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41,794,700 | comment | testfrequency | 2024-10-10T01:45:01 | null | I’m feeling extremely conflicted on all of this with IA right now.<p>On one hand, I love IA<p>On the other hand…I’m in a long thread with their support right now on removing old snapshots of a social media account I have. Creeps are actively using the old snapshots to dox me and send me death threats using my PII.<p>It’s incredibly frustrating and IA keeps insisting they cannot do anything about it.<p>A small part of me hoped IA didn’t recover from today because I knew my info would be finally deleted :/ | null | null | 41,792,500 | 41,792,500 | null | [
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41,794,701 | comment | s17n | 2024-10-10T01:45:02 | null | I have literally never used a doubly-linked list in my life, and I'm pretty sure that most programmers can say the same thing.<p>As for the example... yeah, Python is pretty terrible (for writing production codebases, I think its a great language for short-lived, one-person projects). Interesting that you mention Python because if you're considering Python and Rust for the same use case that's pretty bonkers, for anything that you might possibly have used Python to do there are many more natural choices than Rust. If you wouldn't have done it in C/C++ ten years ago, you probably shouldn't be doing it in Rust today. | null | null | 41,792,751 | 41,791,773 | null | [
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41,794,702 | comment | tptacek | 2024-10-10T01:45:08 | null | Wading in here a little bit, and I know you've thought about this --- I think it's reasonable to say that there are problem domains where it's a very good thing, and problem domains where it isn't.<p>I think a subtextual problem for Rust advocacy is that the places where it's a <i>clear</i> win are a small subset of all software problems, and that space is shrinking. Rust would, in that view of the world, be a victim of its success: it's the best replacement we have for C/C++ today, but the industry has moved sharply away from solving problems that way, and sharply towards solving them with Javascript.<p>(Deno is doing something smart here.) | null | null | 41,794,513 | 41,791,773 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,703 | comment | gitaarik | 2024-10-10T01:45:24 | null | Ripgrep is written in Rust while the original grep in C. So it doesn't make sense to try to combine them. Ripgrep is rather the modern rewrite, and we keep the old grep around for backwards compatibility. | null | null | 41,793,970 | 41,791,708 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,704 | comment | tptacek | 2024-10-10T01:46:41 | null | I do know that it's possible, but when people complain about this --- as with this tweet, from a PL theorist:<p><a href="https://x.com/LParreaux/status/1839706950688555086" rel="nofollow">https://x.com/LParreaux/status/1839706950688555086</a><p>... this is what they're talking about.<p>(I know the tweet is about the "idiomatic" answer to this problem, which is to replace references with indices into flat data structures). | null | null | 41,794,574 | 41,791,773 | null | [
41797698
] | null | null |
41,794,705 | comment | SmellTheGlove | 2024-10-10T01:46:52 | null | I just saw Rancid, Smashing Pumpkins and Green Day. All on the same tour. It was amazing to have that much of the first half of my life in one stadium.<p>Green Day are still in their prime in terms of a live show. Yeah it’s not 3 kids packing a basement anymore, but they absolutely crushed Dookie in their 50s. I felt not old for a couple of hours. | null | null | 41,791,885 | 41,790,295 | null | [
41795098
] | null | null |
41,794,706 | comment | zerovox | 2024-10-10T01:46:52 | null | I understand that they couldn't use the Escape key, and so having an alternative makes sense, but I'm not sure as a user how I would ever discover the behavior of pressing "shift" three times. | null | null | 41,793,597 | 41,793,597 | null | [
41794954
] | null | null |
41,794,707 | comment | rsrsrs86 | 2024-10-10T01:46:53 | null | I regret using it. Recruiting risk. Smaller ecosystem. I should have gone for Python. | null | null | 41,792,304 | 41,792,304 | null | [
41795963,
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41,794,708 | comment | gitaarik | 2024-10-10T01:46:54 | null | You also have lsd: <a href="https://github.com/lsd-rs/lsd">https://github.com/lsd-rs/lsd</a> | null | null | 41,792,280 | 41,791,708 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,709 | comment | ajxs | 2024-10-10T01:47:24 | null | > ...or when the warranty runs out.<p>Do people really replace their drives when the warranty runs out? Hard drive manufacturers won't provide data recovery on drives that fail under warranty[1]. It makes more economical sense to just run a drive until it dies. You'll end up paying the price for a new drive either way, but less often if you ignore the warranty expiring.