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41,798,600
comment
chongli
2024-10-10T13:30:20
null
It gets a lot better with an ad blocker and other annoyance-blockers. The deeper question is whether or not you think it’s worth it. I think many people visit Fandom pages only briefly from a SERP and then take off, like Wikipedia but specific to a game. If that’s the way you use Fandom then it’s probably not worth it.<p>What makes it worth it is if there’s a page specific to a game you like and you spend a good amount of time there reading stuff. That’s a long tail thing though.
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story
zgiber
2024-10-10T13:30:22
Show HN: Handle Batch Errors in Go
A tiny package that makes it somewhat more convenient to work with errors from batch processes where signatures don&#x27;t allow custom return types.<p>I personally found it quite ergonomic, but would like to hear your feedback.
https://github.com/zgiber/batcherror
1
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41,798,601
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[ 41798962 ]
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41,798,602
comment
fransje26
2024-10-10T13:30:23
null
Important consideration, thank you.<p>Edit: Seems like someone has managed to get CUDA to work, with some effort.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;forum.qubes-os.org&#x2F;t&#x2F;nvidia-gpu-passthrough-into-linux-hvms-for-cuda-applications&#x2F;9515&#x2F;2" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;forum.qubes-os.org&#x2F;t&#x2F;nvidia-gpu-passthrough-into-lin...</a>
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41,796,030
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thecatspaw
2024-10-10T13:30:25
null
to fix the interrupt issue they could initially load a page with begnign information, and then load the help text afterwards
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41,793,597
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comment
jqpabc123
2024-10-10T13:30:28
null
Coming soon to a specific, hand selected movie studio lot --- CyberCab rides.<p>Not to be confused with real CyberCab rides on real streets with real traffic and real paying customers --- which is likely years away and based on Musk&#x27;s history will likely take much longer than whatever he says.<p>Just like FSD which has been promised to existing, paying customers for at least a decade. And it still requires the full attention of a real driver.
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41,796,896
41,796,896
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[ 41800522 ]
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41,798,605
comment
buran77
2024-10-10T13:30:37
null
&gt; Apparently, kids these days know little about the hardships of life.<p>Everyone&#x27;s a kid to someone else. I remember being told some stories when my beard was already white and genuinely wondering if they were true or not just because my personal experience had stories that were just as crazy for someone just 10 years younger.
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41,798,184
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[ 41798872 ]
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comment
mjlee
2024-10-10T13:30:45
null
There&#x27;s a big difference between secured and unsecured loans, subprime lending crises aside.
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41,798,027
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comment
exodust
2024-10-10T13:30:49
null
For a fee. In Australia at least it cost money not to be listed in the phone book.<p>Numbers were however tied to a property rather than individual personal phones in our pockets. When you think about it, mobile phone technology arrived quickly and caught everyone by surprise. Back in the 80s very few people thought we&#x27;d be carrying around &quot;pocket TV phones&quot; in such a short time.
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41,792,500
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comment
keybpo
2024-10-10T13:30:49
null
It&#x27;s not just uploads but any item that uses the email address as a unique user identifier (I&#x27;m not technical enough to explain this clearer but [1]).<p>An email address will be part of the xml in his uploads but also in his profile, which anyone can access by simply changing the url from <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.org&#x2F;details&#x2F;@foobar" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.org&#x2F;details&#x2F;@foobar</a> to <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.org&#x2F;download&#x2F;foobar" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.org&#x2F;download&#x2F;foobar</a>. So, in essence, one just needs to have a registered account, independeltly any uploads made.<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;help.archive.org&#x2F;help&#x2F;accounts-a-basic-guide-2&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;help.archive.org&#x2F;help&#x2F;accounts-a-basic-guide-2&#x2F;</a>
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41,795,324
41,792,500
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41,798,609
comment
cozzyd
2024-10-10T13:30:53
null
Whenever my phone accidentally opens fandom with Chrome rather than Firefox mobile (with uBO), I wonder how the hell anybody browses the internet on their phone without an ad blocker...
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41,798,506
41,797,719
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41,798,610
story
janandonly
2024-10-10T13:31:04
Bring Me the Head of Arthropleura
null
https://freethoughtblogs.com/pharyngula/2024/10/10/bring-me-the-head-of-arthropleura/
2
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41,798,610
0
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41,798,611
story
perhinderion
2024-10-10T13:31:07
Generating 8.4B nonwords to investigate uselessness
null
https://patanyc.org/nonwords.html
1
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41,798,611
0
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41,798,612
comment
codelikeawolf
2024-10-10T13:31:26
null
Oh wow, I realized it&#x27;s turning 30 next year and my back just started hurting.
