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41,797,700
comment
thetwentyone
2024-10-10T11:18:53
null
I’m trying to influence this from my small corner of the world here: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;juliaactuary.org&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;juliaactuary.org&#x2F;</a><p>Come chat in the Julia slack #finance or #actuarial channels!
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41,797,568
41,780,848
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41,797,701
story
rntn
2024-10-10T11:18:55
Post Office CEO tells inquiry leadership was in dream world over Horizon scandal
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https://www.theregister.com/2024/10/10/post_office_ceo_inquiry/
2
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comment
rsynnott
2024-10-10T11:18:58
null
What area, precisely, is &#x27;(Remote)&#x27;? Why does the Californian government track income information on Remotistan?
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41,795,267
41,792,500
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41,797,703
comment
kranke155
2024-10-10T11:19:25
null
Gov Uk UX team I believe is doing some of the finest work in the world.
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41,794,268
41,793,597
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comment
Sebb767
2024-10-10T11:19:33
null
On the other hand, what is the reasonable way of action here? A whole set of acquaintances grieving for days about a person only one of them knew? Next to this being quite detrimental to productivity (and you can argue all day about how bad we have it in this society), it would just lead to us being in a mostly permanent state of grieve, as there will always be someone that had some shocking event in recent times, for any reasonably large set of people.
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41,797,602
41,797,084
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41,797,705
comment
indulona
2024-10-10T11:19:49
null
because all that is is no more than 50 lines of code. it&#x27;s so easy that nothing else makes much more sense. Go&#x27;s standard library has all you need to run networking services from the get go. you really do not need these things. Go with nginx, haproxy and similar things if you need every last bit of performance, but otherwise, you can just write your on in no time. Not only that, you can tailor-made it to suit whatever use case you have and that knowledge will only make you more productive in the future.
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41,796,722
41,790,619
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41,797,706
comment
indigo0086
2024-10-10T11:20:05
null
This person has the privilege to espouse nihilist doomer philosophy like this.
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41,797,084
41,797,084
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41,797,707
comment
LandR
2024-10-10T11:20:29
null
&gt; Hiking in altitude is hands down the hardest thing I did in my life<p>HOw much preparation did you do before hand ? I&#x27;m looking at a himalayan trip next year to around a 23k feet summit (over the course of 30 days or so). I&#x27;m taking a year to train for it, but I have no way to train for &#x27;altitude&#x27;, and as I understand it reaction to altitude doesn&#x27;t correlate that much with overall fitness. You can apparently be super fit but still get altitude sick, which is concerning me.
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comment
null
2024-10-10T11:20:30
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null
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null
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41,797,709
comment
pas
2024-10-10T11:20:34
null
depending on how much weight their voice has it might well worth the risk. (as you gain naysayers but you also deliver results, and that might make certain important folks happy, or at least it will look good on your resume, etc..)
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41,796,349
41,794,566
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41,797,710
comment
Dr_Birdbrain
2024-10-10T11:20:44
null
Ok, well, I understand it may have been invented with that goal, but it frankly does not look like blackboard notation at all. This is not lower effort than your rebuttal “yes it does, in fact it was invented that way”.<p>I agree with a sibling comment, also heavily downvoted, that the real blackboard notation is linear algebra notation. Either that, or pseudocode. Python and Haskell look like pseudocode. This doesn’t, and it doesn’t matter what the developer was targeting, he didn’t hit the target.
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41,782,954
41,770,051
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41,797,711
comment
mewpmewp2
2024-10-10T11:20:53
null
I would say that it&#x27;s almost good if it wasn&#x27;t for the Error word in KeyError.<p>If it was something like except KeyDoesNotExist: or KeyNotFound, it would make more sense for me, because it seems hacky to consider it an error where it&#x27;s a normal default to some value behaviour.
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41,797,660
41,794,818
null
[ 41797930 ]
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41,797,712
story
stared
2024-10-10T11:21:02
Access to Opportunity in the Sciences: Evidence from the Nobel Laureates [pdf]
null
https://paulnovosad.com/pdf/nobel-prizes.pdf
1
null
41,797,712
0
[ 41797895 ]
null
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41,797,713
comment
chx
2024-10-10T11:21:03
null
&gt; and hasn’t meaningfully contributed back to the Wordpress project.<p>That&#x27;s what Matt says. WPEngine claims otherwise -- in a legal document, no less.
