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comment
shubhamgirdhar
2024-10-10T09:04:54
null
Is Logic important or Communication, and which order should we learn while growing up.<p>Generally, Logic is given precedence and communication is treated like an ‘also’ thing.<p>Here’s an anecdote that negates this status quo,<p>Cauchy (French mathematician known for Integral theorem), his talent for mathematics was recognised while he was a child,<p>But Lagrange (Italian mathematician also his father’s friend) suggested that don’t let him touch any book of mathematics before he turns seventeen but rather work on his literary skills so that he is able find his true ‘voice’.<p>Makes one think to balance one’s efforts while learning about maths&#x2F;logic and literature&#x2F;communication.<p>Source: The Music of the Primes
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41,796,999
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story
8BitArmour
2024-10-10T09:05:07
The Israel-Iran standoff in maps
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https://www.economist.com/graphic-detail/2024/10/09/the-israel-iran-standoff-in-maps
2
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41,797,001
0
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41,797,002
comment
fulafel
2024-10-10T09:05:08
null
If your browser is running in a wasm sandbox, it&#x27;s a minor comfort that only your browser gets compromised which contains all your creds, etc.
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41,796,973
41,796,030
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[ 41797006 ]
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41,797,003
comment
BSDobelix
2024-10-10T09:05:29
null
There is, at least with book&#x27;s etc:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;annas-archive.org&#x2F;torrents" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;annas-archive.org&#x2F;torrents</a>
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comment
mandeepj
2024-10-10T09:05:37
null
It’s notable here - Cyrus was fired from his Chairman position before his untimely death
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41,796,952
41,795,218
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comment
freddex
2024-10-10T09:05:56
null
Shoelace is excellent, in my experience! Well document, accessible, and a large selection of components. To solve the issue you mention, you can cherry-pick the imports [1], which imports only the specific component you need.<p>[1]: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;shoelace.style&#x2F;getting-started&#x2F;installation#cherry-picking" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;shoelace.style&#x2F;getting-started&#x2F;installation#cherry-p...</a>
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41,794,270
41,794,150
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41,797,006
comment
flohofwoe
2024-10-10T09:05:57
null
Only parts of the browser are running in multiple small isolated WASM sandboxes, those WASM sandboxes are isolated from outside world about as well as if they would run in their own process.
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41,797,002
41,796,030
null
[ 41797010 ]
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41,797,007
comment
Sebb767
2024-10-10T09:06:09
null
This is true for someone manually searching for your info, but sufficient to fool spam lists and most data brokers. This really depends on your threat scenario.
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41,796,437
41,792,500
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41,797,008
comment
freilanzer
2024-10-10T09:06:19
null
Ironically, this comment adds nothing to the post and is needlessly belligerent and condescending.
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41,789,655
41,758,371
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41,797,009
story
rbanffy
2024-10-10T09:06:32
Scrum's “Product Owner” Problem
null
https://rethinkingsoftware.substack.com/p/scrums-product-owner-problem
83
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41,797,009
115
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41,797,010
comment
fulafel
2024-10-10T09:06:44
null
Compartments of internally unsafe sandboxes are what we have now, with browsers employing native-code sandboxes and isolated renderer processes etc. It gets leaky.
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41,797,006
41,796,030
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41,797,011
comment
reshlo
2024-10-10T09:06:44
null
&gt; Some of this technology has a completely different level of complexity that to this day I am not able to grasp<p>Enterprise JavaBeans mentioned?
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41,793,310
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41,797,012
comment
benrutter
2024-10-10T09:06:53
null
I think monad patterns can work pretty well in python, but my experience is nobody uses them.<p>I wrote a small utility library for exactly that kind of &quot;railway oriented programming&quot; if you&#x27;re curious about what it&#x27;d look like in python: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;benrutter&#x2F;ufo-tools">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;benrutter&#x2F;ufo-tools</a>
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41,797,013
story
hardmaru
2024-10-10T09:07:03
Intelligence at the Edge of Chaos
null
https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.02536
2
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41,797,013
0
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41,797,014
comment
johnnyanmac
2024-10-10T09:07:23
null
to be blunt: screw the GDP. things get worse for the middle class even when the country does well. Why should I be concerned that money not going to benefit me is dwindling because a company that exploited me can&#x27;t exploit me anymore? Reap what you sow.<p>More on topic: It was a neat idea, but given how consistently every single walled garden has ended up hindering progress and exploiting users in the long term, I&#x27;d rather go back to that 90&#x27;s geocities era where users had to be mindful of their content instead of letting an algorithm scroll for them showing what maximizes engagement. The experiment has failed with aplomb.<p>Break up Google, break up Microsoft (again, kind of), open up Apple, shake down Steam. Make this new money show why old money was historically regulated into being a proper public service instead of a winner take all conglomerate.