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41,791,885
41,790,295
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41,798,613
comment
hnaccount_rng
2024-10-10T13:31:28
null
Hypothetically: If a friend with interest in this kind of logistics were to be looking for a job. Which company would one tell said friend to look at?
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41,797,136
41,753,626
null
[ 41799511 ]
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41,798,614
comment
Yoric
2024-10-10T13:31:29
null
Many of these components have been made part of the ecosystem long after they were introduced in Firefox. Also, the more platform-specific you go for each component, the more you&#x27;re going to introduce subtle incompatibilities between Firefox running on different versions of Windows or in Firefox for Windows vs. macOS vs. Linux. Also, for a very, very long time, Microsoft had an extremely poor record in terms of security fixes. So what happens when you rely on a Microsoft http library and Microsoft takes a year or two to release a 0-day?<p>There are benefits to this approach, of course, but the costs would have been consequential.
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41,797,301
41,796,030
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story
todsacerdoti
2024-10-10T13:31:31
Thunderbird Android client is K-9 Mail reborn, and it's in solid beta
null
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2024/10/thunderbird-android-client-is-k-9-mail-reborn-and-its-in-solid-beta/
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null
41,798,615
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41,798,616
comment
davecb
2024-10-10T13:31:31
null
On of my _evil hidden agendas_ is making end-users aware that their ISP (Rogers, anyone?) is doing a terrible job, and someone like TekSavvy can solve their problems for them (;-))
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41,795,748
41,793,658
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41,798,617
comment
null
2024-10-10T13:31:44
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41,798,184
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null
null
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41,798,618
comment
rspoerri
2024-10-10T13:31:50
null
I love some misconceptions about technology or the way of living in the 80s &#x2F; 90s.<p>An anecdote I love is a young scholar asking his teacher:<p>Before you had internet, how did you access Wikipedia?
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41,798,184
41,798,184
null
[ 41798771 ]
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41,798,619
story
gslin
2024-10-10T13:31:55
Solar storm could supercharge auroras across US, impact power grids
null
https://www.space.com/severe-solar-storm-geomagnetic-storm-auroras-power-grids-october-10-11-2024
3
null
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41,798,620
comment
HPsquared
2024-10-10T13:31:58
null
Couldn&#x27;t the causality be reversed here? If you&#x27;re powerful, people are compelled to lend to you. See the situation with government bonds.<p>So many &quot;paradoxes&quot; make perfect sense if you flip the causality.
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41,798,027
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41,798,621
comment
null
2024-10-10T13:31:58
null
null
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null
41,769,275
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null
null
true
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41,798,622
comment
ElevenLathe
2024-10-10T13:32:00
null
I get it every year, possibly even stronger. The opening line still gives me chills every read-through:<p>&gt; Cannery Row in Monterey in California is a poem, a stink, a grating noise, a quality of light, a tone, a habit, a nostalgia, a dream.
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41,797,890
41,756,432
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41,798,623
comment
alex_suzuki
2024-10-10T13:32:06
null
Yes sure, but the raise statement is part of the implementation (like throw in Java), and not part of the signature (throw<i>s</i>), which would presumably make it into a generated API documentation.
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41,797,728
41,794,818
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41,798,624
story
tasn
2024-10-10T13:32:08
Incomplete TLS Certificate Chains and How to Fix Them
null
https://www.svix.com/blog/ssl-tls-incomplete-certificate-chain/
1
null
41,798,624
0
null
null
null
41,798,625
comment
null
2024-10-10T13:32:15
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null
null
null
41,798,184
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null
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true
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41,798,626
comment
cbm-vic-20
2024-10-10T13:32:25
null
The &quot;fan&quot; in &quot;Fandom&quot; means the fan in your computer.
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41,798,566
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null
[ 41798677, 41800994, 41798876 ]
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comment
jon-wood
2024-10-10T13:32:29
null
I think it&#x27;s a period thing rather than a country one. People are likely to say they owe &quot;the bank&quot; over here in the UK as well. Back in the 40s though your bank manager had a lot more leeway in the debts they&#x27;d underwrite, and presumably had more personal investment in any loans that were defaulted on because they&#x27;d personally signed off on them.