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41,793,262
41,791,369
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41,797,714
comment
null
2024-10-10T11:21:04
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null
41,797,048
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null
null
true
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41,797,715
comment
lakomen
2024-10-10T11:21:12
null
The polished CMS nobody heard about :)
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41,786,387
41,775,238
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41,797,716
comment
Dr_Birdbrain
2024-10-10T11:21:15
null
I agree, linear algebra or pseudocode.
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41,783,792
41,770,051
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41,797,717
comment
sausagefeet
2024-10-10T11:21:19
null
&gt; I think local-first is the future. This is where the apps runs mostly within user&#x27;s browser with little to no help from the server. Apps like Figma, Linear and Superhuman use this model very successfully.<p>The problem is: Figma and Linear are not local-first in the way people who are local-first proponents explain local-first. Both of them require a centralized server, that those companies run, for synchronization. This is not what people mean when they talk about &quot;local-first&quot; being the future, they are talking about what Martin Kleppman defined it as, which is no specialized synchronization software required.
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41,795,944
41,795,561
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41,797,718
comment
anonify8
2024-10-10T11:21:30
null
Overemployment, moonlighting etc. is another interesting aspect and the heady mix of remote work, inflationary pressure, job insecurity and stagnating wages creates a motivator to take 2 or more jobs.
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41,792,375
41,790,585
null
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null
41,797,719
story
creatonez
2024-10-10T11:21:53
Helping wikis move away from Fandom
null
https://weirdgloop.org/blog/why-were-helping-more-wikis-move-away-from-fandom
790
null
41,797,719
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41,797,720
comment
null
2024-10-10T11:21:58
null
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41,797,721
comment
wavemode
2024-10-10T11:22:11
null
&gt; The maxim is not used by religious people to its intended effect.<p>Your comment literally says &quot;the maxim suggests&quot;.<p>If that wasn&#x27;t what you were saying, then your comment is misphrased.<p>If that -was- what you were saying, then I reiterate that, no, the maxim does not suggest that. You (or whatever hypothetical person you&#x27;re referring to) are the one suggesting it, not the maxim.<p>It doesn&#x27;t matter how you rephrase it - &quot;should be able to&quot; is not the same as &quot;must&quot;. &quot;Able-bodied people should be able to jump off the top of a building.&quot; That&#x27;s a perfectly valid and true statement - jumping off of things is within the physical capabilities of the able-bodied. But that statement, however true, does not suggest that one must jump off the top of a building to prove that one is able-bodied.<p>&gt; No, I didn&#x27;t mean that it has to happen in all cases.<p>If it doesn&#x27;t have to happen in all cases, then an intelligent person can simply say &quot;no, even though I am -able to- accept contradictory ideas, in this case I still reject child marriage in all contexts&quot;. Clearly you would agree that this is perfectly compatible with the maxim. So, in what way is the maxim being harmful here?<p>In reality, your comment has almost nothing to do with the maxim itself, and is mostly just about people using religion and rhetoric to manipulate others. Such people would use whatever tool they have available - with or without the existence of the maxim.
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41,788,546
41,758,371
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41,797,722
comment
SkiFire13
2024-10-10T11:22:53
null
If you&#x27;re doing graphics then you will have to use `unsafe` to interface with the OS primitives, there&#x27;s no other way.<p>Backlinks would be &quot;nice&quot; but they break fundamental assumptions that the borrow checker does.<p>&gt; Detecting a double borrow is the same problem as detecting a double lock of a mutex by one thread, which is being worked on.<p>Is it being worked on using heuristics or formal methods?
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41,792,477
41,791,773
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41,797,723
comment
fwsgonzo
2024-10-10T11:23:25
null
I have to say that yes, it&#x27;s a PITA. Ever tried to enable exceptions in one part, and disabled in the other? It simply won&#x27;t load.<p>Or any other option. Really. So many investigations, so much time wasted.
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41,796,946
41,795,561
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41,797,724
story
squircle
2024-10-10T11:23:34
null
null
null
11
null
41,797,724
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41,797,725
comment
datavirtue
2024-10-10T11:23:35
null
Economics.
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null
41,797,621
41,794,566
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[ 41797914, 41797942 ]
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41,797,726
comment
itsoktocry
2024-10-10T11:23:51
null
&gt;<i>since it seems to be about the fact that your coworkers are not your friends, and your work is not your life.</i><p>That&#x27;s not the message. Even with <i>close</i> friends, what you experience versus the grieving person are miles apart. When a friend&#x27;s parent dies, I show sympathy and provide support, but my life goes on as usual. For the griever it&#x27;s the centre of everything.
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41,797,294
41,797,084
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41,797,727
comment
systems_glitch
2024-10-10T11:23:52
null
Yeah we run this on our own Proton Mail whitelabel, and for a few customers who have us manage it, mostly for the filtering aspect, and the occasional customer who has the wrong&#x2F;mis-spelled address in their system and won&#x27;t change it.