<p>1: I discovered this myself when a Seagate drive containing some important data failed under warranty. If you're foolish enough to send them a failed drive with data you need recovered (like I was), all they'll do is throw it in the bin and send you a replacement drive. | null | null | 41,793,831 | 41,792,500 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,710 | comment | HarHarVeryFunny | 2024-10-10T01:47:58 | null | You're right, of course about the UK. It seems that maybe the most accurate (and/or historically appropriate) label for England, Wales, Scotland, and I suppose Northern Ireland, are "non-sovereign countries", or more sloppily I guess the UK and England can both be called countries ("a country within a country") with the distinction implied. | null | null | 41,786,777 | 41,758,856 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,711 | comment | julienmarie | 2024-10-10T01:48:05 | null | I think @wkyleg meant that an Elixir dev can be as productive as multiple js devs because of the specificity of the language and the beam virtual machine. Complicated things are trivial in Elixir, dependency management is a breather, and all in all, a really simple and productive environment as the mental model is pretty simple once it clicks. | null | null | 41,794,383 | 41,792,304 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,712 | comment | shiroiushi | 2024-10-10T01:48:13 | null | >android has a huge market share on mobile.<p>Not in the US they don't; it's a minority share, split across many different manufacturers who all have their own flavor of Android, their own (crappy) app stores and pre-loaded crapware apps, etc. Apple has a clear majority of the US smartphone market (and it's a vertical monopoly, with Apple controlling the phone hardware and the app store and not allowing any alternatives), but no one's looking at breaking them up.<p>>I think these two being open source is a major reason why they have been so successfully adopted.<p>iOS isn't open-source, and it has a commanding majority of the US smartphone market. | null | null | 41,794,084 | 41,784,287 | null | [
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41,794,713 | comment | zerovox | 2024-10-10T01:48:24 | null | There's some examples (and a pretty sad graph on _when_ users are looking at these resources) on the user research summary: <a href="https://github.com/alphagov/govuk-design-system/discussions/2908">https://github.com/alphagov/govuk-design-system/discussions/...</a> | null | null | 41,794,397 | 41,793,597 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,714 | comment | yard2010 | 2024-10-10T01:48:44 | null | Just like how some people think GitHub is git. | null | null | 41,794,594 | 41,792,500 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,715 | comment | kouz | 2024-10-10T01:48:48 | null | Hey there - I work on the Amplitude product team, and it sounds like we could help. Amplitude is a self-serve product analytics solution that also handles marketing and subscription analytics. We just launched a new update Amplitude Made Easy (<a href="https://www.amplitude.com/easy" rel="nofollow">https://www.amplitude.com/easy</a>) that offers expert templates, out-of-the-box insights, and the ability to use AI to ask analytics questions in plain English. You can also self-serve answer questions using our charts without needing to use SQL.<p>You can bring data in lots of ways without heavy data engineering—you can use one snippet of code to get started with our SDKs, connect directly to your data warehouse, batch upload data—it's flexible based on how your company works :) | null | null | 41,789,831 | 41,789,831 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,716 | comment | alephnerd | 2024-10-10T01:48:50 | null | > This shows a lot in the government as well as its services like BBC and NHS, and the academia<p>Salaries play a significant role.<p>Unlike a lot of other countries, private sector salaries for SWEs suck in much of the UK, and gov.uk (in reality part of the Civil Service), GCHQ+MoD, and BBC can pay fairly competitively and give a fairly decent pension compared to private sector gigs.<p>That said, I'd disagree with NHS IT - it's almost entirely outsourced to regional MSPs who suck (and I say this as a former vendor who's helped sell products those guys use in NHS environments) | null | null | 41,794,490 | 41,793,597 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,717 | comment | SmellTheGlove | 2024-10-10T01:48:56 | null | Everything after it was kind of a disaster though. Although I do have a soft spot for Indestructible. | null | null | 41,792,386 | 41,790,295 | null | [
41799149
] | null | null |
41,794,718 | comment | tqi | 2024-10-10T01:49:35 | null | > There should be a right to opt out of ads.<p>What does that even look like, practically speaking? Is sponsored segment an ad? Is wearing branded apparel an ad? Is doing a press junket for a new movie an ad? | null | null | 41,791,057 | 41,784,287 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,719 | comment | nomilk | 2024-10-10T01:49:39 | null | Hadn't even considered that. I think that confirms "waters edge" can be grammatically correct. (random example: "as rain falls, flood waters edge closer") | null | null | 41,790,901 | 41,787,647 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,720 | comment | gregjor | 2024-10-10T01:50:10 | null | <a href="https://archive.ph/2024.10.09-235022/https://www.wsj.com/politics/policy/donald-trump-tax-plan-americans-abroad-a74bfbdd" rel="nofollow">https://archive.ph/2024.10.09-235022/https://www.wsj.com/pol...</a> | null | null | 41,793,441 | 41,793,441 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,721 | comment | shiroiushi | 2024-10-10T01:50:23 | null | >I don't care about another hour of battery life<p>If you're stuck having to run a ton of shitty JS code with ad malware in it, because your web browser doesn't allow you to effectively block it, that's probably going to cost you more in battery life than the overhead needed by MV2 to block that stuff. | null | null | 41,794,680 | 41,784,287 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,722 | comment | wrsh07 | 2024-10-10T01:50:34 | null | This entire conversation is about tradeoffs, but I would note that some of my favorite engineers that I've had the pleasure of knowing are: 1) very fast and 2) know exactly what the binary code of the thing they are trying to do looks like<p>There's a (3) where they'll quickly confirm their hypothesis using godbolt (or similar) if in doubt or they want to actually think in binary.