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duejihfy
2024-10-10T13:49:36
Show HN: B2B Tool to Target Startups with VC Money
null
https://old.reddit.com/r/SaaS_Email_Marketing/comments/1g0j8ie/send_emails_to_startups_who_have_just_raised_vc/
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comment
StackRanker3000
2024-10-10T13:49:44
null
Isn’t it normal and human to be sad about someone’s passing, even if it’s expected?
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41,798,437
41,795,218
null
[ 41798946 ]
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41,798,802
comment
lmm
2024-10-10T13:49:46
null
&gt; Can the C compiler really optimize foo to always return 0?<p>Yes<p>&gt; That seems extremely unintuitive to me.<p>C compilers are extremely unintuitive. This is a relatively sane case, they do things that are much more surprising than this.
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41,798,021
41,757,701
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comment
ajross
2024-10-10T13:49:52
null
No, because in practice that &quot;wait until&quot; operation will act as a memory barrier. The obvious one is a function call. Functions are allowed to have side effects, one possible side effect is to change the value pointed to by an externally-received pointer.<p>At lower levels, you might have something like an IPC primitive there, which would be protected by a spinlock or similar abstraction, the inline assembly for which will include a memory barrier.<p>And even farther down still, the memory pointed to by &quot;x&quot; might be shared with another async context entirely and the &quot;wait for&quot; operation might be a delay loop waiting on external hardware to complete. In <i>that</i> case this code would be buggy and you should have declared the data volatile.
null
null
41,798,021
41,757,701
null
[ 41799317 ]
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41,798,804
comment
mumblemumble
2024-10-10T13:49:55
null
I think that similar arguments were made about Ma Bell and Bell Labs back in the day. And it&#x27;s true, a lot of great things did come out of Bell Labs.<p>In fact, it almost seems like the only people able to produce great things in the 1970s were massive entrenched corporations like Ma Bell.<p>Funny, that.<p>Come to think of it, wasn&#x27;t there a much more vibrant browser ecosystem in the late 90s and early 2000s, before Google used its dominant position in the ad market to undercut the competition? There used to be a lot more mobile operating systems out there, too.<p>I wonder what happened to all that competition? It&#x27;s almost like some sort of massive <i>anti</i>-competitive influence came into force in the tech scene somewhere in the 2000s. . .
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null
41,793,933
41,784,287
null
[ 41803535, 41801401, 41798957 ]
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comment
FredPret
2024-10-10T13:49:57
null
Very cool. I&#x27;ve always thought there&#x27;s a lot of untapped potential in literate programming [0].<p>There are lots of reports and documents that should be this instead of static Word files.<p>[0] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Literate_programming" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Literate_programming</a>
null
null
41,798,477
41,798,477
null
null
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41,798,806
comment
wkat4242
2024-10-10T13:49:58
null
These things come with a dedicated keyboard?? TIL...
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41,797,831
41,797,831
null
null
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41,798,807
comment
lolinder
2024-10-10T13:49:59
null
What you&#x27;re describing is why Google is willing to sink money into Chrome, and you&#x27;re right. But that doesn&#x27;t mean that Chrome can become a viable independent company.<p>Chrome synergizes with the rest of Google&#x27;s portfolio.
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41,794,084
41,784,287
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null
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41,798,808
comment
deepmacro
2024-10-10T13:50:07
null
Right, something that&#x27;s potentially difficult with Jupyter is sharing something that looks nice with non technical folks where they can easily change values and see the result change immediately without having to execute cells.
null
null
41,798,767
41,798,477
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41,798,809
comment
dilap
2024-10-10T13:50:12
null
The Reverse implementation seems off to me -- it runs through the iterator twice, once collecting into a slice, and then a second time filling the same slice in reverse. (So basically the first Collect call is only being used to find the length of the iterated sequence.) I&#x27;m not sure about Go conventions†, but I imagine it would be considered better form to only run through the iterator once, reversing the collected slice in-place via a series of swaps.<p>(† Are iterators even expected&#x2F;required to be reusable? If they are reusable, are they expected to be stable?)