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41,791,020
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null
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comment
gregjor
2024-10-10T09:07:32
null
I feel sure you mean well, and probably learned a lot putting this together. But your tool, and the many similar &quot;AI&quot;-based tools like it, contribute to the hiring problem they attempt to solve. Clogging hiring pipelines with piles of robo-applications and AI-generated CVs contributes to the arms race -- companies cranking up their filtering of such applications in their ATS. And it interferes with people who took the time to research an opportunity and the employer and tailor their own resume.<p>Sending in lots of applications&#x2F;resumes with automation already describes probably the worst way to find a job. Adding more chaff to the already overflowing candidate funnel will make the process worse for everyone.
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comment
BrandiATMuhkuh
2024-10-10T09:07:33
null
Hi HN,<p>I was the technical co-founder of a couple of startups that showed early promise but didn’t ultimately succeed. After my last attempt, I started digging into the reasons why, and found that YC pretty much has all the advice I wish I had from the start.<p>One thing that really stood out was their list of “What not to do as a startup” (aka “Typical Startup Mistakes”). It’s a goldmine of advice that could have saved me a lot of headaches.<p>I’ve put these insights together in a presentation and thought this would be the right place to share them.<p>--- For convenience, I’ve added the presentation content as text below. ---<p>Y Combinator Advice Authors<p><pre><code> - Michael Seibel (YC Partner and Managing Director) - Paul Graham (YC Co-Founder) - Jessica Livingston (YC Co-Founder) - Dalton Caldwell (YC Partner) - Kat Manalac (YC Partner) </code></pre> Definition of a Startup<p><pre><code> - &quot;A startup is a temporary organization in search of a scalable, repeatable, profitable business model.&quot; [The Startup Owner&#x27;s Manual, 2012]. </code></pre> Definition of Product&#x2F;Market Fit<p><pre><code> - &quot;The customers are buying the product just as fast as you can make it -- or usage is growing just as fast as you can add more servers. Money from customers is piling up in your company checking account. You&#x27;re hiring sales and customer support staff as fast as you can.&quot; [Marc Andreessen] </code></pre> Working on the wrong thing<p><pre><code> - You don&#x27;t personally know 10 people with the problem - You solve a problem you don&#x27;t care about - You solve a problem for people you don&#x27;t care about - You innovate outside your core area </code></pre> Not getting the product into people&#x27;s hands<p><pre><code> - You don&#x27;t talk to customers - You don&#x27;t launch - You stopped talking to customers - You sell instead of listen </code></pre> Validation<p><pre><code> - You don&#x27;t ask customers for money - You think you are on to something because investors say so or even invest in you - You let investors tell you what to do&#x2F;build </code></pre> Sales<p><pre><code> - You don&#x27;t go to the simplest and most desperate customers - You don&#x27;t run away from hard&#x2F;bad customers - You don&#x27;t build for a niche customer type - You are chasing after customers (Making promises to get a sale) - You think partnership can solve your sales problems - You scale the sales team before you have PMF </code></pre> Fake Work<p><pre><code> - You attend conferences (without selling&#x2F;talking to customers) - You talk to the press (wait for them to come to you) - You apply for awards (Awards are awarded automatically) - You have coffee with investors to build a relationship - You build a board of advisors </code></pre> Links<p><pre><code> - The Biggest Mistakes First-Time Founders Make - Michael Seibel - https:&#x2F;&#x2F;youtu.be&#x2F;D56QeyyQMLI?si=tM-ZBACl2ycuvOs7 - The 5 things that kill startups after their seed rounds with Michael Seibel, CEO of Y Combinator - https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=Dgmmje5WHWA - The Real Product Market Fit by Michael Seibel - https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=FBOLk9s9Ci4&amp;t=3s&amp;ab_channel=YCombinator - A Decade of Learnings from Y Combinator&#x27;s CEO Michael Seibel - https:&#x2F;&#x2F;youtu.be&#x2F;0MGNf1BIuxA?si=JwY-FP9IK9NZ9uJR&amp;t=131 - The Best Way To Launch Your Startup | Startup School - https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=u36A-YTxiOw&amp;ab_channel=YCombinator - Jessica Livingston at Y Combinator Female Founders Conference 2016 - https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=a2B4cVFIVpg&amp;t=332s&amp;ab_channel=YCombinator - Lecture 3 - Before the Startup (Paul Graham) - https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=ii1jcLg-eIQ</code></pre>
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41,796,971
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comment
simiones
2024-10-10T09:07:33
null
I misread the question a bit, sorry. Still, I believe the arguments hold - while I&#x27;m sure that it&#x27;s possible to make cheap<i>er</i> missiles, especially if we take into account the markup typically associated with military contracts, I don&#x27;t think there is any room to go anywhere near the cost savings that cheap drones brought against tanks.