<p>Fortunately for the programming community, many of us are able to create useful or interesting things without that kind of depth | null | null | 41,793,722 | 41,758,371 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,723 | comment | tangjurine | 2024-10-10T01:50:38 | null | Is this also using the levels.fyi salary data?<p>If that data is submitted by individuals to a particular company, is it possible to see a lot more detailed heatmap, perhaps down to each address of each company? | null | null | 41,792,764 | 41,792,055 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,724 | comment | yard2010 | 2024-10-10T01:50:54 | null | Yes please, we need this lunatic out of our life, not the other way around | null | null | 41,793,807 | 41,792,500 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,725 | comment | falcor84 | 2024-10-10T01:50:57 | null | That's a good point. Maybe it could be handled like the Geneva conventions? | null | null | 41,792,374 | 41,787,647 | null | [
41800039
] | null | null |
41,794,726 | comment | dtaht | 2024-10-10T01:51:35 | null | speedtest.net added support for tracking latency under load a few years ago. they show ping during up/dl now. That's the number to show your colleague.<p>However they tend to use something like the 75th percentile and throw out real data. The waveform bufferbloat test does 95% and supplies whisker charts. cloudflare also.<p>No web test tests up + down at the same time, which is the worst scenario. crusader and flent.org's rrul test do.<p>Rathan than argue with your colleague, why not just slap an OpenWrt box as a transparent bridge inline and configure CAKE SQM? | null | null | 41,794,318 | 41,793,658 | null | [
41795582,
41795045
] | null | null |
41,794,727 | story | olliechap | 2024-10-10T01:51:50 | Just Make Things | null | https://www.olliechapman.com/posts/just-make-things | 4 | null | 41,794,727 | 0 | [
41794728
] | null | null |
41,794,728 | comment | null | 2024-10-10T01:51:50 | null | null | null | null | 41,794,727 | 41,794,727 | null | null | true | null |
41,794,729 | comment | jcgrillo | 2024-10-10T01:52:07 | null | It's not so much about the neurons, but the systems they connect to. And how they're organized. And how many of them (relatively) are in each component of the brain. And the feedback between motor control and sensory apparatus. I doubt you'll ever get to "intelligence" by building a really fast "brain in a box", even if it has super great transistors. | null | null | 41,791,865 | 41,733,390 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,730 | comment | wslh | 2024-10-10T01:52:10 | null | Just imagine what it's like to spend three years doing technical drawing in high school using Rotring pens [1], not to mention practicing calligraphy based on IRAM/ISO standards [2][3]<p>[1] <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rotring" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rotring</a><p>[2] <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instituto_Argentino_de_Normalizaci%C3%B3n_y_Certificaci%C3%B3n" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instituto_Argentino_de_Normali...</a><p>[3] <a href="https://youtu.be/znrD1DjYqrE?si=Z7RsTatVCw3OKTdT&t=169" rel="nofollow">https://youtu.be/znrD1DjYqrE?si=Z7RsTatVCw3OKTdT&t=169</a> | null | null | 41,794,201 | 41,758,870 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,731 | comment | threeseed | 2024-10-10T01:52:18 | null | Given we have an election in less than a month hardly surprised that their moderation systems are erring on the side of caution.<p>Especially with so many well-funded, state sponsored actors using LLMs to sow division as we've seen so often on Twitter recently. | null | null | 41,794,517 | 41,794,517 | null | [
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41,794,732 | comment | edm0nd | 2024-10-10T01:52:46 | null | Its being done by pro Palestine Islamic hacktivists.<p>They stated on twitter because IA is controlled by "the US" and is "pro Israel".<p>could also just be RU larping under another flag. They have done this in the past with groups like Anonymous Sudan. | null | null | 41,793,160 | 41,792,500 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,733 | comment | michaelteter | 2024-10-10T01:52:46 | null | I'm sure like many left-handers here, my right hand is nearly as dexterous as my left. Writing is the only thing I can do with left which I cannot do with right; other tasks are either equally natural or just a little awkward but still effective.<p>But some right-handers who have been forced to (by breaking an arm for example) can learn to write with the left hand. I have to assume they could learn to be more ambidexterous if they were motivated. It almost seems more like a cultural (see/copy) behavior to be right-only handed. Left-handers may have an inclination to do some things with the left hand, but we also grow up in a world of right-hand designed products.<p>As for the "handedness" of feet, eyes, ears, etc., I also suspect that has more to do with our patterns of hand use. I'm right-eared probably because I hold my phone in my right hand so my left hand is free to do fine motor tasks. It's not because I prefer to listen with my right ear. I'm also somewhat left-footed because I tend to carry heavy things in my right arm; so my right leg is busy supporting the extra weight as I step up on a step with the left.<p>I doubt any/many of these studies have been large or thorough enough to really learn anything meaningful about handedness and its related effects. | null | null | 41,758,870 | 41,758,870 | null | [