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null
41,769,275
41,769,275
null
[ 41798929, 41799258 ]
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41,798,810
comment
DrillShopper
2024-10-10T13:50:20
null
I assume that Fandom pays Google for that placement
null
null
41,798,661
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null
[ 41799104, 41799022, 41800155 ]
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41,798,811
comment
kornhole
2024-10-10T13:50:23
null
That IA was simultaneously breached and assaulted with DDOS attack is unusual. I do not recall any service simultaneously experiencing both kinds of attacks as they are very different.
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null
41,796,958
41,796,958
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null
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null
41,798,812
comment
null
2024-10-10T13:50:34
null
null
null
null
41,798,291
41,797,009
null
null
true
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41,798,813
comment
Ennea
2024-10-10T13:50:45
null
Tenno is the name of the faction in the video game Warframe the player characters are comprised of. Just want to point that out.
null
null
41,798,477
41,798,477
null
[ 41798835, 41799123, 41798828 ]
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41,798,814
comment
pxtail
2024-10-10T13:50:53
null
&gt; Costs nothing to host, but then you need to train every user, which demands time<p>It&#x27;s more than that - imagine that marketers want a contact form on such static site, well nice, you can add that easily. But now there is a lot of spam coming through, okay that can be dealt with. Now they want to have multiple, editable forms. And Hubspot integration, and analytics integration, and now one of forms needs to be 2-step, another needs to have dynamic part shown&#x2F;hidden based on conditions. etc etc All of that is already solved issue in the Wordpress world - one can pick proven and tested solutions from multiple vendors and deliver results.<p>And that is ONE component, form - sure it can be replaced with some 3rd party embedded widget but that never comes without hidden costs&#x2F;annoyances. There are multiple components similar to used &quot;form&quot; example
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null
41,793,477
41,775,238
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41,798,815
comment
slenk
2024-10-10T13:51:03
null
Which ones aren&#x27;t under his control? HR? Legal? Because no sane person would be letting him do this
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null
41,793,863
41,781,008
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null
41,798,816
story
tomduncalf
2024-10-10T13:51:15
Before Murati’s exit from OpenAI staff grumbled o1 had been released prematurely
null
https://fortune.com/2024/10/01/openai-sam-altman-mira-murati-gpt-4o-o1-chatgpt-turbulent-year/
2
null
41,798,816
0
null
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41,798,817
story
sschmitt
2024-10-10T13:51:26
Tmux as a ClusterSSH Alternative
null
https://www.crossfox.red/blog/Tmux_ClusterSSH_alternative
2
null
41,798,817
0
null
null
null
41,798,818
comment
Nadya
2024-10-10T13:51:26
null
Try editing anything on a Fandom wiki and that&#x27;s where the real differences in experience comes from.<p>Fandom makes it extremely difficult (nigh impossible) to do something as simple as access the page of an image asset.
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null
41,798,794
41,797,719
null
[ 41798911 ]
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41,798,819
comment
Mtinie
2024-10-10T13:51:28
null
Perfect response. I&#x27;m chuckling, so thank you.<p>What&#x27;s also humorous to me is this entire discussion is centered around vernacular usage of a word versus the scientific definition. Cocaine is cocaine, but &quot;cocaine&quot; means different things to some people and not to others.
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null
41,798,257
41,787,798
null
null
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41,798,820
comment
carlosjobim
2024-10-10T13:51:30
null
I fully understand YouTube on this. Banning promoted&#x2F;sponsored segments would be censoring the creators. Practically it&#x27;s also too difficult to draw a line.
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41,792,151
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null
null
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41,798,821
story
Liriel
2024-10-10T13:51:32
null
null
null
1
null
41,798,821
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[ 41798917 ]
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41,798,822
comment
zdragnar
2024-10-10T13:51:33
null
There is no spoon.<p>Put it another way: serverless and stateless don&#x27;t mean what you think they mean.
null
null
41,798,461
41,797,041
null
[ 41798989 ]
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41,798,823
comment
wkat4242
2024-10-10T13:51:34
null
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.is&#x2F;1VzhT" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.is&#x2F;1VzhT</a>
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41,798,648
41,798,648
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41,798,824
comment
maartennn
2024-10-10T13:51:37
null
I&#x27;ve been using this for a couple of days now, love it! This post does need more upvotes..!