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41,783,660
41,769,971
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41,797,018
comment
tmtvl
2024-10-10T09:08:09
null
I dunno, I imagine that there&#x27;s no appreciable difference between:<p><pre><code> (loop :for i :below 10 :collect i) </code></pre> and:<p><pre><code> (let loop ((i 0)) (if (= i 10) nil (cons i (loop (1+ i)))))</code></pre>
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41,794,086
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41,797,019
comment
aupra
2024-10-10T09:08:09
null
It&#x27;s definitely is a webview app. The way it renders, it has to be webview.
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41,796,444
41,795,712
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41,797,020
comment
devops000
2024-10-10T09:08:19
null
Posthog
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null
41,789,831
41,789,831
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41,797,021
comment
GaryNumanVevo
2024-10-10T09:08:34
null
Both tweets have received a community note disproving this.
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null
41,796,964
41,792,500
null
[ 41797066, 41797093, 41797114 ]
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41,797,022
story
shivangipriyaa
2024-10-10T09:08:36
Userology- Unlock design insights in 30 mins with AI and 3M+ testers
Userology is an AI-powered user research platform that helps you find participants, conducts interviews and usability tests via conversational AI, and analyzes transcripts for insights.<p>Why is AI needed in user research?<p>Is your user research process slow, costly, and inefficient?<p>We all know user insights are crucial, but research can be tedious. Finding participants, scheduling calls, dealing with no-shows, and sifting through hours of content for insights can take weeks, costing both time and money.<p>There’s a better way: unmoderated research, where users share feedback asynchronously. However, unmoderated testing often leaves more questions than answers.<p>Are there better AI-driven solutions now?<p>Introducing Userology, an AI-moderated research platform fine-tuned with 2,200+ hours of research content. It automates the entire research process, saving you time and money without sacrificing valuable insights. The AI dynamically asks deeper questions based on product context and conducts feedback sessions whenever users are available.<p>What can Userology’s AI do?<p>Access willing research participants in 30 minutes from a pool of 3M+ candidates Help create questionnaires and interview guides Conduct various research types: 1:1 interviews, usability tests, and voice surveys Analyze hundreds of hours of conversations, uncovering behavioral patterns Impact:<p>Get insights in 3-5 days instead of weeks Reduce costs and save bandwidth Increase participant engagement Gain high-quality insights to drive data-driven decisions Don’t just take our word for it—try Userology today and transform your research process.<p>Visit www.userology.co to learn more.
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comment
ipnon
2024-10-10T09:08:37
null
When you want to write a monad the first step is usually to take a coffee break to make sure everyone agrees on what a monad is.
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41,795,917
41,792,304
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41,797,024
comment
account42
2024-10-10T09:09:06
null
Right, making a browser is &quot;too expensive&quot; largely because Google can make it too expensive by dumping tons of money into Chrome.
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41,796,638
41,784,287
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comment
0xEF
2024-10-10T09:09:09
null
Do you have any sources showing how Google spends its profits? Honest question, you got me curious. From my likely ignorant perspective, the devs I know build open-source products with a barely perceptible fraction of the money Google makes, and they seem fine, so I&#x27;m wondering just how much Google dumps into that.<p>My initial search produces a lot of speculative numbers, but nothing verifiable. Admittedly, this is a realm I have little experience with, so perhaps I am looking for the wrong terms. It was also my understanding that the books of large companies like this are typically closed unless demanded by legal entities.
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41,793,933
41,784,287
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41,797,026
comment
sshine
2024-10-10T09:09:11
null
When you feed the engine regexes supplied by users, you don’t want arbitrary code execution or exponential or infinite running times caused by obscure features.
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41,796,370
41,791,875
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41,797,027
comment
bubblyworld
2024-10-10T09:09:31
null
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cs.cmu.edu&#x2F;~15850&#x2F;handouts&#x2F;matousek-vondrak-prob-ln.pdf" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cs.cmu.edu&#x2F;~15850&#x2F;handouts&#x2F;matousek-vondrak-prob...</a><p>Here is a good technical introduction to the probabilistic method, which verifies everything I&#x27;ve written (in the same language as I&#x27;ve used too, namely that of measures and probability spaces, which is the standard in modern mathematics for formalising this stuff).<p>In particular, I quote:<p>&gt; We would like to prove the existence of a combinatorial object with specified properties. Unfortunately, an explicit construction of such a “good” object does not seem feasible, and maybe we do not even need a specific example; we just want to prove that something “good” exists. Then we can consider a random object from a suitable probability space and calculate the probability that it satisfies our conditions. If we prove that this probability is strictly positive, then we conclude that a “good” object must exist; if all objects were “bad”, the probability would be zero.<p>I also quote (emphasis mine):<p>&gt; 1.1.2 Definition (Random graphs). 6 The probability space of random graphs G(n, p) is a <i>finite</i> probability space whose elementary events are all graphs on a fixed set of n vertices.