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41,798,505
41,798,027
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41,798,628
story
sweave
2024-10-10T13:32:30
Show HN : ContribHub – Find and contribute to opensource projects you care about
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https://contribhub.com/
1
null
41,798,628
1
[ 41798629, 41798768 ]
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41,798,629
comment
sweave
2024-10-10T13:32:30
null
Hello all,<p>For Hacktoberfest, I built ContribHub, a platform to help developers find open-source projects to contribute to. Whether you&#x27;re a beginner just exploring open source or an experienced developer looking for new challenges, ContribHub aims to make the search process easier.<p>What sets it apart is that the results are randomized, giving every project a fair chance to be discovered. As someone who maintains an open-source project, I know how tough it can be to find contributors and reach the right audience. This helps smaller or less well-known projects get noticed, which is especially useful for maintainers who are struggling to grow their community.<p>Many developers also prefer contributing to new or early-stage projects, where they can be part of something from the beginning. That&#x27;s why the star filter is useful — it helps you find projects at different stages of growth.<p>Let me know what you think :), I&#x27;ll be improving it and adding more features to make it even easier for maintainers to get discovered and for developers to find projects that truly resonate with them.
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41,798,628
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41,798,630
comment
Ekaros
2024-10-10T13:32:31
null
There used to be much more personal relationships. So it was possible you had a banker a person you worked in with in the bank. Especially with a big bank. So certainly for them losing million might mean losing job, even if the bank itself was big enough to manage.
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null
41,798,505
41,798,027
null
[ 41798699 ]
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41,798,631
comment
oDot
2024-10-10T13:32:51
null
I spend a lot of my time researching live-action anime[0][1], and there&#x27;s an important thing to learn from Japanese animators: sometimes an animation style may seem technically lacking, but visually stunning.<p>When animator Ken Arto was on the Trash Taste podcast he mentioned how Disney had the resources to perfect the animation, while in Japan they had to achieve more with less.<p>This basically shifts the &quot;what is good animation&quot; discussion in ways that are not as clear from looking at the stats.<p>[0] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;blog.nestful.app&#x2F;p&#x2F;ways-to-use-nestful-outlining-anime" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;blog.nestful.app&#x2F;p&#x2F;ways-to-use-nestful-outlining-ani...</a><p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=WiyqBHNNSlo" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=WiyqBHNNSlo</a>
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41,797,462
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null
[ 41799601 ]
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41,798,632
comment
foldr
2024-10-10T13:32:59
null
Is this not restricted to company names deriving from personal names (or words that are perceived as such), though? For example, would you say “I bought this shirt at Target’s”?
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41,791,348
41,787,647
null
[ 41800295 ]
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41,798,633
comment
pm215
2024-10-10T13:33:03
null
As a British English speaker I would say &quot;the bank&quot;. I think it&#x27;s not so much a difference between 1940s English and modern English as between 1940s banking practices and today&#x27;s (especially for the more well-to-do customer) -- it implies that you have a personal relationship with an individual person at the bank who knows you and manages your money for you, and that just isn&#x27;t the way banks work these days, except perhaps for the mega-rich.
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41,798,505
41,798,027
null
[ 41798793 ]
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comment
sgc
2024-10-10T13:33:09
null
I 100% agree. Just pointing out that UBI changes the discourse on this subject.
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41,792,500
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41,798,635
comment
pentlander
2024-10-10T13:33:10
null
I’m pretty sure that Lucene is exactly the same, the segments it creates are immutable and Elastic is what handles a “mutable” view of the data. Which makes sense because Tantivy is like Lucene, not ES.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;lucene.apache.org&#x2F;core&#x2F;7_7_0&#x2F;core&#x2F;org&#x2F;apache&#x2F;lucene&#x2F;index&#x2F;package-summary.html#segments" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;lucene.apache.org&#x2F;core&#x2F;7_7_0&#x2F;core&#x2F;org&#x2F;apache&#x2F;lucene&#x2F;...</a>
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41,798,388
41,797,041
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null
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41,798,636
comment
null
2024-10-10T13:33:11
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null
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null
41,793,262
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null
null
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41,798,637
comment
CryZe
2024-10-10T13:33:45
null
Only about 1&#x2F;3 of those are language features. Out of those a ton are #[cfg] related (i.e. being able to more accurately doing conditional compilation), const (lifting limitations with compile time evaluation), documentation, architecture specific additions (like intrinsics) and co.<p>I only see about like 30 or so that are actual proper language additions, some of which are just exploration without even an RFC either, leaving us with about 15 or so, which really isn&#x27;t that bad.
