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41,796,800 | comment | jstanley | 2024-10-10T08:29:05 | null | Could you replicate the data to their country and let them run queries locally?<p>Could they run their client from your country and operate the UI remotely?<p>There are more options than moving the country! | null | null | 41,796,745 | 41,793,658 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,796,801 | comment | davedx | 2024-10-10T08:29:14 | null | What's <i>common sense</i> about the App Store rulings? | null | null | 41,794,042 | 41,784,287 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,796,802 | comment | baq | 2024-10-10T08:29:15 | null | The sweet, sweet ARR. Investors love it, banks love it, employees should also love it since it makes their paychecks predictable.<p>It sucks for customers, though. | null | null | 41,796,101 | 41,795,561 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,803 | comment | SoothingSorbet | 2024-10-10T08:29:35 | null | Why managed when it could be in Rust and have both performance and safety?<p>The Servo shouldn't have ever been laid off. Yes, I'm aware a team is working on it now, but it isn't up to the same speed and enthusiasm as it was when funded by Mozilla, is it? | null | null | 41,796,743 | 41,796,030 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,796,804 | comment | withinboredom | 2024-10-10T08:29:35 | null | Now I kinda want to test it to see how it works if your application flushes lots of little packets <MTU. Some proxies will try to recombine the packets to make the connection more efficient, some will just forward as-is. But this is super important behavior to be familiar with (and documented) for things like websockets. | null | null | 41,793,840 | 41,790,619 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,805 | comment | scott_w | 2024-10-10T08:29:43 | null | > What makes you think you know more about customer needs than the people working directly with the customers?<p>I never said I did. What I said was that we should not disregard our own knowledge and experience when working on our products.<p>We should be expected to get a good enough understanding of our customer/user needs to be able to challenge Product prioritisation and also to make our day-to-day decisions better when building out the product.<p>> I think presenting product with various options<p>This wording implies an abdication of responsibility in my opinion. We aren't "presenting options and letting them decide," we're collaborating with our Product counterparts to help them figure out how to prioritise which customer needs we tackle first and how we could address them.<p>On the flip side, our PM can (and should) understand and challenge our technical considerations. In some of the examples given, maybe we can run a restricted set of reports or not allow certain features, or build a PoC for a smaller user subset just to validate the idea.<p>That collaboration needs to be built on a foundation of trust and knowledge of each others' strengths. My manager trusts my technical knowledge and my people-management skills but he'll still challenge my decisions where he may have a different context or point of view. Just as I do with my direct reports.<p>> Refusing to add a bathroom to a customers house because there are engineering concerns or thinking you are better at spotting customer needs than product is the opposite of that in my opinion.<p>> I do think that thinking you know better is unfortunately one of the pitfalls of our profession<p>Since I never said any of these things, I don't see any need to address them. | null | null | 41,796,352 | 41,794,566 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,806 | comment | aitchnyu | 2024-10-10T08:30:00 | null | Crunch and 12 hour days are pervasive at tech companies. Also people got meetings with clients or overlap with client timezones (like 2 pm to 11 pm). Hence the office complexes and eateries are still busy at 10 pm. Sorry the "day" was confusing. | null | null | 41,796,137 | 41,795,218 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,807 | comment | lloeki | 2024-10-10T08:30:03 | null | nix-darwin is the cherry on the cake, plain nixpkgs is already miles better than homebrew. | null | null | 41,795,533 | 41,792,803 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,808 | comment | mlnj | 2024-10-10T08:30:03 | null | He was in a chairman emeritus position for many years now.<p>Since Tata, Cyrus Mistry and Natarajan Chandrasekaran have headed the conglomerate. | null | null | 41,796,111 | 41,795,218 | null | [
41797029
] | null | null |
41,796,809 | comment | iam-TJ | 2024-10-10T08:30:21 | null | I do something similar except that I do not allow wildcard reception - I create unique service-identifying user@ for each service I give an address to, and have a simple script that immediately adds that to the Postfix virtual table.<p>That way the SMTP server can reject all unknown user@ without accepting them in the first place - preventing spamming and some types of denial of service through resource starvation.<p>I also apply greylist based on a unique tuple (From, To, client IP address) so on first connection with that tuple valid SMTP clients need to re-deliver the email after a waiting period. Any subsequent delivers are accepted immediately. | null | null | 41,796,383 | 41,792,500 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,810 | comment | authorfly | 2024-10-10T08:30:24 | null | His point is not about compensating for loss.<p>It's the fact that options laid out on the table with unknowns can be preferable to people than no options, or fewer options.<p>The same dichotomy exists for crime vs agreements:<p>- You'll be compensated if a party to an agreement breaks a clause or costs you money (say they fail to provide $30k of goods to your business)<p>- But if someone steals your car, the government won't put $30k in your account for a new one.<p>The same loss occurred. The second case was totally unwarranted, yet the individual outcome is worse.<p>Why? Because doing it any other way would make things worse. People would lie about stolen goods, conduct insurance fraud, etc.<p>Unfortunately in some situations, things "which are worse" are a different category and don't have an answer with government intervention. | null | null | 41,796,371 | 41,795,187 | null | [