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41,795,762
41,792,500
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41,797,728
comment
BerislavLopac
2024-10-10T11:24:37
null
&gt; the language lacks a “throws” statement<p>I&#x27;m not sure what you mean by this? Python has the &quot;raise&quot; statement [0], which &quot;throws&quot; an error from within a function or other code.<p>[0] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;docs.python.org&#x2F;3&#x2F;reference&#x2F;simple_stmts.html#raise" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;docs.python.org&#x2F;3&#x2F;reference&#x2F;simple_stmts.html#raise</a>
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comment
kaba0
2024-10-10T11:24:41
null
Wasm is more open, because we effectively have 1.5 browsers left, and whatever google decides will be the de facto “web standard” everyone should follow. If google were pushing for a slightly revamped jvm&#x2F;applet model, that would be the standard (as the JVM is as open&#x2F;standardized as it gets)
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41,796,072
41,795,561
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[ 41798112 ]
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comment
netsharc
2024-10-10T11:24:45
null
Seeing the login window reminds me I have an unused wordpress.com account with 2 blogs... Well, &quot;had&quot;, I just deleted them due to Matt&#x27;s behavior.
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41,797,406
41,796,748
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null
41,797,731
comment
harywilke
2024-10-10T11:24:48
null
We used to get these big books delivered to our doorsteps that had your name, your address and your personal phone number. You could pay to opt out.
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41,795,548
41,792,500
null
[ 41800231 ]
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41,797,732
comment
anonify8
2024-10-10T11:24:51
null
Non-free to send an application signals scam. I would never use this.
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null
41,792,244
41,790,585
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[ 41799309 ]
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41,797,733
comment
krull10
2024-10-10T11:25:02
null
General scientific computing is pretty good across the Julia ecosystem, from optimization, to ODE and now PDE solver libraries, to various statistics and inference packages, etc. It lacks the deep NN tooling or breadth of ML libraries of Python, and nothing matches R for breadth of stats libraries, but for most other scientific computing it is really great at this point.
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null
41,797,646
41,780,848
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[ 41798011, 41798022 ]
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41,797,734
comment
rsynnott
2024-10-10T11:25:11
null
With luck, they&#x27;ll be so concentrated on replying to each other that they&#x27;ll neglect to bother proper people.
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41,796,608
41,796,608
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41,797,735
comment
GaiaRoncalli
2024-10-10T11:25:24
null
ECOSMIC | Data Analyst | <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.ecosmic.space&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.ecosmic.space&#x2F;</a> | Turin, Italy | Full-time | Remote (IT)<p>Ecosmic is bringing microservices to space. Our first software solution SAFE helps satellite operators gain insights on the risk of collision for their assets. We raised €1.1M this year and our first product is in beta-testing.<p>We are now looking for a Data Analyst to help us design interfaces with several space data providers, and develop proper data models and storage solutions. Part of the job will also be to query and analyse data about product usage and collaborate with the business team to provide market intelligence insights.<p>Learn more and apply here: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.ecosmic.space&#x2F;data-analyst" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.ecosmic.space&#x2F;data-analyst</a>
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null
41,709,301
41,709,301
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null
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41,797,736
comment
kunley
2024-10-10T11:25:27
null
I think the author rather refers to &quot;tamagotchi tooling&quot; and constant adapting libraries to new trends. It was not that much about language changes per se
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41,793,898
41,791,773
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41,797,737
comment
jzemeocala
2024-10-10T11:25:27
null
Kinda similar to Barbara Streisand effect.
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41,792,458
41,791,693
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41,797,738
comment
tone
2024-10-10T11:25:29
null
But none of his actions are sensible if he just wants to defend it. He&#x27;s done more damage than WP Engine ever did.<p>The argument that WP Engine is trying to mislead people is weak at best. We&#x27;re seriously saying that talking about WordPress hosting was misleading? To whom? What about every other host that does this?<p>Also considering the current deliberately misleading state of .com&#x2F;.org&#x2F;Automattic&#x2F;Matt&#x2F;the foundation etc, I really think they could do a lot to lead by example there before going this unnecessarily nuclear to others. I don&#x27;t believe it because the reaction is totally out of line with the issue.
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41,797,576
41,796,748
null
[ 41797791 ]
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41,797,739
comment
jonasdegendt
2024-10-10T11:25:36
null
This is good advice. And don&#x27;t let your first experience(s) write off professional help. &quot;Shop&quot; around if you have to, it took me a while to find a psychologist that I felt I was clicking with.