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41,721,318
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41,797,028
comment
justanotherjoe
2024-10-10T09:09:36
null
That was why i stopped using the word &#x27;tech&#x27; to refer to these things. You don&#x27;t suddenly go back to stop using the wheel after a time, or suddenly think that printing press was a bad idea after all. Those are techs. Many of the things we call techs nowadays are just paradigms. And frameworks are defnitely not &#x27;new technology&#x27;.
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41,796,343
41,795,561
null
[ 41797396, 41797145 ]
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41,797,029
comment
perryizgr8
2024-10-10T09:09:40
null
Cyrus Mistry died in a car crash a couple of years ago.
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41,796,808
41,795,218
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41,797,030
story
heartvoicegifts
2024-10-10T09:09:49
null
null
null
1
null
41,797,030
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[ 41797031 ]
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41,797,031
comment
heartvoicegifts
2024-10-10T09:09:49
null
[dead]
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null
41,797,030
41,797,030
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41,797,032
comment
dgellow
2024-10-10T09:09:53
null
Satire
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null
41,795,636
41,792,500
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41,797,033
comment
debit-freak
2024-10-10T09:10:02
null
...or someone attempting to blame palestinian activists. This smells a lot more like someone trying to ape activist language.
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null
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41,797,034
story
githubprjct
2024-10-10T09:10:02
null
null
null
1
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41,797,034
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[ 41797035 ]
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true
41,797,035
comment
null
2024-10-10T09:10:02
null
null
null
null
41,797,034
41,797,034
null
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null
41,797,036
comment
Aachen
2024-10-10T09:10:03
null
See also the considerations mentioned in the sibling thread btw: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=41793846">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=41793846</a><p>&gt; even if they got your password, if they don&#x27;t have access to your password manager they can&#x27;t login.<p>Wouldn&#x27;t the same argument go for a non-2fa password? What&#x27;s the difference between a randomly generated 2fa secret and a randomly generated password here?
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41,793,981
41,792,500
null
[ 41797832 ]
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41,797,037
comment
btdmaster
2024-10-10T09:10:21
null
Ticket in Tor Browser: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;gitlab.torproject.org&#x2F;tpo&#x2F;applications&#x2F;tor-browser&#x2F;-&#x2F;issues&#x2F;43201" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;gitlab.torproject.org&#x2F;tpo&#x2F;applications&#x2F;tor-browser&#x2F;-...</a><p>It seems to be JavaScript-free from the description, which makes it even scarier. Imagine the libwebp decoder bug except embedded media blocking doesn&#x27;t really work (who blocks CSS?).
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null
41,796,426
41,796,030
null
[ 41797189, 41801310 ]
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41,797,038
comment
amadeuspagel
2024-10-10T09:10:22
null
Is it really a mystery? The human body isn&#x27;t symmetrical on the inside. We evolved to look symmetrical on the outside, because that looks attractive.
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41,758,870
41,758,870
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41,797,039
comment
chobeat
2024-10-10T09:10:59
null
he saved half of his salary for 3 years and you believe that&#x27;s enough to retire? on what planet do you live?
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41,788,087
41,786,818
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41,797,040
comment
bravetraveler
2024-10-10T09:11:25
null
Map of country, hones in on the west coast. Never change
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41,792,055
41,792,055
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41,797,041
story
shutty
2024-10-10T09:11:26
Nixiesearch: Running Lucene over S3, and why we're building a new search engine
null
https://nixiesearch.substack.com/p/nixiesearch-running-lucene-over-s3
95
null
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62
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shivangipriyaa
2024-10-10T09:11:33
null
Be the first to experience Userology! Discover how our AI-powered platform simplifies user research by finding participants, conducting interviews, and delivering insights in just days. Join the conversation and see how Userology can transform your research process!
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41,797,022
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comment
nxobject
2024-10-10T09:11:37
null
It&#x27;s strangely sad that, despite all of the legacy cruft maintained from the original IBM PC until now, that ROM BASIC hasn&#x27;t survived. Just imagine some hole in the memory map reserved for ROM BASIC, some dark corner of UEFI mandating the implementation of a vestigial ROM BASIC for compatibility.
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[ 41797251, 41798165 ]
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41,797,044
comment
akoboldfrying
2024-10-10T09:12:01
null
I agree, and am trying to make that exact point to the person I replied to.
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41,789,175
41,784,287
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comment
thiht
2024-10-10T09:12:33
null
One rarely mentioned tool I absolutely love is hyperfine: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;sharkdp&#x2F;hyperfine">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;sharkdp&#x2F;hyperfine</a><p>It’s a benchmarking CLI tool that can be used as an alternative to `time`. I often use it to detect flacky tests, I run something like `hyperfine —show-output -n=100 &#x27;go test .&#x2F;… -count=1&#x27; and it helps me catch tests that fail unreliably
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41,791,708
41,791,708
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41,797,046
comment
izacus
2024-10-10T09:12:35
null
Not just latency, but also jitter. Jitter was the biggest issue we had when broadcasting and streaming video. You don&#x27;t need a lot of bandwidth, latency can be surivived... but jitter will ruin your experience like nothing else.
