m not much of a gamer, even though I used to be a game developer.<p>Certainly the difference between 30Hz and 60Hz is noticeable.<p>Maybe this is just because I&#x27;m old school but if it were me, I would absolutely prioritize low latency over high frame rate. When you played an early console game, the controls felt like they were concretely wired to the character on screen in a way that most games I play today lack. There&#x27;s a really annoying spongey-ness to how games feel that I attribute largely to latency.<p>I don&#x27;t really give a shit about fancy graphics and animation (I prefer 2D games). But I want the controls to feel solid and snappy.<p>I also make electronic music and it&#x27;s the same thing there. Making music on a computer is wonderful and powerful in many ways, but it doesn&#x27;t have the same immediacy as pushing a button on a hardware synth (well, on most hardware synths).
null
null
41,790,813
41,758,371
null
[ 41798386, 41792130 ]
null
null
41,791,963
comment
indrora
2024-10-09T19:56:19
null
I had hoped that they would reference this in their paper as some kind of &quot;supporting previous exploration&quot; but no, alas.
null
null
41,787,704
41,784,591
null
null
null
null
41,791,964
comment
amadeuspagel
2024-10-09T19:56:23
null
Compare:<p>- Rosi&#x27;s Bar<p>- Rosis Bar<p>With the first it&#x27;s immidiately clear that Rosi is a woman&#x27;s name and that the bar belongs to her. With the second it&#x27;s not clear at all what Rosis is. Maybe some kind drink?
null
null
41,787,647
41,787,647
null
[ 41792883, 41792154 ]
null
null
41,791,965
comment
sailfast
2024-10-09T19:56:27
null
Absolutely incredible product. I don&#x27;t have the $99 to splurge on this but it was very enticing :)
null
null
41,791,029
41,790,295
null
[ 41792213 ]
null
null
41,791,966
comment
alphabettsy
2024-10-09T19:56:33
null
Completely disagree.<p>Use something off the shelf that’s mature and tested until you encounter such complexity that it’s no longer feasible or practical.
null
null
41,791,371
41,790,619
null
[ 41792481 ]
null
null
41,791,967
comment
ta1243
2024-10-09T19:56:41
null
Google doesn&#x27;t really sell products though, not to businesses. It sells individual data to businesses, it sells advertising to businesses.<p>The only thing the government will be interested in is the spying which they aren&#x27;t allowed to do, but unaccountable corporations are allowed to do. As people become more aware of this it means google becomes less and less useful.
null
null
41,791,642
41,784,287
null
[ 41792131, 41792467, 41796378 ]
null
null
41,791,968
comment
giantg2
2024-10-09T19:57:00
null
It depends on the level of needs for the child. There&#x27;s a certain age range where a child can basically take care of themself for a few hours bur can&#x27;t be trusted to be home alone (or haven&#x27;t met the legal age).
null
null
41,791,941
41,791,570
null
[ 41792341, 41791981 ]
null
null
41,791,969
comment
jltsiren
2024-10-09T19:57:04
null
There is a lot of variation in how PhD studies work. In some places, you are just a faceless candidate applying to a department, which discourages you from contacting the faculty before you are admitted. In other places, you must convince a professor to supervise and fund you before you are even allowed to apply. Some universities require you (or your supervisor) pay tuition fees for a number of years before you can graduate, while others don&#x27;t care what you do, as long as you can produce a thesis that meets their standards.<p>You can jump from social sciences to STEM. Your formal admission can wait for a year or two after you actually started. Or you can move to another university and get a PhD in a few months, because the administrative requirements in the original one were too unreasonable. These things happen, because universities are independent organizations that like doing things their own way.
null
null
41,789,779
41,786,101
null
null
null
null
41,791,970
comment
zitterbewegung
2024-10-09T19:57:05
null
Well this PEP won&#x27;t be going forward see <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;discuss.python.org&#x2F;t&#x2F;pep-760-no-more-bare-excepts&#x2F;67182&#x2F;83" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;discuss.python.org&#x2F;t&#x2F;pep-760-no-more-bare-excepts&#x2F;67...</a>
null
null
41,789,903
41,788,026
null
null
null
null
41,791,971
comment
cogman10
2024-10-09T19:57:05
null
&gt; Users don&#x27;t read dialogs.<p>Not all do, some do. And it only takes a few to spot something fishy and start reporting problems.<p>&gt; This also doesn&#x27;t address the threat model<p>It actually does, because few extensions need broad permissions. The threat is significantly reduced if a change in required permissions goes up a new dialog pops up which encourages the few users that read the thing to ask &quot;Hey, why is this asking for so many more permissions?&quot;<p>This model works. It works so well that the security model of pretty much every app store is exactly the same. The risks are also identical.