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41,797,432
41,797,084
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41,797,740
comment
9q9
2024-10-10T11:25:40
null
Geoff Hinton was denied an academic position at the University of Sussex&#x27;s CS department where he had done postdoc work (That department is now &#x27;famous&#x27; for consciousness studies and integrated information theory <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;osf.io&#x2F;preprints&#x2F;psyarxiv&#x2F;zsr78" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;osf.io&#x2F;preprints&#x2F;psyarxiv&#x2F;zsr78</a>. I bet they are kicking themselves now ...)<p>&gt; <i>&quot;Academia will one day wake up, and realize that&quot;</i><p>Charlie Munger famously said, <i>&quot;Show me the incentive and I&#x27;ll show you the outcome&quot;</i> ...
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41,796,754
41,753,626
null
[ 41801686 ]
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41,797,741
comment
DrBazza
2024-10-10T11:26:00
null
Ideally Jira would have something similar so that when you create a new issue and accidentally click somewhere or press escape, it doesn&#x27;t delete the ticket you&#x27;ve just spent 5 minutes creating.
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41,793,597
41,793,597
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null
null
null
41,797,742
comment
itsoktocry
2024-10-10T11:26:06
null
&gt;<i>I don&#x27;t see why we couldn&#x27;t live in a world where coworkers are our friends and work is our life.</i><p>They aren&#x27;t your friends <i>by default</i>, but nothing says they <i>can&#x27;t</i> be your friend. In fact, many of my best friends in life are&#x2F;were coworkers.
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41,797,658
41,797,084
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41,797,743
comment
silexia
2024-10-10T11:26:30
null
The verge generally is clickbait, another site choice would have been better.
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41,793,081
41,792,500
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[ 41802505 ]
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41,797,744
comment
cjcenizal
2024-10-10T11:26:36
null
I think this is a valid approach, but success is contingent on working with product-minded engineers [0]. I consider myself to be one, so I&#x27;m a fan of this approach. There are also many engineers who aren&#x27;t product-minded, and they might prefer working in a culture where their job is to focus on execution.<p>[0] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;blog.pragmaticengineer.com&#x2F;the-product-minded-engineer&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;blog.pragmaticengineer.com&#x2F;the-product-minded-engine...</a>
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41,797,009
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41,797,745
comment
null
2024-10-10T11:26:53
null
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41,797,746
comment
turnsout
2024-10-10T11:27:09
null
I&#x27;m getting ready to launch an iOS app in the next couple of weeks, and this is gold! Does anyone have a perspective on Apple Search Ads vs Meta vs TikTok? I&#x27;m wondering what&#x27;s worth the squeeze.
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null
41,778,882
41,778,882
null
[ 41798241, 41797865 ]
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41,797,747
comment
rudnevr
2024-10-10T11:27:13
null
that&#x27;s what they actually do, yes. It&#x27;s been a joke first, not anymore
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41,791,922
41,785,265
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null
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41,797,748
comment
dividedcomet
2024-10-10T11:27:13
null
I set up a form to send basic email info for wedding RSVPs for my wedding, no validation, and never got a single piece of spam. Granted it’s hosted in Cloudflare so don’t know if they blocked out all the hard work for me.
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41,785,574
41,785,574
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41,797,749
comment
LordAtlas
2024-10-10T11:27:23
null
The reference is to this, where Matt has replied to a query about what constitutes &quot;affiliation&quot; by saying he could not answer that and the person should consult an attorney.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;x.com&#x2F;JavierCasares&#x2F;status&#x2F;1843963074904227945" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;x.com&#x2F;JavierCasares&#x2F;status&#x2F;1843963074904227945</a><p>Read that whole thread from the earlier tweets too. People are getting banned from the Slack channel for asking what the checkbox means. This isn&#x27;t just drama from OP.
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41,797,482
41,796,748
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null
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null
41,797,750
comment
fidla
2024-10-10T11:27:32
null
I&#x27;m a musician. I studied film and photography in college. I started learning how to digitally design in the early 1990s (yes I am old), and made a short career of it for the first 15 years or so until recently. I still do some of it here and there, mostly for fun.