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41,794,734 | comment | petesergeant | 2024-10-10T01:52:48 | null | Here it is in action:<p><a href="https://design-system.service.gov.uk/components/exit-this-page/default/" rel="nofollow">https://design-system.service.gov.uk/components/exit-this-pa...</a> | null | null | 41,793,597 | 41,793,597 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,735 | story | signa11 | 2024-10-10T01:53:02 | Wafer Scale and Trilogy Systems: Part 1 | null | https://thechipletter.substack.com/p/wafer-scale-trilogy-systems-part | 22 | null | 41,794,735 | 3 | [
41799366,
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41,794,736 | comment | edm0nd | 2024-10-10T01:53:25 | null | nah. its politically motivated hacktivists that are pro Palestinian.<p>See their Twitter <a href="https://x.com/Sn_darkmeta" rel="nofollow">https://x.com/Sn_darkmeta</a><p>could also just be RU larping under another flag. | null | null | 41,793,979 | 41,792,500 | null | [
41794965
] | null | null |
41,794,737 | comment | s1artibartfast | 2024-10-10T01:53:40 | null | Im not saying they do. I am saying that claims of inefficiency or failure need to be compared to a possible and realistic counterfactual.<p>You might think it is is inefficient to have a miracle cure for cancer tied up on patent for 20 years, but what are you comparing it to. | null | null | 41,793,180 | 41,784,287 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,738 | comment | cortesoft | 2024-10-10T01:53:54 | null | Once you have been doxed, isn’t the cat kinda out of the bag at that point? Creeps already have the snapshots now, deleting them from IA is just closing the barn door after the livestock has already escaped. | null | null | 41,794,700 | 41,792,500 | null | [
41794773,
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41,794,739 | comment | shiroiushi | 2024-10-10T01:53:58 | null | I think his idea is that if other competing countries (namely China) won't break up their big tech companies, so with US companies broken up, they won't be able to compete against the foreign behemoths. The US <i>already</i> can't compete <i>at all</i> with China in electronic hardware and manufacturing. | null | null | 41,794,368 | 41,784,287 | null | [
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41,794,740 | comment | codesections | 2024-10-10T01:53:59 | null | And the "they" in question is Warren Buffet, <a href="https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2009/06/you_cant_make_a_baby_in_a_mont.html" rel="nofollow">https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2009/06/you_cant_make_a_baby...</a> | null | null | 41,794,696 | 41,793,658 | null | [
41794972
] | null | null |
41,794,741 | comment | zdw | 2024-10-10T01:54:01 | null | The downside of the "bundle everything" approach (which is also used by Docker and it's ilk), is that whenever one of those dependencies needs to be fixed or upgraded (for reliability or security reasons), you have to find <i>every instance</i> of it on the entire system, which soon becomes an extremely difficult task.<p>Shared libraries don't have this problem. Yes, they're separate packages, but having dependencies that can be upgraded separately simplifies upgrading that dependency. | null | null | 41,794,431 | 41,792,803 | null | [
41794801,
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41,794,742 | comment | nbk_2000 | 2024-10-10T01:54:04 | null | Their tag in ASCII Art via console.log() would earn equivalent cred, and not annoy fellow users of a useful service, IMHO | null | null | 41,793,522 | 41,792,500 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,743 | comment | esbranson | 2024-10-10T01:54:43 | null | Not sure. The US Government has accrued a couple hundred years of unbroken political agitprop directed at it. From my observations, many people are comforted when anything tends to validate it, and otherwise ambivalent or oblivious to anything else. Underlying that is legal information that is inaccessible for most; the only books you can't check out of a library, a multitude of websites that never quite work. Newstainment that profits from attention does not help. | null | null | 41,791,788 | 41,784,287 | null | [
41800841
] | null | null |
41,794,744 | comment | aguaviva | 2024-10-10T01:54:46 | null | Secret stuff, I guess. Appreciate the follow-up. | null | null | 41,790,281 | 41,783,867 | null | [
41797505
] | null | null |
41,794,745 | comment | steph-123 | 2024-10-10T01:54:51 | null | I really enjoy `x-cmd`<p><a href="https://github.com/x-cmd/x-cmd">https://github.com/x-cmd/x-cmd</a><p>A vast and interesting collection of CLI that can then bootstrap lots of other programs / functions in a consistent and structured way (X bootstrap 1000+ tools and your scripts) | null | null | 41,791,708 | 41,791,708 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,746 | comment | morning-coffee | 2024-10-10T01:55:00 | null | If your goal is to converge on correctly functioning software, you know, for the benefit of the users of it, then fail-fast can help.