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null
41,797,578
41,797,578
null
null
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41,798,825
comment
aitchnyu
2024-10-10T13:51:50
null
Who are &quot;they&quot;? How did the complaint move forward? I&#x27;m Indian and seen too many cases of this and the bad guys always win.
null
null
41,787,492
41,785,265
null
[ 41803793 ]
null
null
41,798,826
comment
JohnFen
2024-10-10T13:51:50
null
What I&#x27;m saying is that HN reflects the current mood and interests of silicon valley, and silicon valley has a very strong tendency toward fads. Right now, the fad is AI.<p>I&#x27;m not saying AI will go away as a topic. I&#x27;m saying that AI stories won&#x27;t always be so dominant on HN, because sooner or later (likely on the sooner side of later), SV&#x27;s hype train will move on to something else. Then the people who aren&#x27;t so interested in the new fad will be complaining about how stories related to it are too dominant on HN.<p>Cryptocurrency is the last great example of this. The hype train has moved on to AI, and crypto isn&#x27;t the the Hot New Thing anymore. So stories about it don&#x27;t dominate HN anymore. Crypto stories still appear regardless, but at a more reasonable rate.
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41,790,354
41,789,661
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41,798,827
comment
afavour
2024-10-10T13:51:54
null
The big conceptual difference is that Flash, ActiveX etc allowed code to reach outside of the browser sandbox. WASM remains _inside_ the browser sandbox.<p>Also no corporate overlord control.
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41,795,946
41,795,561
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null
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41,798,828
comment
sickofparadox
2024-10-10T13:52:01
null
This was my first thought, probably will make searching stuff difficult.
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null
41,798,813
41,798,477
null
[ 41799028 ]
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41,798,829
comment
iwaztomack
2024-10-10T13:52:01
null
Not punk. Punk is about being bad at your instrument and looking ugly and being the underdog and still creating a community. When Dookie came out, every highschool and college kid was lined up to buy it, it had constant airplay, and was blasting in every classroom and dorm room. That&#x27;s not punk: that is 100% mainstream pop. Which is Green Day in a nutshell. Commidified dissent x100.
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41,793,715
41,790,295
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41,798,830
comment
candiddevmike
2024-10-10T13:52:02
null
Factorio and Rimworld have amazing wikis as well. And they&#x27;re both maintained by the developers AFAIK...
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null
41,798,734
41,797,719
null
[ 41799290 ]
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41,798,831
comment
briandear
2024-10-10T13:52:12
null
Windows isn’t open source. Perhaps Office and Windows should be broken up? They have far more market share comparatively speaking. The fact that most of the enterprise run on Microsoft could be more concerning than an consumer App Store.
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null
41,794,712
41,784,287
null
null
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null
41,798,832
comment
dpassens
2024-10-10T13:52:22
null
(Sane) web UIs in general should be fine, since they can just use the browser&#x27;s JS engine. I don&#x27;t think transmission is affected, at least it&#x27;s not listed as masked.<p>You&#x27;re right about firefox though, which is weird. Apparently node is a build dependency, but I can&#x27;t figure out if that&#x27;s something specific to the ebuild (that Arch&#x27;s PKGBUILD does as well) or just generally something the buildsystem requires, but it&#x27;s not listed as a dependency at <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;firefox-source-docs.mozilla.org&#x2F;setup&#x2F;linux_build.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;firefox-source-docs.mozilla.org&#x2F;setup&#x2F;linux_build.ht...</a>.
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null
41,785,114
41,768,144
null
null
null
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41,798,833
story
sickofparadox
2024-10-10T13:52:26
Women are better than men at science job interviews
null
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-03107-9
3
null
41,798,833
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[ 41798908 ]
null
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41,798,834
comment
daghamm
2024-10-10T13:52:26
null
I never understood why that limitation exist.<p>Can someone explain the reason for this?
null
null
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null
[ 41798894, 41798925, 41799008, 41801188, 41799389, 41799963 ]
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41,798,835
comment
deepmacro
2024-10-10T13:52:27
null
Cool, didn&#x27;t know that, but I can assure you it&#x27;s also the name of a lake close to where I live
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null
41,798,813
41,798,477
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[ 41799023 ]
null
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41,798,836
comment
high_na_euv
2024-10-10T13:52:30
null
Sure, not being at the leading edge is a disadvantage, but I guess you could still handle 99.x% of web pages
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null
41,797,971
41,796,030
null
null
null
null
41,798,837
comment
homebrewer
2024-10-10T13:52:33
null
For some reason you&#x27;re assuming the owners of the website have your interests at heart, and not the interest of their bank account.