null
null
41,791,169
41,784,287
null
null
null
null
41,791,972
comment
alistairSH
2024-10-09T19:57:09
null
<i>...it drives me crazy when I hear people refer to Pizzeria Uno as &quot;Uno&#x27;s&quot;</i><p>Pedant Alert! The chain&#x27;s name is &quot;Uno Pizzeria &amp; Grill&quot;.<p>You&#x27;re not wrong, but the actual ordering of the name makes it less clear to a casual observer that there is no person named &quot;Uno&quot;.<p>And the domain the company uses is &quot;unos.com&quot;, so at the corporate entity has accepted the name.
null
null
41,790,919
41,787,647
null
[ 41792099 ]
null
null
41,791,973
comment
mrguyorama
2024-10-09T19:57:10
null
It&#x27;s the absolute best tool for &quot;I need to programmatically do &lt;thing&gt; and will never touch this script again&quot; or &quot;I want to build a tiny utility app for myself and myself alone, and I don&#x27;t want to have to pull in ANY dependencies or do ANY build steps&quot;<p>I have literally used it instead of writing a curl one liner because I didn&#x27;t feel like looking up the arguments.<p>Python is incredible for building <i>tools</i>, exactly like a small time machinist might build certain cutters for a part they are manufacturing, or a blacksmith build tools, or a welder building a jig, etc etc<p>I cannot fathom when people choose to build heavyweight or long lived applications and business products with it. Django is alright I guess, except that complicated database stuff will cause you problems eventually, and migrations are a lot of fuss for not as many guarantees as you would hope for the effort.
null
null
41,790,724
41,788,026
null
null
null
null
41,791,974
comment
ein0p
2024-10-09T19:57:11
null
It’s even worse in battery constrained devices - they tend to also be memory constrained and run with batch size 1 during extend. IOW the entire model (or parts thereof, if the model is MoE), gets read for every generated token. Utilization of compute is truly abysmal in that case and almost all energy is spent pushing bytes through the memory bus, which on battery powered devices doesn’t have high throughput
null
null
41,791,828
41,784,591
null
null
null
null
41,791,975
comment
ryandrake
2024-10-09T19:57:19
null
&gt; &quot;To harness this energy and grow skills, we believe our sales teams need to be together in the office,&quot; the memo added. &quot;Additionally, our data shows that sales teams are more productive when onsite.&quot;<p>I wonder if they shared the &quot;data&quot; in the memo. Otherwise, this should be considered a magical myth that the company&#x27;s leadership simply believes.
null
null
41,791,570
41,791,570
null
[ 41792253, 41792087, 41792345, 41792776, 41794493, 41795691, 41793380, 41792039 ]
null
null
41,791,976
comment
tivert
2024-10-09T19:57:21
null
&gt; I think there is also the issue of cultural dominance. &quot;English-friendly&quot; means the foreign language is morphed to better suit English speakers. It could go the other way if Mandarin is the dominant trade language.<p>It&#x27;s not an issue of cultural dominance, as no one would be forcing the Chinese to change their names or their pronunciations. It&#x27;s basically just keeping English from being even more unmanageable, in a way many other languages do, including Chinese.<p>If an English name or other word is used in Chinese (or in Japanese, or many other languages) it gets localized. For instance, watch this video: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=Ix2xYvMcW2A" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=Ix2xYvMcW2A</a>. The Chinese speakers are mostly talking about Trump, but the only name I could actually pick out was Obama&#x27;s (probably because &quot;Trump&quot; is hard to pronounce in Chinese).<p>Apparently the Xinhua decided to render &quot;Trump&quot; as 特朗普&#x2F;Te Lang Pu (<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.usatoday.com&#x2F;story&#x2F;news&#x2F;world&#x2F;2017&#x2F;01&#x2F;25&#x2F;china-donald-trump-name-meaning&#x2F;97034962&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.usatoday.com&#x2F;story&#x2F;news&#x2F;world&#x2F;2017&#x2F;01&#x2F;25&#x2F;china-d...</a>), instead of doing the American&#x2F;English thing of &quot;You don&#x27;t know their language? Well f-you then. No help from us.&quot;<p>Also, the English use of Pinyin can have some unfortunate effects. I used to work with a man who&#x27;s last name was Cao whose name was mispronounced &quot;Cow&quot; almost 100% of the time (there was a strong preference for first-name use in the office, so it rarely happened to his face).