If your goal is to optimize the sleep patterns of devops people and make changes to code without testing before releasing it to production, yeah... do what you need to do. :) | null | null | 41,794,679 | 41,791,773 | null | [
41794825
] | null | null |
41,794,747 | comment | felix089 | 2024-10-10T01:55:26 | null | Okay thanks for sharing, I think that's the way to go with the subset. Feel free to reach out if you need anything, more than happy to take a closer look! | null | null | 41,794,690 | 41,789,176 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,748 | comment | aaron695 | 2024-10-10T01:55:28 | null | [dead] | null | null | 41,793,899 | 41,791,693 | null | null | null | true |
41,794,749 | comment | lidder86 | 2024-10-10T01:55:29 | null | Proxy address ie [email protected] you would use [email protected] and have rules to match that | null | null | 41,794,592 | 41,792,500 | null | [
41794789
] | null | null |
41,794,750 | comment | __MatrixMan__ | 2024-10-10T01:55:42 | null | Exact match? Unlikely. But suppose that with each tax return, everybody had the option of listing 5 corporations which they believed were doing more harm than good. It would be simple statistics to determine if the signal was strong enough to warrant action. As for mine, well I'd have to do a bit of research but they'd likely come be in defense, oil, or adtech.<p>Perhaps we also could list 5 which we think are having a positive impact. The assets of the bad ones could be auctioned off to the good ones, the money made from that auction could go towards severance for anyone whose job was dissolved. | null | null | 41,791,400 | 41,790,026 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,751 | comment | marcus_holmes | 2024-10-10T01:55:57 | null | Please stop with the insulting ad-hominems, it contributes nothing to the discussion and just promotes anger.<p>I think I understand why WP is so popular; it optimises for the editing experience and for the vast majority of situations this is fine; building the website is cheaper and quicker, and the audience doesn't really care about a 200ms lag on rendering.<p>My confusion (and I never described this as anything but confusion, so I don't understand your reference to me hating users) is that in a process where we can do better, and use tech that is more appropriate, faster, etc, there is <i>still</i> a preference for WP. Even when the people involved don't have to deal with it. Is it just familiarity, or control, or what? If we have the chance of optimising for the reader's experience, I would think that that would be a huge plus, but apparently not. This is confusing, and a little annoying. | null | null | 41,786,497 | 41,775,238 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,794,752 | comment | rughouseprod | 2024-10-10T01:55:58 | null | [dead] | null | null | 41,793,658 | 41,793,658 | null | null | null | true |
41,794,753 | comment | gus_massa | 2024-10-10T01:56:09 | null | This is not exactly what you are asking for, but I recommend datacamp <a href="https://www.datacamp.com/" rel="nofollow">https://www.datacamp.com/</a> . (They use weird names, so I put that is scare quotes.) They have some free "courses" that are like 3 hours of videos with small test in between. Some are programs with slots you have to fill to make it run. They have "tracks" that are collections of a few "courses" in a sensible order. I'm not sure if they are free.<p>Unless you have something planed, my recommendation is to start with python. I think this is a good starting point <a href="https://www.datacamp.com/tracks/python-data-fundamentals" rel="nofollow">https://www.datacamp.com/tracks/python-data-fundamentals</a> | null | null | 41,794,261 | 41,794,261 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,754 | comment | slavik81 | 2024-10-10T01:56:14 | null | That will be a sad day. One of the best books I checked out of the library during my graduate studies was a copy of "Wind Waves" from 1965 with handwritten corrections written in pen by some former student. | null | null | 41,792,407 | 41,789,815 | null | [
41800144
] | null | null |
41,794,755 | story | Bella-Xiang | 2024-10-10T01:56:47 | Triplet Loss | null | https://myscale.com/blog/what-is-triplet-loss/ | 2 | null | 41,794,755 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,794,756 | comment | db48x | 2024-10-10T01:56:50 | null | Yea, it is pretty harmless. I suppose someone might be interested in any books you currently have checked out, but beyond that there isn't much. | null | null | 41,794,280 | 41,792,500 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,757 | comment | yard2010 | 2024-10-10T01:56:55 | null | It's like the wild west in which a group of outlaws could just start a mess in a bar denying everyone from having fun there.<p>This is why we can't have nice things. | null | null | 41,793,160 | 41,792,500 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,758 | comment | bn-l | 2024-10-10T01:57:15 | null | Can I ask why they're trying to dox you? I have literally never inspired this kind of passion on the internet--and I'm usually pretty blunt. I'm genuinely curious what it takes. | null | null | 41,794,700 | 41,792,500 | null | [
41794815
] | null | null |
41,794,759 | comment | layer8 | 2024-10-10T01:57:21 | null | It’s risky to let your online identity be controlled by a single large provider. Distribute out the services you use as much as possible. Use a different email provider from your domain registrar, and different from the providers of any other online account you have. | null | null | 41,794,367 | 41,792,500 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,760 | comment | pclmulqdq | 2024-10-10T01:57:31 | null | A survey with a few informational questions also probably works. | null | null | 41,792,530 | 41,790,585 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,761 | comment | akiselev | 2024-10-10T01:57:36 | null | A crimes against humanity tribunal at the Hague? | null | null | 41,794,617 | 41,790,295 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,762 | comment | mingus88 | 2024-10-10T01:57:38 | null | The update issue doesn’t sound like a big deal. What’s stopping WP Engine from setting up their own mirror system?<p>CentOS did this to Redhat for decades. They literally stripped out the trademarks and distributed the OS to anyone with no contracts at all. Patches were available same day that RH published them, and were applied from CentOS update servers.<p>The endgame for WP seems to be that they give up this fight or close their source and act like a real licensed software company. You can’t play GPL until it no longer suits you, then start making insane demands about revenue sharing and all this nonsense. | null | null | 41,793,360 | 41,791,369 | null | [