null
null
41,798,717
41,797,719
null
[ 41798930 ]
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null
41,798,838
comment
burkaman
2024-10-10T13:52:54
null
If you&#x27;re wondering what happened to Fandom, just look at who runs it now.<p>&gt; In February 2018, former AOL CEO Jon Miller, backed by private equity firm TPG Capital, acquired Fandom.<p>&gt; In February 2019, former StubHub CEO Perkins Miller took over as CEO<p>- <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Fandom_(website)" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Fandom_(website)</a><p>It&#x27;s hard to imagine a worse leadership team than private equity + StubHub.
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null
41,797,719
41,797,719
null
[ 41800992, 41799350 ]
null
null
41,798,839
comment
yodon
2024-10-10T13:52:54
null
You might be interested in the Handlebars integration[0] Microsoft recently added to their SemanticKernel AI SDK.<p>It&#x27;s not identical to what you&#x27;re doing, but there&#x27;s considerable overlap and possibly some food for thought.<p>[0]<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;medium.com&#x2F;@shijotck&#x2F;automating-tasks-with-semantic-kernel-and-handlebars-planning-a7873e34f280" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;medium.com&#x2F;@shijotck&#x2F;automating-tasks-with-semantic-...</a>
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null
41,798,477
41,798,477
null
null
null
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41,798,840
story
thunderbong
2024-10-10T13:53:03
The water has been sucked out of Tampa Bay by Milton
null
https://twitter.com/BrianEntin/status/1844170710102704585
1
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41,798,840
0
null
null
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41,798,841
comment
briandear
2024-10-10T13:53:07
null
iOS isn’t a monopoly.
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null
41,794,988
41,784,287
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null
null
null
41,798,842
comment
gklitz
2024-10-10T13:53:20
null
They are literally trying to depreciate a feature that regularly breaks user space because it’s unintentionally misused. I don’t think I’ve ever come across a use case where people actually intended to write a bare except. Anyone who ever does this are actually thinking that it’s effectively the same as “except Exception” which it isn’t, but that’s more obvious to most users.
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null
41,788,890
41,788,026
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null
null
null
41,798,843
comment
tsimionescu
2024-10-10T13:53:22
null
It&#x27;s not the same thing though. All of these languages have specific constructs for integrating with the CLR, the CLR is not just a compilation target like WASM is. C++&#x2F;CLR even has a fourth kind of variable compared to base C++ (^, managed references of a type, in addition to the base type, * pointers to the type, and &amp; references to the type). IronPython has not had a GIL since its early days. I&#x27;m sure the others have significant differences, but I am less aware of them.
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null
41,798,142
41,795,561
null
[ 41799938 ]
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41,798,844
comment
nottorp
2024-10-10T13:53:27
null
The quote needs adjusting for inflation though.
null
null
41,798,027
41,798,027
null
[ 41802319 ]
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null
41,798,845
comment
wakawaka28
2024-10-10T13:53:30
null
It is more of a problem without the electoral college, because as I said the popular vote is sensitive to voter turnout. No turnout means no representation. The electors can always step up to represent their state, and if even they can&#x27;t then presumably the entire election would be delayed.
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null
41,796,174
41,792,780
null
[ 41799259 ]
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41,798,846
comment
alsothismthelp
2024-10-10T13:53:36
null
This is a command line tool which lets you inspect the keys recursively and then use the resulting keypath to query the value.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;codecando-x&#x2F;hands">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;codecando-x&#x2F;hands</a>
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null
41,793,326
41,791,708
null
null
null
null
41,798,847
comment
brudgers
2024-10-10T13:54:12
null
Selecting for people who try to make other people’s lives easier is a feature not a bug.
null
null
41,797,836
41,790,585
null
[ 41802630 ]
null
null
41,798,848
comment
neogodless
2024-10-10T13:54:19
null
I&#x27;m not a user of IPTV services and haven&#x27;t really heard about it.<p>I found this which lists apps and services that provide IPTV:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;iptv-org&#x2F;awesome-iptv">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;iptv-org&#x2F;awesome-iptv</a><p>Is that kind of service common in some parts of the world? Do people set up their own IPTV servers to share content? What are the most popular use cases?