null
null
41,791,046
41,787,647
null
[ 41795053 ]
null
null
41,791,977
comment
afiori
2024-10-09T19:57:25
null
Programming languages are too obsessed with unicode in my opinion:<p>String operations should have bytes and utf-{8,16} versions. The string value would have is_valid_utf_{8,16} flags and operations should unset them if they end up breaking the format (eg str[i] = 0xff would always mark the string as not unicode, str[i] = 0x00 would check if the flag was set and it so check whether the assignment broke a codepoint and unset the flag if so)
null
null
41,790,829
41,788,026
null
[ 41792249 ]
null
null
41,791,978
comment
zitterbewegung
2024-10-09T19:57:25
null
Latest post on this says that this PEP won&#x27;t be implemented at all.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;discuss.python.org&#x2F;t&#x2F;pep-760-no-more-bare-excepts&#x2F;67182&#x2F;83" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;discuss.python.org&#x2F;t&#x2F;pep-760-no-more-bare-excepts&#x2F;67...</a>
null
null
41,788,026
41,788,026
null
null
null
null
41,791,979
comment
thomassmith65
2024-10-09T19:57:35
null
That is a large part of it. Another part is that terrorism sucked a lot of air from the room. Until 2001, people - certainly in my country - just did not think much about terrorism. After 9&#x2F;11, it was <i>all</i> anyone thought about. That mindset made WWII issues seem more remote and somewhat stale.
null
null
41,788,074
41,776,721
null
null
null
null
41,791,980
comment
acheron
2024-10-09T19:57:46
null
With a 2 year old, sure. But a lot of my PTO used to be &quot;elementary aged child is sick and has to stay home from school, so I have to stay home too because he can&#x27;t be home by himself for 9 hours&quot;. Now I don&#x27;t have to take PTO for that. Kids are sick and just stay in bed or on the couch, I check on them every so often. Doesn&#x27;t interfere with work any more than going to get a coffee.
null
null
41,791,941
41,791,570
null
null
null
null
41,791,981
comment
milesskorpen
2024-10-09T19:57:56
null
Yeah, I can understand that.
null
null
41,791,968
41,791,570
null
null
null
null
41,791,982
comment
77pt77
2024-10-09T19:57:57
null
They just hijacked the prestige of the field.<p>Like medical doctors did with the term doctor and psychiatrists by claiming they were doing medicine.<p>The list is almost endeless.
null
null
41,776,584
41,775,463
null
null
null
null
41,791,983
comment
bonoboTP
2024-10-09T19:57:58
null
&gt; hundreds of years ago most interesting science, etc. was done by the royal class<p>Not really true. Newton, Copernicus, Kepler, Galileo, Mendel, Faraday, Tesla... Not from royals, nor from high nobility. Many great scientists were born to merchant families, of a level that wasn&#x27;t even all too rare.
null
null
41,790,382
41,786,101
null
null
null
null
41,791,984
comment
null
2024-10-09T19:58:00
null
null
null
null
41,790,244
41,784,287
null
null
true
null
41,791,985
comment
hn_throwaway_99
2024-10-09T19:58:07
null
Sorry to repeat the &quot;if you&#x27;re not paying, you&#x27;re the product, not the consumer&quot; adage, but I think that&#x27;s critically important when evaluating Google. These things aren&#x27;t free, they&#x27;re paid for by billions in advertising, and it&#x27;s not like Google was the first to figure out this business model - radio and TV was &quot;free&quot; in the same manner for decades prior.<p>I honestly would <i>love</i> it we would ditch surveillance capitalism and went back to a simpler option of paying for products and services. I think that essentially all of the complaints you here about Google (their lack of any responsiveness&#x2F;customer support, their constant spying on users, the constant &quot;Google graveyard&quot; of discontinued products, their current corporate ossification, etc.) can be directly linked to the fact that users don&#x27;t pay for their products.