41798765,
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] | null | null |
41,796,811 | comment | natmaka | 2024-10-10T08:30:28 | null | Thank you for those details. This is even worse than I understood.<p>As already stated by Kon5ole: we get the benefits and future generations gets the burden.<p>Nuclear (decommission, hot waste...) plays the same game.<p>> Do you really think all that oh so sustainable green shit is growing on trees?<p>No, but AFAIK we know ways (some are expensive) to alleviate part of their burden and the net result cannot be matched by other type of sources.<p>> Wind? How long do they last?<p>It depends. <a href="https://www.tvindkraft.dk/stories/a-new-nacelle-back-end/" rel="nofollow">https://www.tvindkraft.dk/stories/a-new-nacelle-back-end/</a><p>> What's with the abrasion of the (mostly the front edges) blades while they operate and the entry of those stuff in form of microplastics into the environment?<p>Nothing is perfect. Nowadays a coating is used ( <a href="https://weatherguardwind.com/leading-edge-erosion/" rel="nofollow">https://weatherguardwind.com/leading-edge-erosion/</a> ).<p>> Their disposal after use?<p><a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41783908">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41783908</a><p>> Geothermals? You have much of that. Why is it used so rarely?<p>Because in some places it can trigger earthquakes. Renewables is a set of solutions, none is perfect (one-size-fits-all). <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nirvana_fallacy" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nirvana_fallacy</a> | null | null | 41,786,250 | 41,765,580 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,812 | comment | oneeyedpigeon | 2024-10-10T08:31:08 | null | That's exactly what it does do — check out [this demo](<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>). Presumably, that requires the [JavaScript History API](<a href="https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/History_API" rel="nofollow">https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/History_API</a>), but the whole thing requires JS anyway, so that's no more of a problem. | null | null | 41,794,924 | 41,793,597 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,813 | comment | thesz | 2024-10-10T08:31:10 | null | "Suppose Alice has hashgraph A and Bob hash hashgraph B. These hashgraphs may be slightly different at any given moment, but they will always be consistent. Consistent means that if A and B both contain event x, then they will both contain exactly the same set of ancestors for x, and will both contain exactly the same set of edges between those ancestors."<p>Consider UTXO-based events. There can be an event E1 that consumes UTXO1 and UTXO2 and event E2 that consumes UTXO2 and UTXO3. Hashgaphs that contain one of these events are consistent but their union is not. This can be used to perform some byzantine things, I can think of at least two of them: doublespend and degradation of service.<p>This paper is a clear example of how to make a thing that has no obvious problems. | null | null | 41,672,532 | 41,669,850 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,814 | comment | drcongo | 2024-10-10T08:31:24 | null | Another vote for this book. Took me from objectively terrible at drawing, to objectively mediocre. I think if I'd put more time into practice it could have got me to the point of good. While this doesn't exactly sound like a ringing endorsement, it's literally the only thing that moved the needle for me. | null | null | 41,757,574 | 41,756,978 | null | [
41798320
] | null | null |
41,796,815 | comment | jannes | 2024-10-10T08:31:35 | null | Maybe they're working in a call center<p>> Call centre work is typically done overnight to accommodate time zones in the US, UK, and Australia<p><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Call_centre_industry_in_India" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Call_centre_industry_in_India</a> | null | null | 41,796,199 | 41,795,218 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,816 | comment | fragmede | 2024-10-10T08:31:48 | null | it would be totally cyberpunk to have a data cafe where you bring your hard drive to upload to the cloud and you'd pay by the terabyte/s. have all day? cheap. need to do it in 30 mins? pay up. | null | null | 41,795,794 | 41,793,658 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,817 | comment | shipp02 | 2024-10-10T08:31:50 | null | JRD Tata and Ratan Tata are among the most honorable men with pure hearts, never affected by avarice or hatred. Tales of their generosity and kind hearted nature will continue to inspire me.<p>They are shining examples of how capitalists can help uplift society.<p>RIP | null | null | 41,795,218 | 41,795,218 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,818 | comment | scott_w | 2024-10-10T08:31:56 | null | Chrome closes the window on the last tab. It's splitting hairs, however. As you said, it's still raises suspicion which, to a person in a domestic violence situation, is not what they want. | null | null | 41,796,762 | 41,793,597 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,819 | comment | joshu | 2024-10-10T08:32:04 | null | Not really. Memepool way predated that (1998?) | null | null | 41,791,130 | 41,761,873 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,820 | comment | null | 2024-10-10T08:32:15 | null | null | null | null | 41,796,748 | 41,796,748 | null | null | true | null |