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null
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null
[ 41800498, 41803949, 41799783, 41800477, 41798913, 41800759 ]
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null
41,798,849
comment
Workaccount2
2024-10-10T13:54:20
null
I mean, every other business I am aware of forces you to pay for something too?<p>I don&#x27;t see what is confusing here. Consumers love the ad-model because they can get things &quot;free&quot;. If the real cost of ad-supported products is too much for you, then its too expensive for you to use.<p>Like someone found the backdoor to the movie theater, and people just go in that way rather than pay for a ticket, and then these same people go on rants about how movie tickets are a rip-off and they make you watch 30 mins of ads before the movie, and candy is 5x overpriced, and proudly declaring &quot;I will never pay for a movie ticket again!&quot;, as if they are some righteous moral champion standing against the greed of people wanting to get paid for their work.<p>Straighten out your head, then come back and make an argument.
null
null
41,798,727
41,784,287
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[ 41801311, 41800964 ]
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41,798,850
story
mattbyrom
2024-10-10T13:54:23
Everyone's Lonely but Why? Workplace Loneliness Statistics
null
https://www.aaask.com/workplace-loneliness-statistics/
2
null
41,798,850
1
[ 41799087 ]
null
null
41,798,851
comment
notahacker
2024-10-10T13:54:24
null
And for a slight twist on the same theme, MMM Ponzi schemer Sergei Mavrodi, who had no political ambition whatsoever, ran for the State Duma (which granted him immunity from prosecution: the only issue he turned up to vote on) after his scheme collapsed and was voted in by thousands of people whose only hope of seeing the savings he&#x27;d conned them out of again rested on trusting his promises to sort everything out
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null
41,798,381
41,798,027
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null
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41,798,852
comment
bagful
2024-10-10T13:54:29
null
In the former case it is a list of performances characterized by including Anthony Hopkins; in the middle, it is a list of performances belonging to Hopkins. The latter reads incorrectly to me as an American but as a possessive nonetheless.
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null
41,793,554
41,787,647
null
null
null
null
41,798,853
comment
Pamar
2024-10-10T13:54:30
null
My main problems with fineliners is not their &quot;autonomy&quot; but their durability. I work on small scale drawings most of the time (A5) and I use small size tips. I surely throw away more pens due a damaged tip than due to ink.<p>I am also using Japanese roller pens in very small sizes and these are sturdier, and last &quot;long enough&quot;, in my experience
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null
41,798,064
41,756,978
null
null
null
null
41,798,854
comment
EliBullockPapa
2024-10-10T13:54:38
null
Awesome but pricing seems a little high right now, and you&#x27;re missing Gemini Flash, the very cheapest fine tunable model that I know of.
null
null
41,789,176
41,789,176
null
[ 41798914 ]
null
null
41,798,855
comment
drewcoo
2024-10-10T13:54:46
null
There&#x27;s also the Bernays approach: sell your design as filling some emotional need and convince the stakeholders that they have that need.<p>Automobiles will make you free! This kind if free software is &quot;free as in beer&quot; and who doesn&#x27;t want more beer? My queuing system will make you virile and attractive! Whatever works.