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41,794,318
41,793,658
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41,797,047
comment
luke-stanley
2024-10-10T09:12:43
null
I get that this is one of their jokes, to get attention and for fun. But it would be great if Gboard itself was open source though. I could do a ton of improvements for myself at least. I love the slide &#x2F; swipe typing gesture input mode in Gboard but it&#x27;s needlessly closed source. There could be big privacy improvements and great features added. Maybe AnySoftKeyboard is good enough now, I&#x27;ll check again.
null
null
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null
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story
LiamPa
2024-10-10T09:12:47
BBC Weather app bug suggests hurricane winds in UK
null
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c0kjrp2rngzo
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null
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nullc
2024-10-10T09:12:58
null
Regain your ability to sleep at night: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.qubes-os.org&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.qubes-os.org&#x2F;</a>
null
null
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null
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pavlov
2024-10-10T09:13:16
null
It’s pretty wild that the Republican Party has transformed so much that GWB and Cheney don’t vote for it anymore. It’s only been 16 years since they left office. (Cheney is officially supporting Harris, and Bush clearly is not on Team MAGA either.)
null
null
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null
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null
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bravetraveler
2024-10-10T09:13:55
null
See also: John Wick films, memes. Many signs we&#x27;re better for animals than ourselves
null
null
41,796,751
41,795,218
null
null
null
null
41,797,052
comment
null
2024-10-10T09:14:03
null
null
null
null
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null
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seper8
2024-10-10T09:14:06
null
I should have phrased it differently, sorry.
null
null
41,790,409
41,785,265
null
null
null
null
41,797,054
comment
rodrigodlu
2024-10-10T09:14:34
null
It&#x27;s easier to have an replica. Doesn&#x27;t matter if it&#x27;s &quot;realtime&quot; sync or using CDC, from backups, etc.<p>You can even ask one of these guys to do the setup for you. They&#x27;ll do in a pinch with a happy face.<p>I know because I did.
null
null
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41,793,658
null
[ 41797287 ]
null
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comment
jblecanard
2024-10-10T09:14:44
null
Then you have a mediocre developer not willing to align his interests with those of the company. Cannot end well.
null
null
41,796,574
41,794,566
null
null
null
null
41,797,056
comment
p_l
2024-10-10T09:15:02
null
It&#x27;s somewhat close to how I got myself out of blaming the people trapped in those jobs. It&#x27;s not the people, it&#x27;s the specific family of scummy businesses.<p>Fortunately in Poland our local equivalent (Comarch) never got that big, and doesn&#x27;t suffocate the job market. Also tended to hire slightly higher up, probably because it couldn&#x27;t compete on rates with WITCH for tech support.
null
null
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null
null
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comment
null
2024-10-10T09:15:20
null
null
null
null
41,792,055
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null
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null
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withinboredom
2024-10-10T09:15:40
null
&gt; None of those are what I would consider difficult (serial 7s is starting at 100 and subtracting 7 over and over).<p>I worked with a guy who used to brag about having an IQ of 60. Dude wasn&#x27;t much smarter than a rock, but he could follow directions really well. Pretty sure he could pass these tests too.
null
null
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null
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null
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comment
dalmo3
2024-10-10T09:16:12
null
Those sites exist, but candidates are ghosted anyways, even if you give &quot;the correct&quot; answer for all questions.
null
null
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story
Jack_Xiong123
2024-10-10T09:16:30
null
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1
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macareno
2024-10-10T09:16:31
null
Asimov&#x27;s New Guide to Science<p>Easy to read, he explains difficult concepts in a simple manner. I felt smarter when I finished it.
null
null
41,756,432
41,756,432
null
null
null
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comment
gpderetta
2024-10-10T09:16:55
null
I don&#x27;t think there is any possibility of doing locale specific lower&#x2F;upper casing in ASCII. It is really designed for (a subset of) American english.
null
null
41,787,765
41,774,871
null
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comment
phplovesong
2024-10-10T09:17:13
null
I RARELY&#x2F;NEVER have to build an app so fast that i just fart out whatever broken code as fast as my fingers can type. IF i get a project like this with a deadline of &quot;yesterday&quot; i politely just refuse. I will be wasting my personal time, and the clients time. And the result will be a broken mess that will eventually take more time to fix, than it would have if i in fact did it &quot;correct&quot; from the get go.<p>That said Haxe has externs, enabling you to target JS&#x2F;PHP and use the rich ecosystem both langauges have. The best part of externs is that IF i only use 4 things from given package, i statically KNOW i only use these 4 things, and can refactor more easily, or even build the thing i need myself.