41,796,821 | comment | anonzzzies | 2024-10-10T08:32:39 | null | Nice work! Can you add support for OpenRouter? Then it's easier to switch models too.<p>Edit; it's actually really impressive; I try them all every so many months but this one seems to be the first one that actually works. | null | null | 41,789,633 | 41,789,633 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,822 | comment | lukevdp | 2024-10-10T08:32:59 | null | "give all the info on your product"<p>Exactly except:<p>If you're a CEO, the info you care about is one set of info.<p>If you're a user, the info you care about is different.<p>If you're some other influencer, the info you care about is different again.<p>Everyone wants different sets of info. Good sales is figuring out what that is and giving it to you. | null | null | 41,796,408 | 41,794,566 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,823 | comment | baq | 2024-10-10T08:32:59 | null | This is a feature. | null | null | 41,796,702 | 41,796,030 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,824 | story | srivemaraju | 2024-10-10T08:33:03 | Overcoming Inertia in Tasks and Projects | null | https://evgenii.info/inertia/ | 1 | null | 41,796,824 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,796,825 | comment | kleiba | 2024-10-10T08:33:10 | null | What kind of asshole attacks the <i>Internet Archive</i> of all places on the web?? | null | null | 41,792,500 | 41,792,500 | null | [
41796964,
41796907,
41796850,
41796872,
41798254
] | null | null |
41,796,826 | comment | switch007 | 2024-10-10T08:33:16 | null | It's a personal blog btw. And there is absolutely no way a UK Gov blog would call Google bastards. | null | null | 41,796,384 | 41,793,597 | null | [
41797070
] | null | null |
41,796,827 | comment | climb_stealth | 2024-10-10T08:33:19 | null | FWIW that should just be a matter of using the right configuration and mail client. With Fastmail for example I get to use a catch-all setup with my domain, and respond to whatever email it was sent to.<p>And the other way around as well. Send an email from an arbitrary <whatever>@domain email address. | null | null | 41,796,433 | 41,792,500 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,828 | comment | sylware | 2024-10-10T08:34:18 | null | until the next one...<p>It has been like that for most 'internet software' in the last decades, no light at the end of this tunnel. | null | null | 41,796,030 | 41,796,030 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,829 | comment | buginprod | 2024-10-10T08:34:30 | null | I dont fully understand this but it seems fucked. It sounds like a real job with all the real job issues and none of the pay. Actually antipay as it is an expensive hobby ... might as well snowboard.<p>Edit: some of that team seem sponsored so maybe I am wrong? | null | null | 41,796,748 | 41,796,748 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,796,830 | story | miguelaeh | 2024-10-10T08:34:31 | A WebGPU C++ Guide | null | https://eliemichel.github.io/LearnWebGPU/ | 1 | null | 41,796,830 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,796,831 | comment | authorfly | 2024-10-10T08:34:33 | null | Svelte-fire* allows you to basically sync state between frontend use (with optional chaining operators) and your firebase/firestore backend. You can basically call stuff as a variable and it gets it from the database and likewise updates it.<p>Specifically, once I load something (say a document), if I edit in on another tab, it will re-render on my original tab so long as the document it references (by key) is the same and firebase permissions allow me to read it as that firebase user.<p>It means all my permissions and schema goes in firebase/firebase rules (e.g. users can only access their own documents of type "Car" but can read all documents of type "Road"). Which is quite handy to do stuff quickly that syncs across users and works as a single source of truth.<p>It's an add on that works with Svelte (and Firebase). *(sorry, I got the wrong phrase) | null | null | 41,770,890 | 41,748,912 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,832 | comment | ywvcbk | 2024-10-10T08:34:34 | null | Django is quite stable and monolithic. If you used it 10-15 years ago and wanted to build something new it wouldn’t take too much time for you to readjust. With JS you’d be entering a new world and chances are that almost everything you can remember is now an “anti-pattern” and starting on a clean slate might be easier..<p>Frontend is a mishmash of random components and packages, unless you are 100% sure in advance what are you going to use and and do chances are that you’ll run into with issues with the latest version of package X not working with build system Y due to cryptic incomprehensible reasons unless you make sure to stick with the latest “mainstream” trends (which seem to change ever 1-2 years). | null | null | 41,785,710 | 41,781,457 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,796,833 | comment | account42 | 2024-10-10T08:34:35 | null | Good. Maybe this will get them to reconsider their website changes that make the IA unusable without javascript. | null | null | 41,792,500 | 41,792,500 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,796,834 | comment | dagw | 2024-10-10T08:34:35 | null | The core model seems to have a lot learned behaviour that it applies to all (latin) languages. One is that people sometimes fail to hit space between words and when that happens, in most cases, people actually wanted to insert a space between the two distinct words, and this behaviour has carried over to other languages.<p>Also In Swedish splitting the words is many cases not incorrect, but just changes the meaning.<p>For example is Swedish an "English teacher" (Engelsk lärare) would be a teacher that is from England, while an "Englishteacher" is a teacher the teaches the subject English.