null
null
41,795,621
41,794,566
null
null
null
null
41,798,856
comment
dvngnt_
2024-10-10T13:54:49
null
laughs in ublock origin
null
null
41,798,566
41,797,719
null
[ 41799321, 41799171 ]
null
null
41,798,857
comment
eesmith
2024-10-10T13:54:54
null
Huh. &quot;Development and Management of a Computer-centered Data Base&quot; was published in November 1963 while a Google Books search finds the 1962 DoD &quot;annual report of the Office of Civil Defense&quot; at <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.google.com&#x2F;books&#x2F;edition&#x2F;Annual_Report_of_the_Office_of_Civil_Def&#x2F;XVGMktX8x8QC?hl=en&amp;gbpv=1&amp;dq=%22data+base%22&amp;pg=PA56&amp;printsec=frontcover" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.google.com&#x2F;books&#x2F;edition&#x2F;Annual_Report_of_the_Of...</a> (so one year older) with cover letter date &quot;November 24, 1962&quot; with:<p>&gt; Necessary weather forecasts are furnished by the U.S. Weather Bureau. The so-called &quot;data base&quot; used in the computer assessment process is stored at computer locations on magnetic tapes.<p>On page 64 we can read about &quot;Data Base Improvements&quot;<p>&gt; Resource data are obtained manually and by use of automatic data processing systems. ... During fiscal year 1963, OCD, through contracts and agreements with other agencies, completed or continued projects to materially strengthen the data base for these purposes.<p>(FY 1963 was July 1 1962-June 30 1963.)<p>And apparently there are three uses of &quot;data base&quot; in &quot;Automation and Scientific Communication&quot;, Short Papers Contributed to the Theme Sessions of the 26th Annual Meeting of the American Documentation Institute at Chicago, Pick-Congress Hotel, October 6-11, 1963, including<p>&gt; The data base for the current experimental system is derived from &quot;Current Research and Development in Scientific Documentation, No. 10&quot; (10).<p>On the other hand, <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.google.com&#x2F;books&#x2F;edition&#x2F;Air_Force_AFM&#x2F;J8f73BV6eqQC?hl=en&amp;gbpv=1&amp;dq=%22data+base%22&amp;pg=PA51&amp;printsec=frontcover" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.google.com&#x2F;books&#x2F;edition&#x2F;Air_Force_AFM&#x2F;J8f73BV6e...</a> tells me that in December of 1963 (after the November citation you gave), &quot;Data Base&quot; was defined as an Air Force term for &quot;A group of data elements or related features arranged in a logical sequence&quot;, and an &quot;Intelligence Data Base&quot; is &quot;An aggregation of finished or initially processed intelligence data ... which can be exploited to provide information to augment specific analyses and validate decisions.&quot;<p>That may explain why &quot;Organization and Presentation of Environmental Data for Office of Civil Defense Use (A Feasibility Study)&quot; dated April 1963, at <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.google.com&#x2F;books&#x2F;edition&#x2F;Organization_and_Presentation_of_Environ&#x2F;l1kmAQAAIAAJ?hl=en&amp;gbpv=1&amp;dq=%22data+base%22&amp;pg=PP34&amp;printsec=frontcover" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.google.com&#x2F;books&#x2F;edition&#x2F;Organization_and_Presen...</a> has a few uses of &quot;data base&quot; including, on page 19, &quot;A reference library is another type of nonautomated data base.&quot;<p>This makes it seem like &quot;data base&quot; was a term in use predating that 1963 publication.
null
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41,794,413
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null
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41,798,858
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arghwhat
2024-10-10T13:54:55
null
<i>citation needed</i>
null
null
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null
[ 41799083, 41801076, 41799198, 41800568 ]
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null
41,798,859
comment
lolinder
2024-10-10T13:55:01
null
Frankly, I think the browser ecosystem needs a major shock. There are too many companies invested in the web as a platform for them to collectively allow web browsers to just stop existing, and a few years of discomfort may well be worth it if it shakes up the ecosystem a bit and brings more diversity.
null
null
41,794,872
41,784,287
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41,798,860
comment
Qem
2024-10-10T13:55:03
null
What are the precedents for UN peacekeeping forces not actively engaged in combat being targeted in the past? Is that a(nother) warcrime? To me it seems odd a regime can keep a seat at UN while shooting at UN troops.
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41,798,445
41,798,445
null
null
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null
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emvesper
2024-10-10T13:55:05
null
null
null
1
null
41,798,861
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story
thunderbong
2024-10-10T13:55:23
The bill finally comes due for Elon Musk
null
https://www.theverge.com/2024/10/9/24265781/tesla-robotaxi-elon-musk-claims-safety-driverless-level-5
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null
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throwoutway
2024-10-10T13:55:30
null
Yes thats a better way to say it
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null
41,754,334
41,749,371
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null
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null
41,798,864
comment
mdaniel
2024-10-10T13:55:34
null
&gt; I learned that I can&#x27;t use file i&#x2F;o in a function outside the main, which is an unspoken rule that no tutorial elucidated.<p>is for sure not true, that would be crazypants
null
null
41,794,786
41,792,500
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[ 41801029, 41801244 ]
null
null
41,798,865
comment
wodenokoto
2024-10-10T13:55:37
null
Fandom runs on media wiki too.