null
null
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null
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null
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comment
Const-me
2024-10-10T09:17:17
null
&gt; I could get effectively the same performance with containers and move semantics<p>When I’m happy with the level of performance delivered by idiomatic C++ and standard collections, I tend to avoid C++ all together because I also proficient with C# which is even faster to write and debug.<p>But sometimes I want more performance. An example from my day job is a multi-step numerical simulation which needs to handle grids of 200M nodes. When processing that amount of data, standard collections are suboptimal. I’m not using std::vector because I don’t need them to grow and I want to allocate these huge buffers bypassing C heap i.e. page-aligned blocks of memory zero initialized by the OS.
null
null
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null
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null
2024-10-10T09:17:21
null
null
null
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robjwells
2024-10-10T09:17:26
null
The note currently displayed to my account disputes the claims made in the linked tweet (that the Internet Archive is run by the US government(???)), not the supposed motivation of the attackers.<p>That said, this just seems to me like the attackers are trying to come up with some justification after the fact to explain why they would go after something as universally beloved as the Internet Archive. Actual pro-Palestine activists are not happy, eg (strong language): <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;x.com&#x2F;Aldanmarki&#x2F;status&#x2F;1844155616199413969" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;x.com&#x2F;Aldanmarki&#x2F;status&#x2F;1844155616199413969</a>
null
null
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null
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null
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comment
ankit219
2024-10-10T09:17:32
null
Many Indians (esp entrepreneurs) don&#x27;t realise it, Ratan Tata&#x27;s conduct is the default expectation how the successful and hyped people in India are to behave (not taking a moral stand, rather a factual one) in the society. He was known to be humble and kind and never made headlines for the wrong reasons. Many would do extensive PR, while he stayed away from the limelight. It&#x27;s remarkably difficult in a country where the heroes are few and get a huge coverage if they want it.<p>Whenever a big brand wants to enter India and (due to FDI rules) has to partner with an Indian brand, invariably they go with Tata (Starbucks, Foxconn). The image of being upstanding, clean, and good at execution is hard earned.
null
null
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null
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41,797,068
comment
mikae1
2024-10-10T09:18:01
null
Or degrades, depending on how you see it. dagw explains how splitting or not splitting carries meaning[1]. I actually think it&#x27;s a nice construct.<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=41796834">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=41796834</a>
null
null
41,792,255
41,787,647
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null
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comment
01jonny01
2024-10-10T09:18:20
null
You can adapt your code to work with YouTube embeds. Set the youtube embed src to the following:<p>controls=0 – Removes the player controls (like play, pause, volume). modestbranding=1 – Minimizes the YouTube logo in the player. rel=0 – Prevents showing related videos at the end (only works to show videos from the same channel). showinfo=0 – Removes the video title and uploader info (this parameter is deprecated but modestbranding should help). fs=0 – Disables the fullscreen button. iv_load_policy=3 – Hides video annotations (like pop-up notifications).<p>Then have your code detect for youtube embed urls and use a iframe to create the player (rather than a video tag). Finally map your player controls to the youtube embed api. Plyr.io have done something similar.
null
null
41,780,297
41,780,297
null
null
null
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41,797,070
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oneeyedpigeon
2024-10-10T09:18:27
null
I didn&#x27;t read it as a dig at Google specifically, but I accept your general point is totally correct.
null
null
41,796,826
41,793,597
null
null
null
null
41,797,071
comment
phplovesong
2024-10-10T09:18:52
null
Nope. For thins you pick Haxe (<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;haxe.org&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;haxe.org&#x2F;</a>), it has an awesome macro system, and a state of the art compiler thats really, really fast.
null
null
41,794,864
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null
null
null
null
41,797,072
comment
account42
2024-10-10T09:19:04
null
It&#x27;s also crazy how quickly you change your opionon on theft once you start using it to fill your pantry. Same for most other antisocial behaviors.
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null
41,793,452
41,784,287
null
null
null
null
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comment
bananapub
2024-10-10T09:19:14
null
this worry is so very stupid. the .su domain is still around and still serving despite the empire it was created for ending over 30 years ago. ICANN isn&#x27;t some automaton that has to follow whatever silly rules they have written down, they&#x27;ll just change the rules or whatever - if it is actually needed - to keep .io exactly as it is.
null
null
41,788,805
41,788,805
null
null
null
null
41,797,074
comment
0x12A
2024-10-10T09:19:26
null
IMO, it hits a nice sweet spot between performance and level of abstraction, especially w.r.t. concurrency and networking. Also I found that you get things done incredibly fast. I am mostly doing Python and some C, so Go feels like &quot;somewhere in between&quot;.
null
null
41,792,553
41,785,511
null
null
null
null
41,797,075
comment
fire_lake
2024-10-10T09:19:48
null
Without do-notation (computation expressions in F#) it’s hard to see how this can scale.