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41,798,469
41,791,773
null
[ 41798683 ]
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41,798,638
story
smallmartial
2024-10-10T13:33:58
A Time-Saving Amazon Product Scraper Plugin for Affiliate Marketers
null
https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/amazon-product-scraper/ogfogfdkacdklhgpmgbmapeljcbibial
1
null
41,798,638
1
[ 41798639 ]
null
null
41,798,639
comment
smallmartial
2024-10-10T13:33:58
null
Hey everyone!<p>For those of you doing Amazon affiliate marketing, you’ve probably encountered the common problem of how to quickly scrape large amounts of product data and efficiently export affiliate links for SEO or social media promotion. To streamline this process, I’d like to recommend a newly released Chrome extension called Amazon Product Scraper, developed by a friend of mine who runs independent sites. It has already saved us a lot of time in real-world applications.<p>Here’s the Chrome Store link: Amazon Product Scraper - Chrome Web Store<p>What Problem Does This Plugin Solve?<p>When doing Amazon affiliate marketing, we typically need to search for tons of products using keywords, click through to each product page to collect titles, prices, product details, image links, and then manually generate affiliate links. This repetitive process is not only time-consuming but also tedious, especially when you need to scrape thousands of product listings—manual work is just not feasible.<p>This plugin tackles exactly that pain point. It automatically scrapes Amazon product information based on keywords, including:<p>• Product titles • Prices • Product details • Image URLs • Product links<p>The best part is, it supports bulk exporting this data into CSV files compatible with Excel. You can also predefine your Amazon Affiliate ID so that the exported product links are automatically appended with your affiliate tag, saving even more time.<p>Key Features:<p>1. Keyword Search: Enter keywords to quickly filter relevant products. 2. Automatic Data Scraping: Retrieve product titles, prices, images, and details with one click, without manually visiting each product page. 3. Affiliate Link Generation: Predefine your Amazon Affiliate ID, and the plugin will automatically add it to the exported product links for easy commission tracking. 4. Data Export: Export all the scraped data to a CSV file, which can be further processed or analyzed.<p>Example Use Case<p>Let’s say you need to create pages for 1000 keywords on your website, and each page requires 30-50 product recommendations. That means you’ll need to scrape 30,000-50,000 product listings. Manually doing this would take an unreasonable amount of time and effort. This plugin automates the entire process, saving countless hours of work.<p>If you’re interested, feel free to download the plugin from the Chrome Web Store and give it a try. I’ve been using it for a few days now, and it’s been a huge time-saver. If you have any suggestions or run into issues, let’s discuss in the comments!
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41,798,640
comment
stuaxo
2024-10-10T13:34:10
null
Wish they had a community version I could play with, but understand they would be worried about cannibalising their already small market.<p>Still, for something that I have only really used in one job for a year, I&#x27;m not going to try it out further without some sort of try-before-you-buy, even if it might be interesting.
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null
[ 41802479, 41798949, 41800876 ]
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41,798,641
comment
tombert
2024-10-10T13:34:13
null
&gt; Coca-Cola still uses coca leaves in the production of its drink.<p>Is this actually true? A quick search gives me a lot of sources like &quot;Natural News&quot; and similarly dubious sources. What do they actually use the Coca leaves for?
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41,798,642
comment
umanwizard
2024-10-10T13:34:14
null
The word &quot;whisky&quot; is derived from the Scottish Gaelic word for &quot;water&quot;, too. (Maybe that&#x27;s what your sibling comment is referring to?)
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41,798,537
41,787,798
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41,798,643
comment
dstroot
2024-10-10T13:34:19
null
If you owe the bank a million, the bank owns you. If you owe the bank a billion, you own the bank.
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41,798,027
41,798,027
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41,798,644
comment
cameron_b
2024-10-10T13:34:22
null
I love the statement in the conclusion.<p>Curation is something we intrinsically favor over engagement algorithms. Noisy is easy to quantify, but greatness is not. Greatness might have a lag in engagement metrics while folks read or watch the material. It might provoke consideration, instead of reaction.<p>Often we need seasons of production in order to calibrate our selection criteria, and hopefully this season of booming generation leads to a very rich new opportunity to curate great things to elevate from the noise.
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null
41,797,462
41,797,462
null
[ 41803957 ]
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story
zzzeek
2024-10-10T13:34:27
Juice Rescue – A collective effort to save and maintain Juicebox EV Chargers
null
http://juice-rescue.org/
1
null
41,798,645
0
null
null
null
41,798,646
comment
Xcelerate
2024-10-10T13:34:30
null
&gt; Random k-SAT is useless<p>Other than cryptography, is there any real-world value in solving random problem instances of NP-complete problems (at least when average case approaches worst case, based on the parameterization of the problem)? Presumably these are instances that do not have any underlying mathematical structure as a truly random problem instance is Kolmogorov-maximal, and thus even if you solve the problem via brute-force, the result still isn&#x27;t useful for any predictive purpose.