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41,798,794
41,797,719
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null
null
null
41,798,866
comment
pixl97
2024-10-10T13:55:41
null
&gt;it just got less expensive<p>Quantity is a quality. Add that the AI can profile you and do a decent job spear phishing and you&#x27;re talking about a sea change.<p>&gt;and the real internal one<p>“Three can keep a secret, if two of them are dead.”<p>There is no such thing as an &#x27;internal&#x27; email you communicate to other people outside your company with. It&#x27;s just an email address. Someone at some point will leak it by accident or malice.
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null
41,797,518
41,792,500
null
[ 41801945 ]
null
null
41,798,867
comment
AlienRobot
2024-10-10T13:55:42
null
If you used AI to make something awesome, even if I liked it, I&#x27;d feel scammed if it wasn&#x27;t clearly labelled as AI, and if it was clearly labelled as AI I wouldn&#x27;t even look at it.
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null
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null
[ 41802173, 41801513 ]
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41,798,868
comment
atonse
2024-10-10T13:55:54
null
Sure but you have to grade on a curve. When you actually see how some of their peers act, compared to them, the Tatas are gems.
null
null
41,798,596
41,795,218
null
[ 41798984 ]
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story
Boriscii
2024-10-10T13:55:59
null
null
null
1
null
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comment
bloopernova
2024-10-10T13:56:10
null
Slightly related: Does anyone know of a simple macropad that uses 2u or larger keys? I just want 4 or so larger keys!
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null
41,762,483
41,762,483
null
[ 41803075 ]
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41,798,871
comment
lmm
2024-10-10T13:56:10
null
Nah. All organisations have relationships, and the ones that appear on the org chart are usually a small subset of them. Actual hierarchies are extremely rare, e.g. even in an officially very hierarchical company there will usually be loops because someone nominally low actually controls someone nominally high.
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41,797,112
41,794,566
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41,798,872
comment
yetihehe
2024-10-10T13:56:21
null
&gt; because my personal experience had stories that were just as crazy for someone just 10 years younger<p>That&#x27;s why programmers often like to call themselves wizards. We do things that are even unimaginable to other people. I recently got a surprised &quot;Wow, is that even possible?&quot; comment about a weekend project made for fun.
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41,798,605
41,798,184
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[ 41798979 ]
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41,798,873
comment
amiga386
2024-10-10T13:56:25
null
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Honor_killing" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Honor_killing</a><p>&gt; An honor killing (American English), honour killing (Commonwealth English), or shame killing is a traditional form of murder in which a person is killed by or at the behest of members of their family or their partner, due to culturally sanctioned beliefs that such homicides are necessary as retribution for the perceived dishonoring of the family by the victim.<p>&gt; Methods of murdering include stoning, stabbing, beating, burning, beheading, hanging, throat slashing, lethal acid attacks, shooting, and strangulation. Sometimes, communities perform murders in public to warn others in the community of the possible consequences of engaging in what is seen as illicit behavior<p>&gt; Often, minor girls and boys are selected by the family to act as the murderers, so that the murderer may benefit from the most favorable legal outcome. Boys and sometimes women in the family are often asked to closely control and monitor the behavior of their siblings or other members of the family, to ensure that they do not do anything to tarnish the &#x27;honor&#x27; and &#x27;reputation&#x27; of the family<p>&gt; Sharif Kanaana, professor of anthropology at Birzeit University, says that honor killing is: &quot;A complicated issue that cuts deep into the history of Islamic society. .. What the men of the family, clan, or tribe seek control of in a patrilineal society is reproductive power. Women for the tribe were considered a factory for making men. Honor killing is not a means to control sexual power or behavior. What&#x27;s behind it is the issue of fertility or reproductive power.&quot;<p>&gt; Nighat Taufeeq of the women&#x27;s resource center Shirkatgah in Lahore, Pakistan says: &quot;It is an unholy alliance that works against women: the killers take pride in what they have done, the tribal leaders condone the act and protect the killers and the police connive the cover-up.&quot; The lawyer and human rights activist Hina Jilani says, &quot;The right to life of women in Pakistan is conditional on their obeying social norms and traditions.&quot;<p>&gt; Fareena Alam, editor of a Muslim magazine, writes that honor killings which arise in Western cultures such as Britain are a tactic for immigrant families to cope with the alienating consequences of urbanization. Alam argues that immigrants remain close to the home culture and their relatives because it provides a safety net. She writes that &#x27;In villages &quot;back home&quot;, a man&#x27;s sphere of control was broader, with a large support system. In our cities full of strangers, there is virtually no control over who one&#x27;s family members sit, talk or work with.&#x27;<p>Hopefully that expands on it. A rotten culture of &quot;family values&quot; that sees women as nothing more than baby factories and keeps them under control at all times, through intimidation, persecution, monitoring, and straight up state-sanctioned killing and blaming of the victim if they try to assert themselves.