null
null
41,791,724
41,784,287
null
[ 41792085 ]
null
null
41,791,986
comment
kej
2024-10-09T19:58:12
null
The PEP has been withdrawn based on the poll results, which mostly echo the comments here: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;discuss.python.org&#x2F;t&#x2F;pep-760-no-more-bare-excepts&#x2F;67182&#x2F;83" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;discuss.python.org&#x2F;t&#x2F;pep-760-no-more-bare-excepts&#x2F;67...</a><p>&gt;Hi everyone!<p>&gt;Thanks a lot for voicing your opinions and concerns! After reading carefully all the arguments, the poll and the different positions we have decided that the best course of action is to withdraw the PEP as there is clear agreement that the breakage doesn’t justify the benefits here.<p>&gt;Thanks a lot!
null
null
41,788,026
41,788,026
null
[ 41792157, 41792335 ]
null
null
41,791,987
comment
blackeyeblitzar
2024-10-09T19:58:14
null
For reference, here is an article on the Turkey ban: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.reuters.com&#x2F;technology&#x2F;turkey-blocks-instant-messaging-platform-discord-2024-10-09&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.reuters.com&#x2F;technology&#x2F;turkey-blocks-instant-mes...</a><p>&gt; The block comes after public outrage in Turkey caused by the murder of two women by a 19-year-old man in Istanbul this month. Content on social media showed Discord users subsequently praising the killing. &gt; Transport and infrastructure minister Abdulkadir Uraloglu said the nature of the Discord platform made it difficult for authorities to monitor and intervene when illegal or criminal content is shared. &gt; &quot;Security personnel cannot go through the content. We can only intervene when users complain to us about content shared there,&quot; he told reporters in parliament. &gt; &quot;Since Discord refuses to share its own information, including IP addresses and content, with our security units, we were forced to block access.&quot;<p>To me, this reads less like a justifiable reason to ban Discord, and more like exploitation of some vague situations to justify a broad ban. But the real reason is in the last two sentences. The issue is that the state cannot monitor and control content, which is a power they use to suppress political opposition. It’s not surprising for Turkey to do this though - they do have legalized censorship.<p>As for Twitter&#x2F;X: they comply with local laws wherever they operate, and have stated this publicly. So in Turkey, where censorship is legal, they’ve abided by the law. In Brazil, where it’s illegal and unconstitutional under article 5 part 10, Twitter&#x2F;X has fought back against censorship. In Brazil’s case, there’s a judge issuing secret bans that keep political opposition from accessing social media, in relation to a past criminal incident, but instead of issuing charges relating to the incident this judge has taken it much further to blanket censorship of people. The comment you’re replying to is referring to the hypocrisy of people in social media (on Hacker News, Reddit, etc) cheering on Brazil’s new censorship regime, while attacking Turkey’s. But that might be happening because a lot of the same people dislike Musk more than they like free speech.
null
null
41,790,477
41,786,368
null
[ 41794507, 41794976 ]
null
null
41,791,988
comment
ilovefood
2024-10-09T19:58:15
null
If that&#x27;s the case then I&#x27;ll try the platform out :) I want to finetune Codestral or Qwen2.5-coder on a custom codebase. Thank you for the response! Are there some docs or infos about the compatibility of the downloaded models, meaning will they work right away with llama.cpp?
null
null
41,791,793
41,789,176
null
[ 41792190 ]
null
null
41,791,989
comment
SpaceNoodled
2024-10-09T19:58:18
null
Open Source Everything, Rust optional.
null
null
41,790,537
41,788,517
null
null
null
null
41,791,990
comment
artooro
2024-10-09T19:58:18
null
Already doing this kind of stuff with Caddy. Unclear why this would be any better.
null
null
41,790,619
41,790,619
null
null
null
null
41,791,991
comment
complianceowl
2024-10-09T19:58:20
null
Fellow Chicagoan here. It&#x27;s funny you say that. My wife calls Jewel-Osco &quot;Jewels&quot; lol. I am just starting to realize that not everyone talks this way haha.
null
null
41,791,337
41,787,647
null
null
null
null
41,791,992
comment
giantg2
2024-10-09T19:58:44
null
Bonus points are that the ones affected most are families, so the companies save even more on the benefits they don&#x27;t have to cover. Basically, this is roundabout maritial&#x2F;family status employment discrimination.