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41,796,754
41,753,626
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[ 41799531 ]
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41,798,647
story
tmsh
2024-10-10T13:34:33
Ask HN: On mobile it's too easy to tap hide or flag
Any ideas for fixing that? Maybe on mobile moving to a “more” pop up menu or something? I’m always having to unflag or unhide because it’s really easy to tap those links when trying to tap the main link.<p>Thanks for making HN.
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story
whycome
2024-10-10T13:34:37
Months Before Ethiopian 737 Crash, Boeing Turned Aside Carrier's Questions
null
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/09/us/politics/boeing-ethiopian-airlines-crash-questions.html
7
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[ 41798823, 41798651 ]
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comment
Savageman
2024-10-10T13:34:46
null
I like how the author uses a test to run arbitrary code, this is exactly how I do it too!
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41,798,650
comment
null
2024-10-10T13:34:51
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comment
null
2024-10-10T13:34:53
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41,798,652
comment
null
2024-10-10T13:35:03
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41,798,647
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41,798,653
comment
cjonas
2024-10-10T13:35:06
null
Vet cool! I&#x27;ve always wanted something like this in my note taking (currently use obsidian), but it being a &quot;webapp&quot; is kinda a deal breaker. I want something that runs and stores my data locally.
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null
41,798,477
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null
[ 41798682, 41798703 ]
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41,798,654
comment
gautamsomani
2024-10-10T13:35:07
null
Have same thing to say. I worked for a very large e-commerce company in India, who when they were building their DC, contracted TCS. TCS gave a nightmarish experience on execution and ethics. They were horrible.
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41,798,149
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ulla7653
2024-10-10T13:35:14
null
If you hate spreadsheets this could be your way out of it...
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41,798,477
41,798,477
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comment
greatgib
2024-10-10T13:35:15
null
I might be wrong, but I think that it might even be illegal in some countries like France.<p>Except for banks, business are not allowed to discriminate customers and refuse to serve equally everyone. Imagine like saying you are not allowed to take gas in a shell gas station if you are an employee of Exxon or something like that...
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41,797,371
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comment
randomdata
2024-10-10T13:35:25
null
<i>&gt; I have to disagree with the central argument, which is to give engineers more product management responsibilities</i><p>How is it disagreeable? Scrum is a formalization of Agile, which is literally about eliminating management by giving engineers control over the project. They are intrinsically linked. It doesn&#x27;t make sense otherwise.<p>The Twelve Principles, is pretty clear that you need special people to make Agile work; that it&#x27;s not for everyone. Your assessment that you don&#x27;t want to go down that road is going to be true in the vast majorly of cases, and nothing in the literature disagrees with that. However, in those cases you wouldn&#x27;t be using Scrum in the first place. It is clearly the wrong tool for the job if you are going to retain managers.
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41,798,087
41,797,009
null
[ 41799388 ]
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comment
_spduchamp
2024-10-10T13:35:25
null
I&#x27;ve heard about a situation here in Toronto where a family had a double mortgage on their overvalued mansion. The bank would never get their money back on a power of sale, so instead of calling in loans, they just extended them more credit, and connected them with an investment manager to help them manage the money the bank was throwing at them.<p>Wouldn&#x27;t be nice to fail upward like that?
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null
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[ 41798775, 41798995, 41798712, 41799168, 41799227, 41799695 ]
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comment
moffkalast
2024-10-10T13:35:28
null
That man really had the gaul to do anything.
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41,798,381
41,798,027
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41,798,660
comment
pvg
2024-10-10T13:35:34
null
You&#x27;re better off sending such questions to [email protected]
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41,798,647
41,798,647
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null
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null
41,798,661
comment
EcommerceFlow
2024-10-10T13:35:42
null
Google giving Fandom powerful rankings bothers me too, since their intrusive ads clearly go against Google ranking factors.<p>Still, I&#x27;m glad for some competition. However, even after browsing their site, is contacting them the only way to get something up and running?
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null
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peutetre
2024-10-10T13:35:42
null
null
null
1
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Octoth0rpe
2024-10-10T13:35:49
null
Particularly relevant for twitter these days.