<p>So "He is an English teacher" and "He is an Englishteacher" would both be valid sentences in Swedish, but the predictive text model seems to assume you wanted the first one. | null | null | 41,792,363 | 41,787,647 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,796,835 | comment | divbzero | 2024-10-10T08:34:41 | null | As of 08:34 GMT on October 10, the Internet Archive is down again. | null | null | 41,794,551 | 41,792,500 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,796,836 | comment | oneeyedpigeon | 2024-10-10T08:34:52 | null | Sorry, I'm not totally sure why I made that assumption. I thought I'd spotted a '.gov' domain, but clearly it's not. I guess some of the writing also implies it (e.g. "Last year [...], we launched the GOV.UK Design System’s Exit this Page component") but, of course, this could just be a contractor. | null | null | 41,796,784 | 41,793,597 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,796,837 | comment | ggeorgovassilis | 2024-10-10T08:34:55 | null | If this worked it would be great! I tried to sign up, but it requires way too much upfront manual data entry - would be great if it parsed a CV document or read data from Linkedin. At this stage I don't want to continue testing it because I'm interested in finding out how well it works with my real data and not some test/mock data I upload in a hurry. | null | null | 41,796,379 | 41,796,379 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,796,838 | story | thinkingemote | 2024-10-10T08:35:10 | A Weekend of Work in the Aftermath of Helene in East Tennessee | null | https://twitter.com/Ancient_Daze/status/1843652341503013264 | 1 | null | 41,796,838 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,796,839 | comment | JodieBenitez | 2024-10-10T08:35:12 | null | Yes, that's why we did the "weird claw thing" aforementioned.<p>Anyway, no more handwriting these days... | null | null | 41,795,147 | 41,758,870 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,840 | story | lijunhao | 2024-10-10T08:35:14 | Interactive TUI program that displays time across the time zones | null | https://github.com/oz/tz | 1 | null | 41,796,840 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,796,841 | comment | hi-v-rocknroll | 2024-10-10T08:35:59 | null | Yep. I remember it for the PCjr but forgot about original PC support for it. PCjr's also supported ROM cartridges.<p>I think the core problem of the PCjr is it was trying to be all things to all people by being part PC, part low-end computer, and part gaming console. | null | null | 41,794,019 | 41,794,019 | null | [
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41,796,842 | comment | pas | 2024-10-10T08:36:34 | null | I like renting cars, I hate to take them for some godforsaken garage to fix some issue with it. Sure, there's a premium, and so on, but similarly I hate looking for an overnight parking space, if I can simply hand it over to someone who takes/needs it for the night (going around selling drugs or going to fill it up and clean it, or all of the above) all the better.<p>with onboard telemetry and ubiquitous HD image recording ability it's pretty easy to make a few shots to have some evidence of good and careful handling, and giving it to the next user in a known condition.<p>of course if time and space are at a relative abundance then owning might make perfect sense, or if someone uses it so much that handover costs would start to be significant.<p>7-15 years is nothing for firmware. the hardware is fixed, requirements are also basically fixed. no need to support new codes, new protocols, etc. | null | null | 41,796,229 | 41,795,075 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,843 | comment | davedx | 2024-10-10T08:36:41 | null | But that's false - China broke up Ant/AliBaba. The CCP doesn't want a single company controlling their entire economy any more than the US does - granted not for exactly the same reasons | null | null | 41,794,739 | 41,784,287 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,844 | comment | flohofwoe | 2024-10-10T08:36:41 | null | AFAIK the big new thing in WASM is that it enforces 'structured control flow' - so it's a bit more like a high level AST than an assembly-style virtual ISA. Not sure how much of that matters in practice, but AFAIK that was the one important feature that enabled the proper validation of WASM bytecode. | null | null | 41,796,592 | 41,795,561 | null | [
41796912
] | null | null |
41,796,845 | comment | sylware | 2024-10-10T08:36:44 | null | c++... sad.<p>At least they have star citizen. | null | null | 41,796,478 | 41,796,478 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,846 | comment | jll29 | 2024-10-10T08:36:51 | null | This is an amazing trove of human knowledge - if made digitally accessible, the titles should be on a Web page and the references crawled by Google Scholar.<p>We should eventuall OCR all that stuff to use it to train LLMs. Seen from that commodity perspective, it has financial value.<p>Unfortunately, human species is pretty bad at long-term archiving of digital assets. Good luck to the Internet Archive - they have had their share of recent troubles, and I hope their continuation is secure.<p>Imagine the struggle, sweat and suffering that went into these 3.2 kilometers of shelf space; actually, only someone who has done a Ph.D. can probably appreciate that. | null | null | 41,789,815 | 41,789,815 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,847 | comment | luke-stanley | 2024-10-10T08:36:54 | null | This sounds interesting to me!
I will check it out in more detail. I saw 3.5-turbo mentioned which is more expensive and as I understand it, it's usually less good as a base model, if I see 3.5-turbo before I see 4o-mini, and don't see 4o-mini, I might wonder if things are behind! I hope that's fair feedback for a quick reaction.