null
null
41,791,961
41,791,570
null
null
null
null
41,791,993
comment
chromanoid
2024-10-09T19:58:46
null
I would say &quot;Kati&#x27;s Ecke&quot; (urks) should look modern (and fails at that, looks like cargo cult to me) or is an unintentional error of the owner because they don&#x27;t know better (maybe obligatory English lessons in school compromised the actual rules of German). I am sure it doesn&#x27;t look exotic to most Germans. We actually use the apostrophe in cases where adding the possessive s is problematic. E.g. &quot;Felix&#x27; Ecke&quot;<p>There is a very ugly mix of German and English we call Denglish in German.<p>And there are many &quot;English sounding&quot; things that are not English or also a horrible mix up for marketing purposes.<p>E.g. Handy for smartphone. It doesn&#x27;t look exotic, but English which is usually considered to be something modern.<p>And then there is a similar concept as the Idiotenapostroph which is the Deppenleerzeichen which is a space between combined words that are usually and famously not separated by space in correct German.<p>All those things are usually used in amateurish marketing and look just like that to the average German grammar enthusiast.<p>On the other hand especially in many professional fields English conquers the professional slang with gusto of the participants. A very hilarious take on such Denglish for software developers: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;m.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=c2V4bOL1jgM" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;m.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=c2V4bOL1jgM</a>
null
null
41,790,566
41,787,647
null
[ 41792123, 41796714, 41798224, 41792251, 41792259 ]
null
null
41,791,994
comment
Night_Thastus
2024-10-09T19:58:53
null
&quot;President Walt Disney Pepsi Comcast has done wonders for the economy! Being that it now <i>is</i>...the economy.&quot;
null
null
41,791,321
41,784,287
null
[ 41795172 ]
null
null
41,791,995
comment
someluccc
2024-10-09T19:59:05
null
A) Do you pay them? - No: then yes it is free<p>“But my data” Have your ever sold your data? Would the value you could ever possibly receive for your data ever equate to the value you get from the free services?<p>Likely No and No.<p>Is the free ad supported city newspaper free? Yes it is in fact free, just like FM radio is free, and broadcast television is free, and sidewalks next to billboards are free<p>Someone creating something appealing and giving it away for free in order to make up for it through ads in front of eyeballs does not in any way mean that the free thing isn’t free
null
null
41,791,873
41,784,287
null
[ 41795398, 41792369, 41792089, 41792068 ]
null
null
41,791,996
comment
dave4420
2024-10-09T19:59:12
null
Pretty sure they can sue in theory. Don’t think most employers bother. But would rather not burn my bridges.<p>(I’m in the UK, laws may be different in your jurisdiction, etc.)<p>Edit: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;uk.adp.com&#x2F;resources&#x2F;adp-articles-and-insights&#x2F;articles&#x2F;a&#x2F;are-notice-periods-enforceable-in-the-uk.aspx" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;uk.adp.com&#x2F;resources&#x2F;adp-articles-and-insights&#x2F;artic...</a> says that<p>&gt; Employers can take legal action if an employee breaches their notice period by leaving without providing the required notice period. They might pursue a claim for breach of contract, seeking damages for the cost of hiring temporary contractor replacements or loss incurred by a sudden departure.
null
null
41,791,299
41,790,085
null
[ 41793611 ]
null
null
41,791,997
comment
ninetyninenine
2024-10-09T19:59:15
null
No functional programming is about programming as if your code is a math equation.<p>In math people never use procedures. They write definitions in math in terms of formulas and expressions.<p>If you can get everything to fit on one line in your programming. Then you are doing functional programming.<p>The lack of side effects, lack of mutation and high modularity are the beneficial outcome of fp, it is not the core of what you&#x27;re doing. The core of what you&#x27;re doing is your defining your program as a formula&#x2F;equation&#x2F;expression rather then a list of procedures or steps. Of course, why you would write your program this way is because of the beneficial outcomes.<p>By coincidence if you write your code in a way where you just account for the side effects like deliberately avoiding mutation, IO and side effects... then your program will become isomorphic to a mathematical function. So it goes both ways.<p>Another thing you will note and most people don&#x27;t get this is that for loops don&#x27;t exist in FP. The fundamental unit of &quot;looping&quot; in fp is always done with recursion, just like how they would do it in mathematical expressions.
null
null
41,790,149
41,758,371
null
[ 41794763, 41793773 ]
null
null
41,791,998
comment
xnx
2024-10-09T19:59:16
null
Mine has keys on all sides
null
null
41,786,781
41,758,682
null
null
null
null
41,791,999
comment
geoka9
2024-10-09T19:59:20
null
Having said that... :) ... GD are very much above average musically when it comes to the popular music of the last 30 years. With those songwriting&#x2F;performing chops, it&#x27;s almost surprising they are a punk rock band.
null
null
41,791,607
41,790,295
null
null
null
null