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41,756,978
41,756,978
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41,797,751
comment
Roark66
2024-10-10T11:27:32
null
That is why I&#x27;ve been successfully working from home for almost a decade starting on an LTE connection that was 5Mb up and 10Mb down(notice this is small b as in bits). No problem at all... Why because most of the time latency was good.<p>I&#x27;m still on the same LTE connection, but everyone kept telling me how my speeds are crap and how I should update to a new LTE cat 21 router. So I got one of more popular models ZTE MF289F. And the speed increased to 50Mb up 75Mb down on a speed test. But all my calls suddenly felt very choppy and the perceived Web browsing was unbearably slow... What happened? Well, the router would just decide every day or so to up it&#x27;s latency to Google.com from 15ms to 150ms until it was restarted. But that is not all. Even when the ping latency was fine it still felt slower than my ancient tplink lte router... So the zte went into a drawer waiting for the times I&#x27;ll have time to put Linux on it. And the tplink went back on top of my antenna mast.
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41,793,658
null
[ 41799140 ]
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comment
psychoslave
2024-10-10T11:27:34
null
It’s all have to do with resource management here.<p>It’s obvious that laying off people that were working hard at making more robust the flagship product of the non-profit wasn’t going to result in a an increase of security in this product. Could the whole lay-off have been prevented? That would require some number analysis here, and insights I lake.<p>Could at least some termination have been avoided? Freezing the income of the CEO until some agreed metrics improve, and use the amount thus spare to save some employ salary was certainly an option here, wasn’t it?<p>Claiming &quot;think of my family, look how much more some other people earn elsewhere&quot; while almost simultaneously (at organization level at least) putting so many people in a jobless position, that’s a rather bold cognitive dissonance to throw at the world to my mind.<p>If pointing out &quot;odd financial priorities&quot; of a non-profit is flame bait, one might wonder how humanity is supposed to mend all organizational dysfunctions it can ever fall into.
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2024-10-10T11:27:45
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41,797,653
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systems_glitch
2024-10-10T11:28:03
null
Probably. I run all the old, insecure machines on their own subnet and physical segment, and some of the &quot;keep them going&quot; services are hosted on VMs running on our modern VM hosts. We&#x27;ve got a few things that have to cross the router&#x2F;firewall between the two networks, not SMB currently though.
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null
2024-10-10T11:28:14
null
null
null
null
41,793,597
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comment
Kalanos
2024-10-10T11:28:17
null
The product role is far too broad. It&#x27;s absurd. The more experience I get in both product and engineering leads me to believe that product should be a scout out ahead of the team, identifying the most valuable things to build. Product people should spend more time with customers and internal stakeholders. Implementation below the epic level should be handled by the engineering team.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;docs.google.com&#x2F;drawings&#x2F;d&#x2F;1-6iUUbfFp3UFK24_OymF7ciXwqj50Yr68_qYA3abWIg&#x2F;edit" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;docs.google.com&#x2F;drawings&#x2F;d&#x2F;1-6iUUbfFp3UFK24_OymF7ciX...</a>
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41,797,009
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comment
farseer
2024-10-10T11:28:21
null
Go hunt bad guys
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null
41,792,713
41,792,713
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41,797,758
comment
anonify8
2024-10-10T11:28:22
null
Internships while you study. Freelancing.<p>I think the grads cant get hired is overstated.<p>Beancounters can&#x27;t resist a the lower $ per neuron of hiring grads.
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story
Maaltalk
2024-10-10T11:28:30
null
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null
2024-10-10T11:28:30
null
null
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null
41,797,759
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throwaway2037
2024-10-10T11:28:40
null
It is a fair question, but I have seen plenty of footage where the first drone misses a weak spot. Sure, the explosion is intense, but the tank continues unabated. Then a second or third drone hits the weak spot for disablement.
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41,776,363
41,769,971
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comment
LordAtlas
2024-10-10T11:28:58
null
No, it&#x27;s not. Please see the tweets I linked from this comment.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=41790976">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=41790976</a>
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41,797,501
41,796,748
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41,797,763
comment
altacc
2024-10-10T11:29:04
null
Simpler to define what you want to do as Option B then produce an expensive &amp; time consuming Option A and an unacceptable, risky and business damaging Option C. Then show the Powerpoint to the C-Suite and let them think that going for Option B was their great decision making skills. Everyone leaves happy!
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null
41,794,566
41,794,566
null
[ 41798392 ]
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41,797,764
comment
ossobuco
2024-10-10T11:29:14
null
&gt; Of course we do, tovarisch.<p>Nice argument you got there; it really shows your unwillingness to see things for what they are. Keep living the dream, no worries, there is no exploitation in the world, and your lifestyle is entirely moral.
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null
41,788,558
41,749,470
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41,797,765
comment
pyeri
2024-10-10T11:30:04
null
I think there is a historical pattern of same thing happening with PHP, when things like cake-php and other foo-php started gaining enough popularity to irk PHP core folks about it. Though I don&#x27;t remember PHP doing an outright war against them like Matt&#x2F;WP, I think they did alter their license and mention specifically to not use their name in the project in a way that associates them to PHP.