I have done a bunch of fine-tuning before, locally and with 4o-mini, and there's often a lot of time spent suboptimally on wrangling data so I'm interested in this category of product for sure, if it helps more than it costs me. | null | null | 41,789,176 | 41,789,176 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,796,848 | comment | buginprod | 2024-10-10T08:36:58 | null | 130ms latency within a city? Are you using sound or something?<p>Yeah yeah I know thats only 40m ish for sound. | null | null | 41,793,658 | 41,793,658 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,849 | comment | rsynnott | 2024-10-10T08:37:02 | null | See, that’s the thing. Neither naughty ol’ mr car, nor the card game, are paying people to vote. Not technically. US election law is… not great. Note the digs at Citizens United in the FAQ. | null | null | 41,793,654 | 41,792,780 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,850 | comment | null | 2024-10-10T08:37:19 | null | null | null | null | 41,796,825 | 41,792,500 | null | null | true | null |
41,796,851 | comment | 0xedd | 2024-10-10T08:37:53 | null | [dead] | null | null | 41,792,500 | 41,792,500 | null | null | null | true |
41,796,852 | comment | silisili | 2024-10-10T08:38:39 | null | Good luck.<p>At one time I was experiencing high ping times and near non existent speed from ATT Fiber to Online.fr's network. I did 80% of the diagnostics for them and provided the details and of course a nudge as to what I felt the issue could be.<p>It's extremely frustrating to be a networking person having to deal with home internet CS.<p>To my surprise, it actually did get to their networking team who replied saying the peer was fine and try again. The problem with that was that it came 8 months later, long after I'd left the area and didn't even have service with them anymore. | null | null | 41,795,067 | 41,793,658 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,853 | story | FirmwareBurner | 2024-10-10T08:38:43 | null | null | null | 2 | null | 41,796,853 | null | null | null | true |
41,796,854 | comment | edanm | 2024-10-10T08:38:59 | null | What. The. Hell.<p>Just to get this straight. If you are in the business of creating websites for clients, and most of them are hosted on Wordpress.com, but a few are hosted on WPEngine, you are now forced to no longer use Wordpress.org and can't participate in the community?<p>Our company website is hosted on WPEngine, and has been there for years because we don't really touch it much. I literally log in once a year or so. The idea that because of this, I am <i>barred</i> from logging in to Wordpress.org is <i>offensive</i> and <i>disgusting</i>.<p>I really don't have much of a dog in this fight, I'm a lightweight customer of WPEngine but barely interact with it so don't care much. All I know is - I'll never, ever agree to work with Wordpress again. | null | null | 41,791,369 | 41,791,369 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,796,855 | comment | 082349872349872 | 2024-10-10T08:39:00 | null | Pt'être que demain ca ira mieux :) <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TncdhLGjFTE" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TncdhLGjFTE</a><p>The story I heard about how Rumantsch (~40k L1) became the 4th language of switzerland is that one day toward the middle of last century, after Mussolini said that rumantsch speakers were just a bunch of farmers who didn't know how to speak proper italian, the swiss people essentially said « Esti d'épais à marde ! » by voting to make it official.<p>Lagniappe: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BjoCmyhTSBU" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BjoCmyhTSBU</a> | null | null | 41,791,086 | 41,787,647 | null | [
41800058
] | null | null |
41,796,856 | comment | sva_ | 2024-10-10T08:39:06 | null | You can buy coca tea in headshops in Netherlands as well. | null | null | 41,796,641 | 41,787,798 | null | [
41798083,
41798895
] | null | null |
41,796,857 | story | karugaj | 2024-10-10T08:39:08 | null | null | null | 1 | null | 41,796,857 | null | null | null | true |
41,796,858 | comment | buginprod | 2024-10-10T08:39:10 | null | I dont see how people miss latency. It is the only other number shown on the speed check screen! No curiousity as to why that is there?<p>I mean I bet they do care about litres/100km for their car AND 0-100km accelerarion (and many other stats) | null | null | 41,794,318 | 41,793,658 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,859 | comment | downvotetruth | 2024-10-10T08:39:14 | null | A generous, thoughtful and kind individual sounds like just the person to buy this bridge I have for sale in New York for the low price of ... | null | null | 41,794,807 | 41,794,807 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,860 | comment | lsaferite | 2024-10-10T08:39:15 | null | Seeing "Hopkins's" is very weird to me. I was taught that the possessive of a noun ending in "s" just got a trailing apostrophe. Is that no longer the norm?<p>Edit:
As a partially related aside, I have a friend who's right about the same age as me that's incredulous that I was taught to use "they" as a gender neutral pronoun when the subject's gender was unknown (or you desired not convey a gender) back in the late 80s and early 90s. Maybe it's just a regional difference in teaching or something. He's from the UP of Michigan, I'm from Florida. So maybe the same thing is true with possessive nouns | null | null | 41,792,574 | 41,787,647 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,861 | comment | jamil7 | 2024-10-10T08:39:47 | null | Not really because then you need a JS environment everywhere you want to run your code. If I write a Rust module I have the possibility to compile to WASM or machine code. This is what I meant in my other comment, your assumption is everyone is making browser apps in Javascript that don't have any performance or resource constraints. | null | null | 41,796,066 | 41,795,561 | null | [
41796924
] | null | null |
41,796,862 | comment | oniony | 2024-10-10T08:39:52 | null | I don't believe the person you are replying to was suggesting that software had anything to do with their bankruptcy.<p>I believe they are suggesting that it is illustrative to the general public as to why buying cars with heavy cloud integration is a bad idea. | null | null | 41,796,421 | 41,795,075 | null | [
41797315
] | null | null |
41,796,863 | story | aleph_minus_one | 2024-10-10T08:40:06 | Graphical User Interface Gallery | null | http://toastytech.com/guis/index.html | 2 | null | 41,796,863 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,796,864 | comment | DanielHB | 2024-10-10T08:40:09 | null | > Before WASM you could already compile code from other languages into JavaScript. And have the same benefits as you have with WASM.<p>If you are referring to asm.js you must be joking. asm.js was basically a proof of concept and is worse in every way compared to WASM.<p>Like parsing time overhead alone makes it a non-option for most large applications.<p>You seem to imply you should just do it in plain JS instead for "deployment, execution and debugging" benefits. Imagine if you could be free to use those python ML libs in any language of your choice, that alone is enough of an argument. No one is going to reimplement them in JS (or any other environemtn) unless there is a huge ecosystem movement around it. | null | null | 41,795,968 | 41,795,561 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,865 | comment | piva00 | 2024-10-10T08:40:14 | null | Same in Sweden and not only for DHL. Not sure if it's someone on the inside or a leak being exploited, I have experienced it only twice while my partner often gets those SMS with suspicious links after an online purchase. | null | null | 41,796,538 | 41,796,181 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,866 | comment | Cu3PO42 | 2024-10-10T08:40:22 | null | Thank you for the pointer! I will certainly consider TypeBox as well when the time comes to migrate. | null | null | 41,794,585 | 41,764,163 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,867 | comment | cheptsov | 2024-10-10T08:40:36 | null | Unfortunately, neither VLLM nor TGI support FP8 on AMD yet. But once they do, we will look into it. | null | null | 41,794,193 | 41,791,509 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,868 | comment | edanm | 2024-10-10T08:40:51 | null | Just in case anyone isn't aware of this history - the "Morris worm" being referred to here is named after Robert Morris who wrote it. He's also one of the co-founders of YC, which built HN. | null | null | 41,788,073 | 41,779,952 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,869 | comment | withinboredom | 2024-10-10T08:40:55 | null | For the latter, I try to be helpful as if they were the first type. Everyone sometimes forgets shit (myself included). Basically, if I can search the docs and find the answer immediately, I will just share that with them. If they keep being "forgetful" or time-wasting I will have a 1:1 with them to discuss the behavior ("don't take my kindness for weakness" type of thing). I will also have a 1:1 with their manager who's job is to deal with that sort of thing. This usually has the intended effect -- eventually removing them from the organization, or teaching them how to use search functions to solve problems themselves. | null | null | 41,791,945 | 41,765,127 | null | [
41800599
] | null | null |
41,796,870 | comment | Karrot_Kream | 2024-10-10T08:41:01 | null | In my last role I started trying to enforce this by refusing to use the terms "Layer 7" and "Layer 4" (I worked on application and transport layer infrastructure at a big tech) but it never caught on and after having to give "the talk" about what happened to OSI Layers a few times I resigned myself to the fate that it was never happening. I will continue to use those terms though. | null | null | 41,795,961 | 41,790,619 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,871 | comment | rsynnott | 2024-10-10T08:41:15 | null | Did the EU get less free after Lisbon when it transferred power from the commission and council of ministers (each state has similar influence) to the parliament (each person has similar influence)? Like, that was about the least contentious part of Lisbon; it was broadly popular. Very few people would think they lost freedom through it. | null | null | 41,795,698 | 41,792,780 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,872 | comment | Onavo | 2024-10-10T08:41:22 | null | Probably funded by some bored executive at a publishing house. | null | null | 41,796,825 | 41,792,500 | null | [