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41,798,027
41,798,027
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comment
null
2024-10-10T13:36:08
null
null
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null
41,798,662
41,798,662
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null
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comment
noja
2024-10-10T13:36:12
null
&gt; or a woman walking in front of dozens of reflections<p>A lot of people will not notice the missing reflections and because of this our gatekeepers to quality will disappear.
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null
41,798,195
41,797,462
null
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null
41,798,666
comment
AdmiralAsshat
2024-10-10T13:36:13
null
Most of the time I don&#x27;t notice it because I use Firefox w&#x2F; uB0 on all platforms. But recently I&#x27;ve been playing some games on Steam and trying to use Steam&#x27;s browser overlay to cache some guides. Its browser seems to be a chrome fork and does <i>not</i> support any kind of adblocker, unfortunately, and so I&#x27;ve been exposed to just how bad Fandom wikis are without one.
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41,798,506
41,797,719
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null
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41,798,667
comment
tzs
2024-10-10T13:36:15
null
It probably depends on which part of the Sherman act we are talking about.<p>Section 2, which covers &quot;Every person who shall monopolize, or attempt to monopolize, or combine or conspire with any other person or persons, to monopolize any part of the trade or commerce [...]&quot; has been found by courts, I believe, to require 50% market share (or sometimes more) to apply.<p>But section 1, which applies to &quot;Every contract, combination in the form of trust or otherwise, or conspiracy, in restraint of trade or commerce [...]&quot;, does not as far as I&#x27;ve been able to tell have any market size threshold.
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41,794,133
41,791,369
null
null
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null
41,798,668
comment
null
2024-10-10T13:36:23
null
null
null
null
41,798,576
41,798,576
null
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41,798,669
comment
Arch-TK
2024-10-10T13:36:29
null
&gt; First of all compilers disagree on many interpretations and consequences of abstract machine rules.<p>List them. I am not aware of any well defined parts of the C standard where GCC and Clang disagree in implementation. Only in areas where things are too vague (and are effectively either unspecified or undefined), or understandably in areas where they&#x27;re &quot;implementation defined&quot;.<p>If there are behaviours where a compiler deviates from the standard it is either something you can configure (e.g. -ftrapv or -fwrapv) or it&#x27;s a bug.<p>&gt; Also compilers have bugs.<p>Nothing you do can defend against compiler bugs outside of extensively testing your results. If you determine that a compiler has a bug then the correct course of action is definitely not: &quot;note it down and incorporate the understanding into your future programs&quot;<p>&gt; So a proficient C&#x2F;C++ programmer does have to learn what compilers actually do in practice and what they guarantee beyond the standard (or how they differ from it).<p>There are situations where it&#x27;s important to know what the compiler is doing. But these situations are limited to performance optimisation, the knowledge gained through these situations should only be applied to the single version of the compiler you observed it in, and you should not use the knowledge to feed back to your understanding of C or the implementation.<p>It&#x27;s almost impossible to decipher how modern C compilers work exactly and trying to determine what an implementation does based on the results of compilation is therefore extremely unreliable. If you need to rely on implementation defined behaviour (unavoidable in any real program) then you should be relying solely on documentation, and if the observed behaviour deviates from the documentation then that is, again, a bug bug.<p>&gt; It isn&#x27;t, but it is a family of languages that share a lot of syntax and semantics.<p>I am not a C&#x2F;C++&#x2F;C#&#x2F;ObjectiveC&#x2F;JavaScript&#x2F;Java programmer.<p>C++ and C might share a lot of syntax but that&#x27;s basically where the similarities end in any modern implementation. People who know C thinking they know enough C to write reliable and conformant C++ and people who know C++ thinking they know enough C++ to write reliable and conformant C are one of the groups of people who produce the most subtle mistakes in these languages.<p>I think you could get away with these kinds of things in the 80s but that has definitely not been the case for quite a while.
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null
41,798,517
41,757,701
null
[ 41799268, 41800260 ]
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41,798,670
comment
Nadya
2024-10-10T13:36:37
null
Crazy seeing a weird gloop post in the morning on HN.<p>Cook is very passionate about wikis - as is the rest of the team - and the RS wiki has long been regarded as one of the best gaming wikis on the internet; no contest. If you run a wiki - talk to Weird Gloop. The blog isn&#x27;t bullshit and they genuinely want to help.<p>I think it&#x27;s awesome that they&#x27;re helping more wikis move away from Fandom after the success of the Minecraft wiki moving.<p>They also are running a wiki for Andrew Gower&#x27;s upcoming game as well.<p>I really hope I hear about other wikis making the move in the near future. Fandom deserves to die out.<p>The RS Wiki is the single website I&#x27;ve whitelisted in my ad blocker. And despite needing ads to cover costs - they made sure to ask the community first about adding them and what alternatives to funding might be possible. It was really a last resort and they are obsessive about making sure the ads are non-intrusive, single banner, not in primary real estate, and not harming the wiki experience. If any ads cause problems they completely pause running ads until the ad host resolves the issue. Although I&#x27;m usually signed in - so never see ads anyway as they only show for users who aren&#x27;t signed in.