41794870
] | null | null |
41,794,763 | comment | wrsh07 | 2024-10-10T01:57:45 | null | As someone who likes math (math major, applied math grad) and who picked up functional programming relatively early in my career, I don't find this model (fp is just math) to improve my understanding or make it easier to understand why I would want to program like this<p>Talking about state and error handling is helpful because it helps explain why to use the tool, not how the tool was forged (or originally conceived) | null | null | 41,791,997 | 41,758,371 | null | [
41794944
] | null | null |
41,794,764 | comment | ensignavenger | 2024-10-10T01:57:49 | null | Then they must be valuable enough for what you are paying. If they weren't, you would let Epson have them knowing they were losing money on them, and you would spend your money on better valued things. | null | null | 41,794,177 | 41,784,287 | null | [
41794991
] | null | null |
41,794,765 | comment | sadeshmukh | 2024-10-10T01:57:53 | null | What completed or competes with YouTube? | null | null | 41,793,536 | 41,784,287 | null | [
41794957,
41796251
] | null | null |
41,794,766 | comment | kelnos | 2024-10-10T01:57:58 | null | > <i>What page are people on that might lead to domestic abuse?</i><p>I assume there's a .gov.uk page somewhere that lists resources for people who are in abusive relationships. I imagine if an abusive partner walked in to find you reading that, that might set them off. | null | null | 41,794,397 | 41,793,597 | null | [
41795664
] | null | null |
41,794,767 | comment | naming_the_user | 2024-10-10T01:58:20 | null | Does anyone else feel like Instagram "moderation" is, well, basically a lost cause?<p>The core issue with it is the algorithm. There's nothing inherently "incorrect" about 99% of the stuff I see on there but it clearly influences my mind over time regardless, it's just a bad information diet. | null | null | 41,794,517 | 41,794,517 | null | [
41794949,
41797142,
41795526
] | null | null |
41,794,768 | comment | grahamj | 2024-10-10T01:58:35 | null | Smoking is bad for your health. The only reason people keep doing it is addiction.<p>I would not call that great. | null | null | 41,788,736 | 41,786,461 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,769 | comment | gitaarik | 2024-10-10T01:58:50 | null | Also the stomach is on the other side, so if the pointy stick wouldn't puncture the liver, it would puncture the stomach. | null | null | 41,794,618 | 41,758,870 | null | [
41803689
] | null | null |
41,794,770 | story | mrobins | 2024-10-10T01:58:56 | Cashierless checkout startup Grabango shutting down | null | https://www.cnbc.com/2024/10/09/amazon-just-walk-out-rival-shutters-after-failing-to-secure-funding.html | 2 | null | 41,794,770 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,794,771 | comment | wakawaka28 | 2024-10-10T01:58:59 | null | >Also not sure what's so difficult about it, I thought for the USB-stick case all you do is dd it onto the dev-node and you're good to go? IDK, maybe I'm wrong here, like I said I prefer using CD-R discs on the very rare occasions that I need to install a new linux distro because the alternative is backing up my entire USB stick so I can overwrite it with a new FS and then restore it from backup.<p>The real alternative is to buy a few $5 USB sticks for the express purpose of installing Linux. Trying to use the same sticks for personal data and OS installs is an unnecessary headache with so many cheap and huge USB keys around.<p>If you want to burn CDs it should be to have more durable copies of some data, as USB keys have been known to lose data when left powered off for many months or years. I think I have never lost data that way but it is hard to tell if I did, on my oldest USB keys. | null | null | 41,785,091 | 41,784,668 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,772 | comment | perhapsAnLLM | 2024-10-10T01:59:07 | null | Awesome work! Really clean UI - who are your competitors that offer a similar "end-to-end workflow" UI for LLMs? I'm typically in a Jupyter notebook for this type of thing but a neat and snappy web app could certainly help streamline some workflows. | null | null | 41,789,176 | 41,789,176 | null | [
41798007,
41797262
] | null | null |
41,794,773 | comment | ocdtrekkie | 2024-10-10T01:59:17 | null | Bear in mind that is the doxxing and doxxers that have happened now. There are plenty of future opportunities to be doxxed and plenty of other potential victims.<p>Not that I'd cheer for the loss of IA, but it'd probably be nice if they took down PII on request. | null | null | 41,794,738 | 41,792,500 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,774 | comment | acaiblue44 | 2024-10-10T01:59:25 | null | Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince is bffs with ex CIA Mike Janke
<a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/TrueAnon/comments/p0wifx/here_is_mike_janke_excia_father_of_chrischans/" rel="nofollow">https://www.reddit.com/r/TrueAnon/comments/p0wifx/here_is_mi...</a> | null | null | 41,794,378 | 41,792,500 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,775 | comment | bn-l | 2024-10-10T01:59:27 | null | I think spreading out between them is a good strategy. Cloudflare has been flawless for me for email. | null | null | 41,794,564 | 41,792,500 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,776 | comment | elzbardico | 2024-10-10T01:59:54 | null | Well, you don't simply walk into a Patek Phillipe store and ask to see the watches.