null
null
41,797,012
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null
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null
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41,797,076
story
gorkmckr
2024-10-10T09:20:09
Prime Day deals you can still grab for $25 or less
null
https://www.theverge.com/24263922/amazon-prime-day-tech-deals-under-25-cheap-gifts-accessories-october-2024
2
null
41,797,076
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null
null
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sourcepluck
2024-10-10T09:20:18
null
I am aware that it&#x27;s an imperfect metric yes, but think it&#x27;s still sufficient to back up the point I was making in this case.
null
null
41,789,347
41,785,265
null
null
null
null
41,797,078
comment
Yoric
2024-10-10T09:20:27
null
And OCaml or Haskell :)
null
null
41,796,749
41,796,030
null
[ 41797170 ]
null
null
41,797,079
comment
Joker_vD
2024-10-10T09:20:28
null
...the parable (I hope it&#x27;s a parable!) with the plumber is atrocious. You have a suspicion of a leak in the water main, and the plumber instead offers to re-do your whole in-house waterworks while evading the question whether there is actually a leak in the main, or whether our current in-house plumbing is failing. Oh, and also lying about the pressure regulators only being settable once, to boot. Just pay through the nose for all those wonderful new shiny things, come on, you planned on renovating your house in the near future anyhow, right?<p><i>Why</i> do you propose to us to be like this?
null
null
41,794,566
41,794,566
null
null
null
null
41,797,080
comment
altacc
2024-10-10T09:21:08
null
&gt; ... we’ll see a cool demo of a stylish-looking prototype, allowing Musk to claim a kind of victory for first impressions, even when the rough outlines of what he promises will barely hold up to scrutiny. The exaltations from bullish investors will give him enough cover to continue to make misleading declarations about what is and isn’t autonomous. And the safety experts and competitors who try to warn about the dangers of his approach will likely be drowned out or dismissed by his most ardent fans.<p>Which is a bang on description of most Telsa releases. But this time they&#x27;re promising a robotaxi, a much higher hurdle than the fuzzily defined FSD. The expectation should be no supervision, no humans, pass out drunk in the cab and wake up safely at home. Call me skeptical but I&#x27;ve followed Tesla enough to think that the reality will probably be more like a vague timeline resulting a few years later in a tiny fleet of Tesla owned cars operating in a small area with simple roads &amp; weather and human &quot;supervisors&quot; actually doing the driving more than half the time. And the investors will flip out at how amazing that is and value the company even higher as they predict that it will out compete Uber, a company which struggles to make a profit.
null
null
41,789,358
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null
null
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gorkmckr
2024-10-10T09:21:28
null
null
null
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true
41,797,082
comment
youngtaff
2024-10-10T09:21:39
null
Youtube, Search, Display Ads, and Cloud Compute are probably the four profitable business units<p>GTM and GA probably live with Display Ads<p>Chrome and Android probably live with Search<p>Who knows where ChromeOS, and all the hardware devices go
null
null
41,793,933
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41,797,083
comment
ivolimmen
2024-10-10T09:21:46
null
I am a 100% left and I can do most (except writing) with my right. Well I can do writing if I do it slow but it looks horrible. I have a group of friends that I know from 25 years ago and the weird thing is: all my friends are left as well. On of my friends also married a left handed partner, so the lefties are in the majority in my friends group.
null
null
41,758,870
41,758,870
null
null
null
null
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story
chistev
2024-10-10T09:21:53
All We Have in This World Is Ourselves
null
https://rxjourney.com.ng/all-we-really-have-in-this-world-is-ourselves
63
null
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null
null
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anonzzzies
2024-10-10T09:21:53
null
Perhaps one day we will have properly working wasm stuff and we can forget about all these terrible because-typescript-sucks-because-js-sucks libraries.
null
null
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null
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yreg
2024-10-10T09:21:57
null
&gt; I&#x27;m just glad you&#x27;re not in charge of this kind of services<p>Why are you attacking the user instead of just focusing on the argument?
null
null
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null
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chupasaurus
2024-10-10T09:22:06
null
Can talk about foil fencing perspective: lefties get a competitive advantage only in junior years because training exercises are done against <i>same-handed</i> opponent (be it a coach or dummy) while they spar and compete mostly against righties. It diminishes with time.
null
null
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LavingtonRoy90
2024-10-10T09:22:10
null
null
null
1
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llm_trw
2024-10-10T09:22:39
null
Previously amateurs would crack Adobe software and then get a letter telling them they needed to pay or be sued when they went professional.<p>The cracked software was there to onramp teens into users. Adobe has burned this ramp and now no one under 14 uses it any more which is quite the change from when I was 14.