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null
41,797,383
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null
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41,797,766
story
getwiththeprog
2024-10-10T11:30:07
Sleeping Through the Technical Interview (2022)
null
https://xeiaso.net/blog/sleeping-the-technical-interview/
2
null
41,797,766
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null
null
null
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comment
pen2l
2024-10-10T11:30:07
null
A better example than Figma is Rive, made with Flutter.<p>Works well local-first, and syncs with the cloud as needed. Flutter space lends itself very well to making local-first apps that also play well in the cloud.
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null
41,796,021
41,795,561
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41,797,768
comment
I_complete_me
2024-10-10T11:30:15
null
I use dirjump [1] for this. I use zoxide alongside it. [1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;imambungo&#x2F;dirjump">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;imambungo&#x2F;dirjump</a>
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41,793,777
41,791,708
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comment
binary132
2024-10-10T11:30:22
null
The fact is that our pseudo-liberal market is extremely dysfunctional and doesn’t offer meaningful opportunity to most people who didn’t get technical degrees. A healthy society cannot run on pure software engineering, and cannot offer meaningful work only to its brightest nerds and most unscrupulous thieves. It’s good and right to notice this, and the solution is not that the nerds and thieves should consider dribbling a few extra scraps to the poors (at this point, everyone else).<p>No, I don’t think knowing how to perform an affine transform justifies a 20x better salary than the common man has access to. The vast majority of folks in tech are not building rocket ships and flying cities.
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41,794,567
41,792,055
null
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41,797,770
comment
okkdev
2024-10-10T11:30:55
null
I beg to differ.
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null
41,700,002
41,698,094
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story
tu7001
2024-10-10T11:31:02
A UK treaty could spell the end of the .io domain
null
https://www.theverge.com/2024/10/8/24265441/uk-treaty-end-io-domain-chagos-islands
2
null
41,797,771
1
[ 41797975, 41797818 ]
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null
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comment
vtomole
2024-10-10T11:31:08
null
The people who claim that current quantum computers are useful for classical problems contribute to &quot;Quantum hype&quot; which is frowned upon by most members of the community.
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null
41,796,510
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null
[ 41798080 ]
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davidgiribet
2024-10-10T11:31:13
null
null
null
1
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true
41,797,774
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null
2024-10-10T11:31:13
null
null
null
null
41,797,773
41,797,773
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diggan
2024-10-10T11:31:16
null
I mentioned it in another comment but worth repeating, I have no bones in this fight, so I don&#x27;t really care either way and I disagree with the approach Matt is taking regardless.<p>But, the person you linked to don&#x27;t seem to be discussing the whole thing in good faith, as exemplified with this comment:<p>&gt; &quot;ANY way means that if I visit the WPE website I cannot click that checkbox. That&#x27;s not a speculation&quot;<p>I&#x27;m pretty sure that no legal interpretation of that checkbox label would reach the same conclusion (but, I&#x27;m not a lawyer, and yadda yadda), and it is quite literally speculation unless that person actually investigated if it&#x27;s true, which don&#x27;t seem to have done.<p>So again, not disagreeing or agreeing with anything here, but there is a lot of baseless arguing back-and-forth between everyone, and people (including Matt) seem to more willing to stir the pot some more, rather than finding something that moves to solve the situation.
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41,797,677
41,796,748
null
[ 41799136 ]
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41,797,776
comment
SkiFire13
2024-10-10T11:31:33
null
&gt; You do need efficient data structures, which often implies developing custom ones for specific use cases.<p>You are assuming you can&#x27;t do this with those vecs&#x2F;maps. But you can! That&#x27;s what the &quot;additional semantics&quot; are.<p>They will be slightly slower due to often using indexes instead of raw pointer, which requires a bound check and an addition to get the pointer, and sometimes a reallocation, but they won&#x27;t be <i>that</i> slow. Surely they will be faster than C#, which you claim can implement those same data structures efficiently. You also often get the benefit of better cache locality due to packing everything together, meaning it could even be faster.
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41,793,779
41,791,773
null
[ 41801515 ]
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41,797,777
comment
throwaway2037
2024-10-10T11:31:36
null
<p><pre><code> &gt; caused by NATOs defeat </code></pre> To clarify: Is this a hypothetical statement or is there a specific NATO defeat that you have in mind? As I understand, Russia has not directly attacked any NATO states since the state of the Ukraine war. (Leave aside the sabotage of Nord Stream natural gas pipelines.)