Enzo Ferrari refused to sell ferraris for people he didn't think were deserving of having a ferrari.<p>Corruption on the highest levels is very similar. Not everyone is on the buyers club. | null | null | 41,794,095 | 41,784,287 | null | [
41795827,
41796102,
41795322
] | null | null |
41,794,777 | comment | kelnos | 2024-10-10T02:00:44 | null | Yeah, it seems a little obscure. Here's a test page with the functionality:<p><a href="https://design-system.service.gov.uk/components/exit-this-page/default/" rel="nofollow">https://design-system.service.gov.uk/components/exit-this-pa...</a><p>One cool thing is when you first hit the shift key once, the "Exit this page" button expands vertically, and shows three small circles, one now filled in. So it makes it obvious that hitting the shift key did <i>something</i> related to that button. So if you hit the shift key for any other reason, you'll see something happen.<p>But still, I agree it seems a little hard to discover. | null | null | 41,794,656 | 41,793,597 | null | [
41797207,
41795073
] | null | null |
41,794,778 | comment | pclmulqdq | 2024-10-10T02:01:01 | null | The spleen is on the left though, and that is an organ that is far more vulnerable and where a rupture is lethal without surgical treatment. I still think this is bullshit, but that would be the organ to choose. | null | null | 41,794,618 | 41,758,870 | null | [
41802058
] | null | null |
41,794,779 | comment | dtaht | 2024-10-10T02:01:07 | null | We have seen small ISPs get LibreQos running in under an hour, which includes installing ubuntu. Configuring it right and getting it fully integrated with the customer management system takes longer.<p>We're pretty sure most of those ISPs see reduced opex from support calls.<p>Capex until the appearance of fq_codel (Preseem, Bequant) or cake (LibreQos, Paraqum) middleboxes was essentially infinite. Now it's pennies per subscriber and many just a get a suitable box off of ebay.<p>I agree btw, that how to monitor and scale is a learned thing. For example many naive operators look at "drops" as reported by CAKE as a bad thing, when it is actually needed for good congestion control. | null | null | 41,794,491 | 41,793,658 | null | [
41795748
] | null | null |
41,794,780 | story | typeofhuman | 2024-10-10T02:01:34 | Open sourced policies for a better future | null | https://www.policiesforpeople.com/ | 2 | null | 41,794,780 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,794,781 | comment | wrsh07 | 2024-10-10T02:01:36 | null | Largely orthogonal to your comment:<p>One interesting thing I learned/realized when reading about the msr dafny project is that for loops mean you need to provide guarantees about invariants.<p>How do I know there's no index out of bounds? How do I know how large the resulting array is?<p>When you have to write post conditions for each loop, it makes higher order functions (map, reduce, filter) much more appealing. The proof was already done in the function that will invoke yours! | null | null | 41,793,773 | 41,758,371 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,782 | comment | 3eb7988a1663 | 2024-10-10T02:01:39 | null | All of the behind the scenes improvements aside, ripgrep just has significantly better defaults. Recursiveness, ignore binaries, parsing .gitignore, etc. I do not think it would be possible to get grep to alter these configurations. It would break decades of ossified scripts. | null | null | 41,794,015 | 41,791,708 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,783 | comment | md224 | 2024-10-10T02:02:06 | null | I wish the US would legalize coca leaves. Our nation's drug laws are so goddamn stupid.<p>Two different Popes drank Vin Mariani!<p><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vin_Mariani" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vin_Mariani</a> | null | null | 41,787,798 | 41,787,798 | null | [
41796641,
41794893
] | null | null |
41,794,784 | comment | shiroiushi | 2024-10-10T02:02:07 | null | The reason people turned to ad-blockers is because the ads became too intrusive. They were fine (or at least bearable) when they were just simple text boxes next to your Google search results, or maybe when they were static banner ads. But then the advertisers came up with pop-ups, pop-unders, video ads, 2-hour long ads in the middle of YouTube videos, and all kind of other nasty shenanigans that hijacked your computer and rendered it completely unusable. The advertisers have only themselves to blame for ad-blockers. | null | null | 41,793,646 | 41,784,287 | null | [
41796065
] | null | null |
41,794,785 | comment | nicodjimenez | 2024-10-10T02:02:29 | null | Not in baseball.<p>I recently watched some Mets games and it’s just incredible how commonly you use a left handed hitter go up against a left handed pitcher. | null | null | 41,758,870 | 41,758,870 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,786 | comment | acaiblue44 | 2024-10-10T02:02:38 | null | I'm a new user, is this a good time to plug my project that hopes to put 200 GB on a piece of paper?
<a href="https://sourceforge.net/u/acaiblue44/blog/2024/09/gigapaper08/" rel="nofollow">https://sourceforge.net/u/acaiblue44/blog/2024/09/gigapaper0...</a> | null | null | 41,793,831 | 41,792,500 | null | [
41798864,
41803534
] | null | null |
41,794,787 | comment | yard2010 | 2024-10-10T02:02:39 | null | If god is the good guy and satan is the bad guy - why do bad people sent to hell? They would just chill with the devil laughing about all the DDoS they did for the lulz. | null | null | 41,793,888 | 41,792,500 | null | [
41795032
] | null | null |
41,794,788 | comment | driver8_ | 2024-10-10T02:02:40 | null | That sucks, I was reading my email in the morn and saw the news from haveibeenpwned.com, and I'm indeed effected by it.<p>Consolation is that I used a randomly generated unique password, tried to reset my credentials and see of any 2FA options but the site is overloaded throwing 504s. | null | null | 41,792,500 | 41,792,500 | null | [
41796100
] | null | null |