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null
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[ 41799079, 41799222 ]
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comment
krapp
2024-10-10T13:36:38
null
It was terrible if you were struggling in college and had to choose between using the mouse that day or eating.
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41,798,184
41,798,184
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null
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41,798,672
story
biancaleebelman
2024-10-10T13:36:40
null
null
null
1
null
41,798,672
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null
null
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41,798,673
comment
cynicalpeace
2024-10-10T13:36:40
null
It is 100% true. It seems a DEA source would convince you: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;museum.dea.gov&#x2F;exhibits&#x2F;online-exhibits&#x2F;cannabis-coca-and-poppy-natures-addictive-plants&#x2F;coca#:~:text=Coca%20and%20Cola%3A%20In%20the,the%20flavoring%20for%20Coca%2DCola" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;museum.dea.gov&#x2F;exhibits&#x2F;online-exhibits&#x2F;cannabis-coc...</a>.<p>&quot;In the late 1800s cocaine was used as a primary ingredient for flavor in Coca-Cola. In the early 1900s cocaine in its crude form was removed. Today the extract of the coca leaves, a de-cocainized version, is manufactured in the United States and used in the flavoring for Coca-Cola.&quot;
null
null
41,798,641
41,787,798
null
[ 41800830, 41798680, 41799244 ]
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41,798,674
comment
greenavocado
2024-10-10T13:36:55
null
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;public-inspection.federalregister.gov&#x2F;2024-06177.pdf" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;public-inspection.federalregister.gov&#x2F;2024-06177.pdf</a><p>DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE<p>Drug Enforcement Administration<p>[Docket No. DEA-1335]<p>Importer of Controlled Substances Application: Stepan Company
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null
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41,787,798
null
[ 41802144 ]
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41,798,675
story
kirshiyin
2024-10-10T13:36:59
null
null
null
1
null
41,798,675
null
[ 41798676 ]
null
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41,798,676
comment
null
2024-10-10T13:36:59
null
null
null
null
41,798,675
41,798,675
null
null
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null
41,798,677
comment
setopt
2024-10-10T13:37:16
null
And the “dom” refers to how it completely dominates that fan.
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null
41,798,626
41,797,719
null
[ 41799873, 41799729 ]
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null
41,798,678
comment
vault_
2024-10-10T13:37:19
null
Where this breaks down, as I&#x27;ve experienced at least, is that the product management side maintains basically zero awareness of the production constraints engineers are working within. If you&#x27;ve built out a painting production line around spray guns and beige, that has knock-on effects as to what results are attainable. A PM asking for polka-dots next sprint is throwing into question the entire body of practice, but this happens with extreme frequency in software.
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null
41,798,087
41,797,009
null
[ 41799314 ]
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41,798,679
comment
asveikau
2024-10-10T13:37:20
null
This is off topic, but I don&#x27;t see Bush&#x2F;Cheney as very different from Trump, and there is a straight line between those. The biggest contrast is that Trump jettisoned decorum and politeness. Bush was outwardly polite as he enacted the same kind of policy. I mean, the appointment of Samuel Alito is a prime example. Look how the Bush court appointments are unleashed now that they&#x27;ve got a few more like-minded colleagues.
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null
41,797,050
41,790,295
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[ 41798730 ]
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41,798,680
comment
tombert
2024-10-10T13:37:21
null
Fair enough!
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41,798,673
41,787,798
null
null
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null
41,798,681
comment
dartos
2024-10-10T13:37:25
null
I’ve never had a banker, so I just say “the bank”
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41,798,505
41,798,027
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41,798,682
comment
deepmacro
2024-10-10T13:37:32
null
Well it&#x27;s a web app but it&#x27;s not using anything in the cloud at the moment, I experimented with packaging it in an app for Mac and works nice. If more people wanted it this could definitely be converted in something running locally where you can store .md files in your computer.
null
null
41,798,653
41,798,477
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[ 41798693 ]
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41,798,683
comment
pjmlp
2024-10-10T13:37:45
null
Every single of them needs brain space, regardless of the use.<p>Also any language designer knows that every feature has exponential capacity due to the way it interacts with everything already in use, that is why innovation tokens are a thing in language design.