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41,776,154
41,769,971
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null
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41,797,778
comment
close04
2024-10-10T11:31:39
null
&gt; &quot;Huge&quot; in the case of antitrust matters is big enough to act anti-competitively.<p>With the extra clarification that just the size of the company or its market share aren&#x27;t in and of themselves enough to constitute a crime. It&#x27;s how the company acts once it has that power that constitutes the crime.<p>You could be a huge company, or dominate a market and still not run afoul of anti-competitive laws because you didn&#x27;t abuse the position [0]. The abuse of position particularly (or only, depending on jurisdiction probably) if it brings harm to consumers is what lands a company in hot water.<p>[0] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;thehustle.co&#x2F;originals&#x2F;the-worlds-cutest-monopoly" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;thehustle.co&#x2F;originals&#x2F;the-worlds-cutest-monopoly</a>
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41,795,871
41,784,287
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41,797,779
comment
paulcole
2024-10-10T11:31:48
null
&gt; Did the scammers and spammers realize that stuffing every input field on the web with commercial links and javascript exploits dosen&#x27;t actually work ?<p>How sure are you about this?
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41,785,574
41,785,574
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null
41,797,780
comment
fidla
2024-10-10T11:31:50
null
the problem with these waitlist items is when the product becomes available, I rarely remember registering and usually target the email to spam, or it goes automatically to spam.
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null
41,794,109
41,794,109
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null
41,797,781
comment
greener_grass
2024-10-10T11:32:00
null
Some tech influencers pushed Zod - that&#x27;s basically the entire story
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41,790,517
41,764,163
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41,797,782
comment
rubyfan
2024-10-10T11:32:02
null
I was expecting it to address the common practice of product owners often not owning business outcomes.<p>Also would have loved to see mention of the hijinks that goes on around half-ass features often in conjunction with the abuse of the term MVP.
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41,797,009
41,797,009
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story
tosh
2024-10-10T11:32:52
null
null
null
1
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null
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41,797,784
comment
razakel
2024-10-10T11:32:54
null
They don&#x27;t if you&#x27;re in the UK.
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null
41,797,257
41,793,597
null
[ 41798154 ]
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41,797,785
comment
rsynnott
2024-10-10T11:33:00
null
&gt; What page are people on that might lead to domestic abuse?<p>The police, the divorce services, health services pages about contraception, abortion, sexual assault, LGBT youth services, etc etc etc. Think people who are already being abused, mostly.
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41,794,397
41,793,597
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41,797,786
comment
bravetraveler
2024-10-10T11:33:04
null
How we feel matters not, the license does. Before and after Google there is Linux. Same for Matt and this CMS lineage
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41,790,498
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41,797,787
story
keepamovin
2024-10-10T11:33:11
null
null
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41,797,788
comment
null
2024-10-10T11:33:26
null
null
null
null
41,778,882
41,778,882
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null
41,797,789
comment
binary132
2024-10-10T11:33:32
null
Guilty is not what I was looking for here although clearly that is what people picked up. I certainly don’t think I bear any responsibility for the present situation, even though I benefit from it. To notice that the situation is quite bad for most people and very good for us is not something that should induce guilt but rather, I think, shame and anger.
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41,794,007
41,792,055
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41,797,790
comment
petepete
2024-10-10T11:33:48
null
Oops my bad. Yes that&#x27;s it.
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41,795,397
41,791,708
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41,797,791
comment
diggan
2024-10-10T11:33:58
null
&gt; But none of his actions are sensible if he just wants to defend it. He&#x27;s done more damage than WP Engine ever did.<p>Trying to see things from Matts perspective, it totally makes sense to go nuclear in order to defend what you see as your baby being under attack from a hostile for-profit entity.<p>I don&#x27;t necessarily agree that the situation actually is &quot;WP Engine is attacking Wordpress&quot;, but clearly Matt sees it like that, no matter if it&#x27;s real or not, and it does make his actions understandable, even if I disagree with them, or how weak the argument is.
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null
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41,796,748
null
[ 41799190 ]
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comment
okkdev
2024-10-10T11:34:04
null
It&#x27;s not an exhaustive take, but what it boils down to. Also the Github blocking is false and has been disproven.