41,794,789 | comment | layer8 | 2024-10-10T02:02:53 | null | It’s [email protected], and it’s a poor substitute for a dedicated domain. For one, every attacker knows about plus addressing and that those addresses are really all the same email account. | null | null | 41,794,749 | 41,792,500 | null | [
41795775
] | null | null |
41,794,790 | comment | __MatrixMan__ | 2024-10-10T02:03:13 | null | Something along those lines is what I would propose, although once the tokens were used to decide which companies get dissolved (and maybe which ones get tax breaks) I'd zero-out all balances rather than creating a secondary economy around their circulation. By that point they'd have done their job. But I'm not really enough of a game theorist/economist/evolutionary biologist to be coming up with the details. My point is just that we should try <i>something</i> like this. | null | null | 41,792,564 | 41,790,026 | null | [
41800887
] | null | null |
41,794,791 | comment | mewpmewp2 | 2024-10-10T02:03:26 | null | A bit off topic, but how do people usually write code here or on Reddit, I always find it to be really cumbersome to make sure there's two spaces etc in front of everything? Is there some formatting tool that I'm not aware of that everyone else uses?<p>Because in both forums I keep coming back to edits, and it takes forever to edit some of the things, manually. I feel like I'm being stupid or the UX of all of that is just so terrible. | null | null | 41,793,468 | 41,791,773 | null | [
41802911,
41795117,
41794921,
41798507
] | null | null |
41,794,792 | comment | yard2010 | 2024-10-10T02:03:29 | null | Imagine physically breaking into your local library for the lulz | null | null | 41,793,732 | 41,792,500 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,793 | comment | ufo | 2024-10-10T02:03:33 | null | Closures are not easy to fit with "everything is a string", which favors dynamic scoping over lexical scope. I wonder what you'd change to make tcl more amenable to modernization. | null | null | 41,793,929 | 41,791,875 | null | [
41797352,
41796115
] | null | null |
41,794,794 | comment | gedy | 2024-10-10T02:03:37 | null | I just wanted to throw out there that having an informed electorate was one of the reasons there is the Electoral College. We can blame LLMs, etc. now but low-information, easily-swayed voters has always been an issue. | null | null | 41,794,731 | 41,794,517 | null | [
41795015
] | null | null |
41,794,795 | comment | EvanAnderson | 2024-10-10T02:03:40 | null | Latency is a cruel mistress. Had a Customer who was using an old Win32 app that did a ton of individual SELECT queries against the database server to render the UI. They tried to put it on the end of a VPN connection and it was excruciating. The old vendor kept trying to convince them to add bandwidth. Fortunately the Customer asked the question "Why does the app work fine across the 1.544Mbps T1 to our other office?" (The T1 had sub-5ms latency.) | null | null | 41,794,318 | 41,793,658 | null | [
41795252,
41795426,
41800197,
41796882,
41796745,
41802242,
41797151
] | null | null |
41,794,796 | comment | hackernewds | 2024-10-10T02:03:48 | null | Still worth deleting future instances. What's your point? | null | null | 41,794,738 | 41,792,500 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,797 | comment | lukeinator42 | 2024-10-10T02:03:50 | null | I brewed tea out of the leaves and also chewed them when hiking in Peru. Stimulant level-wise it felt similar to green tea. Maybe also a slight euphoria when chewing them but it's definitely still way less potent than a coffee (atleast for me).<p>The only interesting side effect was that both my wife and I experienced tingling feet when combining coca leaves with acetazolamide, the altitude sickness meds we were taking (tingling feet is apparently a side effect of those meds). I wonder if on some level it does have a similar mechanism for altitude sickness? | null | null | 41,793,426 | 41,787,798 | null | [
41794862
] | null | null |
41,794,798 | comment | carlosjobim | 2024-10-10T02:03:56 | null | Do you really? In other European countries you only need approval for your company name, but are free to use any business name(s) you prefer, as long as they're not trademarked. | null | null | 41,790,652 | 41,787,647 | null | null | null | null |
41,794,799 | comment | Jarred | 2024-10-10T02:04:14 | null | > The site presents Deno 2 as if it has finally beat Bun in terms of performance<p>Bun's HTTP server performs 51% faster before parallelism. Their benchmark is incorrect. They posted a correction, and their correction is also incorrect. Benchmarking correctly is hard, and we put a lot of effort into making sure our benchmarks are easily reproducible.<p>Bun v1.1.30: 283,386 requests per second (51% faster)<p>Deno v2.0.0: 187,359 requests per second<p>Deno v1.45.5: 185,522 requests per second<p>The following code:<p><pre><code> let i = 0;
export default {
async fetch(request: Request): Promise<Response> {
return new Response(`Hello, world! ${i++}`);
},
};
</code></pre>
Run with:<p><pre><code> oha -c 10 -n 10000000 --disable-compression http://localhost:{port}
</code></pre>
This was tested on a Linux x64 machine running Debian 11 with a 32 core Intel i9-13900 CPU and 64GB of RAM. In this benchmark, the HTTP server runs on a single thread, so the CPU core count is not as relevant but still worth mentioning.<p>If we increase the number of concurrent connections from 10 to 1,000 - Bun's HTTP server performs 267% faster.<p>Bun v1.1.30: 209,133 requests per second (267% faster)<p>Deno v2.0.0: 78,289 requests per second<p>Deno v1.45.5: 76,628 requests per second<p>Run with:<p><pre><code> oha -c 1000 -n 10000000 --disable-compression http://localhost:{port}
</code></pre>
Note that we add the --disable-compression for Deno's benefit here (as it does nothing for Bun right now)<p>Have not yet spent enough time investigating their other benchmarks. | null | null | 41,792,585 | 41,789,551 | null | [
41796564
] | null | null |
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