41796920
] | null | null |
41,796,873 | comment | Alifatisk | 2024-10-10T08:41:30 | null | I think everyone who've used Ruby with Vscode is well aware of Solargraph. I find Solargraph buggy, sometimes it works, sometimes it does not.<p>Any particular reason this was shared now? | null | null | 41,771,387 | 41,771,387 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,874 | story | fanf2 | 2024-10-10T08:42:03 | Moiré no more: using FFT to remove halftone patterns | null | https://www.getrevue.co/profile/shift-happens/issues/moire-no-more-688319 | 2 | null | 41,796,874 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,796,875 | comment | oniony | 2024-10-10T08:42:09 | null | Is that not the joke? | null | null | 41,796,766 | 41,762,483 | null | [
41800126
] | null | null |
41,796,876 | comment | john_the_writer | 2024-10-10T08:42:24 | null | But for Hockey it's not a case of handedness.. Sticks come in both hands. So it's as if you had a pile of left and right handed guitars. | null | null | 41,795,239 | 41,794,676 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,877 | comment | o999 | 2024-10-10T08:42:33 | null | s/except:/except Exception:/g | null | null | 41,789,903 | 41,788,026 | null | [
41796885
] | null | null |
41,796,878 | story | nokita | 2024-10-10T08:42:42 | null | null | null | 1 | null | 41,796,878 | null | null | null | true |
41,796,879 | comment | dhruvrajvanshi | 2024-10-10T08:42:43 | null | Well in most statically typed languages with a VM (Java/C#), there's some sort of runtime validation<p>In Java
Object something = new Map();
String badCast = (Object) something; // This line would throw a ClassCastException because something is not a String<p>This has the advantage of throwing an exception in the correct place, instead of somewhere down the line. | null | null | 41,794,879 | 41,764,163 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,880 | comment | atemerev | 2024-10-10T08:43:00 | null | $50k for a domain? these days?<p>“Interest rates could have been way higher” | null | null | 41,795,704 | 41,778,139 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,881 | comment | wafflemaker | 2024-10-10T08:43:18 | null | While I see sense in articulating that cocaine use was different in 17th c. compared to now, I don't believe that you'd argue the same against someone saying that a person drinking beer is drinking alcohol, because beer has less alcohol than vodka. | null | null | 41,795,808 | 41,787,798 | null | [
41797318
] | null | null |
41,796,882 | comment | chickenbig | 2024-10-10T08:43:22 | null | > Latency is a cruel mistress.<p>Yes, Bloomberg had fun with latency because of their datacenter locations (about a decade ago they still only had two and a half close to New York). Pages that would paint acceptably in London would be unacceptable in Tokyo as when poorly designed they would require several round trips to render. Once the page rendered there was still the matter of updating the prices, which was handled by separately streaming data from servers close to the markets to the terminals. A very different architecture but rather difficult to test because of the significant terminal-side functionality. | null | null | 41,794,795 | 41,793,658 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,883 | comment | rsynnott | 2024-10-10T08:43:25 | null | They’re not technically paying for votes. That’s illegal. They’re exploiting the same loophole as Musk to, for practical purposes, pay for votes. | null | null | 41,793,800 | 41,792,780 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,884 | comment | guenthert | 2024-10-10T08:43:43 | null | I probably have spent too much time in 'merica (yeah, that must be it, not that I would be such a Depp), but I don't see the problem.<p>"Even before the rule clarification, the German orthographic council permitted the use of the possessive apostrophe for the sake of clarity, such as “Andrea’s Bar” to make clear that the owner is called Andrea and not Andreas."<p>And what's wrong with more clarity? | null | null | 41,787,647 | 41,787,647 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,885 | comment | orf | 2024-10-10T08:43:44 | null | Not the same: should be BaseException.<p>I guess this highlights op’s issue quite well. | null | null | 41,796,877 | 41,788,026 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,886 | story | domofutu | 2024-10-10T08:43:58 | The Illusion of Information Adequacy | null | https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0310216 | 2 | null | 41,796,886 | 2 | [
41798208,
41796991
] | null | null |
41,796,887 | comment | herbst | 2024-10-10T08:44:00 | null | Basically any web programming stack offers a database editor/admin panel. Imagine a clean phpmyadmin with WYSIWYG editor and full/more control.<p>Imo it's easier to just roll a fresh rails project and use any admin gem than to write a custom theme for Wordpress | null | null | 41,792,972 | 41,791,369 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,888 | comment | Alifatisk | 2024-10-10T08:44:03 | null | There is work done on the JIT, but it seems to be mostly bug fixes.