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41,698,518
41,698,094
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null
41,797,793
comment
myrmidon
2024-10-10T11:34:24
null
Julia is a really nice language. It was one of the first modern languages I&#x27;ve used were &quot;buildsystem&quot;&#x2F;package management was properly&#x2F;deeply integrated from the start (like rust with cargo)-- contrast with Python, JS or C++, where there are several completely different libraries&#x2F;tools to manage this with bad interoperability (and your own dependencies might only support a subset). I think in hindsight that this is a really desirable development in general.<p>I also feel that Julia managed to achieve &quot;forward interoperability&quot; between libraries that is almost unparalleled in my experience: It is often possible to just pass data structures across library boundaries, and in MANY other languages this is absolutely not the case; consider e.g. C++, where you might have like five different &quot;Matrix&quot; classes&#x2F;types between GUI library, linear algebra package, image processing toolkit etc., and the code you write has to convert those types at every boundary by hand.<p>The one thing the language is bad at (but this also improved a lot over time!) is the suitability as conventional scripting language, where you run some source code through a cold-started interpreter (you get somewhat railroaded into having an open interpreter instance, that you then run your scripts on instead).
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41,780,848
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null
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comment
yunohn
2024-10-10T11:34:38
null
I’ve found that with most libraries - they always provide toy foobar style examples assuming it’ll make them approachable, but in reality, instead makes it impossible to understand the practical way to use it in real world settings.
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41,795,519
41,764,163
null
[ 41802350, 41799203 ]
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comment
gus_massa
2024-10-10T11:34:40
null
Post that are not in English are usually ignored or flagged. It&#x27;s better to link to the English version <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;c2montreal.com&#x2F;en&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;c2montreal.com&#x2F;en&#x2F;</a> that has the same design. (It&#x27;s hard to switch from the FR version to the EN version. Perhaps the problem is that the preferred language of my browser is ES?)<p>Most of the time the discussion here is about the content. If you want to discuss the design is better to make the submission and a minute later make a comment explaining that you like the design (and add some personal remarks or a link to the designer explanation). Sometimes people will follow the trend and discuss the design, and sometimes people will ignore the comment and discuss whatever they want.<p>What is the moving part? The river? And a mountain in the bottom and the Sun at the top? (Is Montreal sunny?)
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41,784,920
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[ 41799197 ]
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41,797,796
comment
gregjor
2024-10-10T11:34:45
null
I&#x27;m pretty sure the systems big companies and recruiters use to initially filter&#x2F;screen applications already do that, with &quot;AI.&quot; If not their ATS provider is right now selling new AI features to them.<p>I expect that companies that have systems that can (supposedly) detect AI-generated applications, resumes, and cover letters will reject those without acknowledgment. The false positives will spawn a new wave of &quot;Why do companies ghost me?&quot; posts here and on Reddit et al.<p>I work for a company that uses a service to detect plagiarism, and that service got updated about two years ago to detect AI-generated content. How well that works doesn&#x27;t really matter, because the person submitting the document that got flagged stands guilty until they prove their innocence.<p>Whether these systems&#x2F;services can reliably detect AI-generated content or not doesn&#x27;t matter. It makes little difference to the employer if they lose a few real applicants along the way -- collateral damage. Like I wrote before it just becomes an arms race, with the people genuinely trying to get a job losing. Job hunting turns into a race to the bottom, one set of bots sending spam to another set of bots trying to weed through it. Sending lots of applications and resumes out in hopes of getting a bite already describes one of the worst ways to get a job, and it just gets worse.
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41,797,566
41,796,379
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41,797,797
comment
rsynnott
2024-10-10T11:34:51
null
See things like <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Ask_for_Angela" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Ask_for_Angela</a><p>In principle, information about this could be propagated, if it&#x27;s reliably available on UK govt sites at this point (I&#x27;m not sure if it is).
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41,796,239
41,793,597
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[ 41799854 ]
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41,797,798
comment
hbrav
2024-10-10T11:35:02
null
The individual has impunity of the department has impunity?<p>Not sure if you know this, but it might be of interest: in the UK speech, within the House of Commons (maybe the Lords too? I&#x27;m unsure) is specifically protected from defamation actions. An MP could stand up and say &quot;Mr Smith murders kittens in his spare time&quot; and Mr Smith would have no ability to sue. However, this does not apply to MPs outside of parliament.
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41,796,384
41,793,597
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comment
ecuaflo
2024-10-10T11:35:28
null
When there’s feature parity, what’s the next differentiator for you? For me, performance.<p>Though I admit another important aspect is community adoption. If your 3rd-party dependency uses zod internally, well now you’re bundling in both, and the added network latency probably negates any performance improvement you were getting in a web app. That’s why I wish libraries would use something more generic that allows you to dependency-inject what you’re already using, like <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;decs&#x2F;typeschema">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;decs&#x2F;typeschema</a>
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41,764,163
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