null
null
41,796,355
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null
null
null
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41,797,090
comment
reshlo
2024-10-10T09:22:58
null
&gt; In reality, the ‘right way’ path being advocated for, statistically will also waste a lot of time, and over-engineering waste can and does grow exponentially, while under-engineering frequently only wastes linear and&#x2F;or small amounts of time, until the problem is better understood.<p>The “right way” examples I’m thinking of weren’t over-engineering some abstraction that probably wasn’t needed. Picture replacing a long procedural implementation, filled with many separate deprecated methods, with a newer method that already existed and already had test coverage proving it met all of the requirements, rather than cramming another few lines into the middle of the old implementation that had no tests. After all, +5 -2 without any test coverage is obviously better than +1 -200 with full test coverage, because 3 is much smaller than 199.
null
null
41,794,483
41,758,371
null
[ 41799495 ]
null
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41,797,091
comment
Hugsun
2024-10-10T09:23:27
null
To be clear: the commenter you replied to just seems to be reiterating the idea, so I&#x27;m not accusing them of not reading the article.<p>You should have seen how few replies read the last article I posted. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=40525629">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=40525629</a> The majority of the comments, including all the top ones, expressed insights as original, that were pretty thoroughly analyzed in the article. Just read my mildly frustrated replies.
null
null
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null
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rbanffy
2024-10-10T09:23:40
null
&gt; insist on uppercasing reserved words,<p>It makes code a lot more readable
null
null
41,795,815
41,764,465
null
[ 41797439 ]
null
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41,797,093
comment
natdempk
2024-10-10T09:23:45
null
The current community notes I see on these tweets just basically say: the Internet Archive is not part of the US government.
null
null
41,797,021
41,792,500
null
null
null
null
41,797,094
comment
fransje26
2024-10-10T09:23:51
null
From your experience, what are the system requirements needed to use that as comfortably as your daily driver?
null
null
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null
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null
null
41,797,095
comment
squarefoot
2024-10-10T09:23:53
null
&gt; This raises an interesting question: should email addresses be private?<p>Yes and no. Both of them. As any powerful tool, email is going to be abused, like any other alternative would be when it will come one day. Those services allowing creation of dynamic email addresses do their job (until they&#x27;re banned, that&#x27;s why I&#x27;m not mentioning them), however using them isn&#x27;t automatic and most people don&#x27;t even know about their existence. What if we then did upgrade email protocols to reflect current needs wrt privacy and modified existing mail servers so that they could create dynamic addresses when asked by a simple flag? Example: I want to subscribe to a service from company XYZ, however I&#x27;m not sure how much I can trust them, therefore, when writing an email or filling a web form I can activate the option to create a new address that is tied to the recipient I&#x27;ll be writing to, and will work as a dedicated proxy for my real address, that is, every mail I send to the recipient using my real address will be actually sent from the new dynamic address, then all replies to the dynamic address will be routed to my real one, but a field in its headers will always contain either a memo by me (example: &quot;signup with XYZ&quot;) or the original recipient (example: &quot;info@xyz_trustuswerenotspammers_yeahsure.com&quot;). This way one can immediately spot whoever sold their address to others and blacklist them. As said, those services work well but not being built in into mail servers and clients their adoption is quite restricted. I don&#x27;t see why that function shouldn&#x27;t be embedded in a new upgraded email protocol as the modification would neither be that hard nor consume any serious resource. I would however expect heavy resistance against the adoption, of course.
null
null
41,795,388
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null
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lifthrasiir
2024-10-10T09:23:57
null
For <i>now</i>, (typical) WASM is indeed more secure than (typical) JVM or .NET bytecodes primarily because external operations with WASM are not yet popular. WASM in this regard has the benefit of decades&#x27; worth of hindsight that it can carve its own safe API for interoperation, but otherwise not technically superior or inferior. Given that the current web browser somehow continues to ship and keep such APIs, I think the future WASM with such APIs is also likely to remain safer, but that&#x27;s by no means guaranteed.
null
null
41,796,715
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null
null
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comment
arkh
2024-10-10T09:24:08
null
&gt; customer_id<p>It&#x27;s hard to fight for those when surrounded by ORM first people. &quot;Why call it customer_id in the customer table, call it id&quot;. Because I like using using. &quot;But we don&#x27;t care we rarely do SQL queries, why optimize for the rare cases?&quot;.<p>Enjoy your N+1 ORM only problem then.
null
null
41,795,815
41,764,465
null
[ 41799013 ]
null
null
41,797,098
comment
high_na_euv
2024-10-10T09:24:19
null
Im aware of Rust, but there is C#&#x2F;Java too, with way bigger ecosystem, community and lower entry level
null
null
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null
[ 41797414, 41797380, 41797349 ]
null
null
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comment
RifatHimself
2024-10-10T09:24:26
null
I am using <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.typingmentor.com" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.typingmentor.com</a> but I am not bored. In its lessons segment, there are also storylines to practice. You can visit its lessons page.
null
null
41,700,858
41,700,858
null
null
null
null