<a href="https://github.com/ruby/ruby/releases/tag/v3_4_0_preview2">https://github.com/ruby/ruby/releases/tag/v3_4_0_preview2</a> | null | null | 41,767,765 | 41,767,549 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,889 | comment | oreilles | 2024-10-10T08:44:41 | null | Smaller creators are also doing it for money, and Green Day and Brain are also doing this out of funny memery. | null | null | 41,796,659 | 41,790,295 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,890 | comment | Const-me | 2024-10-10T08:44:50 | null | > Isn't this obviously true?<p>To an extent sure, but we’re talking about low level micro-optimizations. Games don’t animate individual pixels. I don’t think animating 1000 things per frame gonna saturate a CPU core doing these computations, which means the code doing that is not actually performance critical.<p>> Got a bit lost here: games?<p>I searched the internets for “Bevy Engine” and found this web site <a href="https://bevyengine.org/" rel="nofollow">https://bevyengine.org/</a> which says “game engine”. I wonder is there another Bevy unrelated to games?<p>> 3.84 GB/second<p>In modern games none of that bandwidth is processed on CPU. Games use GPU for that, which don’t run Rust.<p>> there's a weak claim that all performant data structures in Rust must use unsafe code<p>Weak claim? Look at the source code of data structures implemented by Rust standard library. You will find unsafe code everywhere. When you need custom data structures instead of merely using the standard ones you will have to do the same, because safe Rust is fundamentally limited in that regard. | null | null | 41,794,497 | 41,791,773 | null | [
41798125,
41800894
] | null | null |
41,796,891 | comment | black_puppydog | 2024-10-10T08:45:00 | null | I recently read a proposal in a book that comes down to a new tax that is specifically aimed to integrate these breakup decisions into the market mechanics.<p>Basically, a company would pay a very progressive tax on its revenue (not profit) which reaches 100% at some <i>high</i> threshold value. This tax would be flat zero for the vast majority of enterprises, but would approach 100% as the company's revenue approaches something that is big enough to be relevant on a countrywide GDP scale. Since it would be applied to individual companies only, splitting a company up wod reduce the tax or more even eliminate it entirely.<p>The exact point at which it makes sense for a company to split itself up the depends on the industry and other circumstances, but thst ppind exists and as society we can control in which type of scale it lies.<p>Just thought it was a neat proposal, although it would of course require careful legislation to avoid loopholes and edge cases. It surely ald be quite difficult to implement, given the opaque ownership structure of many companies and the companies they in turn own. But maybe the fact <i>that</i> this is so complicated should already give us pause... | null | null | 41,784,287 | 41,784,287 | null | [
41796908
] | null | null |
41,796,892 | story | funyu_lee | 2024-10-10T08:45:05 | null | null | null | 1 | null | 41,796,892 | null | [
41796893
] | null | true |
41,796,893 | comment | null | 2024-10-10T08:45:05 | null | null | null | null | 41,796,892 | 41,796,892 | null | null | true | true |
41,796,894 | comment | amaccuish | 2024-10-10T08:45:41 | null | OS/2 Museum is one of the few sites that can feed my weird fascination with Netware and the old NT domain stuff, it’s great for getting an insight like you said in to the pre TCP/IP world. | null | null | 41,796,763 | 41,795,919 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,895 | comment | dhruvrajvanshi | 2024-10-10T08:45:48 | null | > Other statically-typed languages do have to deal with the problem of parsing external objects.<p>Well that's just blatantly not true. Which languages are you thinking of? I'm sure I'm misunderstanding what you said.<p>I can't think of a single server side language that doesn't have to parse external untyped objects. That's where these serialization libraries come into play.<p>For example, in Kotlin, you declare a data class and mark it as @Serializable and it generateds `toJSON/fromJSON` for you. IMO it's a much better experience than Zod. | null | null | 41,796,514 | 41,764,163 | null | [
41797483
] | null | null |
41,796,896 | story | marcoriol | 2024-10-10T08:45:49 | Tesla Is Ready to Roll Out Its Robotaxis | null | https://www.wired.com/story/tesla-is-ready-to-roll-out-cybercab-robotaxi/ | 2 | null | 41,796,896 | 3 | [
41799616,
41798604,
41796897
] | null | null |
41,796,897 | comment | null | 2024-10-10T08:45:49 | null | null | null | null | 41,796,896 | 41,796,896 | null | null | true | null |
41,796,898 | comment | SturgeonsLaw | 2024-10-10T08:46:19 | null | It is very much like that.<p>Hiring is like dating from a woman's point of view, you post the job and then sift through an exhausting number of dud applicants for one that you think is up to the job and is not an asshole.<p>Applying to jobs is like dating from a man's point of view, you take a punt, over and over again, getting ghosted or if you're lucky, rejected, in the hopes of landing that first date and showing your charm.<p>And like online dating, applying for jobs works much better if you skip the online part entirely and instead use your networks in the real world to make connections. | null | null | 41,795,334 | 41,790,585 | null | null | null | null |
41,796,899 | comment | tialaramex | 2024-10-10T08:46:26 | null | > Most (if not all) of your posts here on HN boil down to "C/C++ bad, Rust good".<p>I haven't measured but it's easy to say categorically that it's not "all" unless somehow my posts about network protocols, aeroplanes, security and psychology among others fall into this vague category.<p>And yes, like Ignaz Semmelweis I can see an obvious improvement to how my profession does what it does and it's infuriating that the response from many other practitioners is "No, I don't like change, therefore you're crazy for explaining why I should change"<p>Ignaz Semmelweis died in an asylum. But on the other hand while Ignaz was correct and his proposals would have worked he couldn't explain <i>why</i> because germ theory was only confirmed <i>after</i> he died. Rust isn't in that situation, we know already exactly what the problems are with C++. So that means I can tell you not just <i>that</i> using C++ is a bad idea, but <i>why</i> it's a bad idea. | null | null | 41,796,542 | 41,791,773 | null | [
41797141
] | null | null |
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