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41,798,637
41,791,773
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[ 41799864 ]
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41,798,684
comment
thfuran
2024-10-10T13:37:47
null
Clearly identified and few in number.
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null
41,794,933
41,784,287
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41,798,685
comment
GJim
2024-10-10T13:37:48
null
What are these &#x27;ads&#x27; of which you speak?
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null
41,798,566
41,797,719
null
[ 41798717 ]
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41,798,686
comment
Kinrany
2024-10-10T13:37:49
null
Thr current Scrum guide also defines two separate backlogs: sprint and product.
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41,798,451
41,797,009
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null
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41,798,687
comment
burntsushi
2024-10-10T13:38:03
null
IDK how we jumped to CTRE. Python doesn&#x27;t do CTRE. It&#x27;s doing caching. In Rust, you use std::sync::LazyLock for that. I don&#x27;t get what the problem is to be honest.<p>I assume by CTRE you&#x27;re referring to the CTRE C++ project. That&#x27;s a totally different can of worms and comes with lots of trade-offs. I wish it were easy to add CTRE to rebar, then I could probably add a lot more color to the trade-offs involved, at least with that specific implementation (but maybe not to &quot;compile time regex&quot; in general).
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null
41,798,484
41,791,773
null
[ 41800547 ]
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41,798,688
comment
rascul
2024-10-10T13:38:04
null
&gt; The statement that Rust has no UB does not make sense because Rust has no specification, and all behavior is defined by the default implementation.<p>It is in the reference.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;doc.rust-lang.org&#x2F;reference&#x2F;behavior-considered-undefined.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;doc.rust-lang.org&#x2F;reference&#x2F;behavior-considered-unde...</a>
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41,798,049
41,791,773
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41,798,689
comment
mlyle
2024-10-10T13:38:05
null
&gt; You can if all the risks were not disclosed, especially if others come forward and it becomes a class action lawsuit.<p>&gt; &gt; ...if you are informed of those risks...
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41,796,263
41,795,187
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null
41,798,690
comment
jkestner
2024-10-10T13:38:06
null
You&#x27;re telling me some people out there don&#x27;t create spreadsheets and a scoring system to compare 10 different ceiling fans before purchase?
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null
41,796,727
41,794,566
null
[ 41798910 ]
null
null
41,798,691
comment
null
2024-10-10T13:38:11
null
null
null
null
41,798,591
41,798,591
null
null
true
null
41,798,692
comment
codingdave
2024-10-10T13:38:17
null
That would build incentives for dark patterns to encourage people to pay to submit themselves to jobs they&#x27;d never get, and then force the company to pay to ignore them. It probably would fail fast, but if it did work, it would be truly an evil concept.
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null
41,792,244
41,790,585
null
[ 41799334 ]
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null
41,798,693
comment
_1tan
2024-10-10T13:38:18
null
That would be great!
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null
41,798,682
41,798,477
null
[ 41798721 ]
null
null
41,798,694
story
hydrolox
2024-10-10T13:38:24
1k Hours of Artificial Life Simulation
null
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KQN7EToy9X0
1
null
41,798,694
0
[ 41798706 ]
null
null
41,798,695
comment
015a
2024-10-10T13:38:30
null
Zod is very good. No further comment necessary.
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null
41,764,163
41,764,163
null
null
null
null
41,798,696
story
null
2024-10-10T13:38:30
null
null
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41,798,696
null
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true
41,798,697
comment
null
2024-10-10T13:38:30
null
null
null
null
41,798,696
41,798,696
null
null
true
null
41,798,698
comment
grecy
2024-10-10T13:38:43
null
You’d be surprised…<p>The last place I worked on a system that billed $5-$10 million a month, all pure profit. I was the only one with any knowledge.<p>When the server was built the guy who did so never documented the root password, and nobody knows it. I was in the sudoers file, and I have no idea what they do since I left. I tried to explain it to multiple levels of management, but I lost them all the second I opened a terminal and ssh’d in.<p>I can tell it’s still running…
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41,795,184
41,795,075
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null
41,798,699
comment
lmm
2024-10-10T13:39:01
null
&gt; Especially with a big bank.<p>No, especially as a big <i>client</i>, if anything more so at a small bank than a big one.
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41,798,630
41,798,027
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