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41,798,551
41,793,597
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null
null
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41,798,874
comment
farouqaldori
2024-10-10T13:56:49
null
Yes for sure. But your mileage may vary, and it all depends on the quality of the dataset that you build up.<p>Happy to discuss this in detail, how do you measure performance?
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41,798,713
41,789,176
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41,798,875
comment
gus_massa
2024-10-10T13:56:52
null
It&#x27;s probably very similar to virus causing cancer that is well known <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Infectious_causes_of_cancer" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Infectious_causes_of_cancer</a> It may be helpful to understand why exactly this genetic treatment cused this cancer and fix it for future similar treatments, but not as generic improvement for all cancers.
null
null
41,796,631
41,795,187
null
null
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41,798,876
comment
razodactyl
2024-10-10T13:56:53
null
...I like you. I&#x27;m gonna keep you around... hahaha
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null
41,798,626
41,797,719
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null
null
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41,798,877
comment
hakunin
2024-10-10T13:56:56
null
&gt; You probably went through Ecto 1 -&gt; 2 -&gt; 3 and Phoenix was migrating to contexts.<p>&gt; But I also have to say there was a lot of FOMO in relation to OTP back then: people felt they had to build these amazing supervision designs, otherwise they were not using the language correctly.<p>Exactly!<p>Contexts really threw me off, because I couldn&#x27;t figure out how&#x2F;why would I set a boundary up front, if I&#x27;m not even sure how the app is going to turn out.
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null
41,796,153
41,792,304
null
[ 41800070 ]
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41,798,878
comment
politelemon
2024-10-10T13:56:56
null
The newegg comment is subtle and well done. It&#x27;s just silly enough and yet believable enough to make you wonder.
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null
41,798,184
41,798,184
null
null
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41,798,879
comment
al_potato
2024-10-10T13:57:02
null
I think they&#x27;re squaring &quot;simple&quot; against &quot;millions of dollars of investment.&quot; Some other languages are successful without that.
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null
41,796,152
41,791,773
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41,798,880
comment
rashkov
2024-10-10T13:57:02
null
Coming from a ReasonML &#x2F; OCaml codebase (frontend react), I&#x27;m seeing a lot to love with the pattern matching and sum types. Zod is already one of my favorites (coming from <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;glennsl&#x2F;bs-json">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;glennsl&#x2F;bs-json</a>).<p>Is &#x27;retry &#x2F; observability &#x2F; error handling&quot; something that comes from Effect?
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null
41,793,956
41,764,163
null
[ 41802889 ]
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null
41,798,881
comment
whalesalad
2024-10-10T13:57:04
null
[flagged]
null
null
41,798,317
41,793,597
null
null
null
true
41,798,882
comment
mooktakim
2024-10-10T13:57:05
null
How would anyone know that you can use the shift key? Closing the tab&#x2F;page is just more natural as its something you do all the time.
null
null
41,793,597
41,793,597
null
[ 41799489 ]
null
null
41,798,883
comment
freeone3000
2024-10-10T13:57:12
null
And yet, people put out tons of free content all the time! Clip out the ad and it’s right there.
null
null
41,798,584
41,784,287
null
[ 41798932 ]
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41,798,884
comment
kodt
2024-10-10T13:57:26
null
Yeah, I assume if it were to be sold by that date, then you still have time after that date that the product remains fresh. Is this not common sense to people?
null
null
41,766,143
41,765,006
null
[ 41798978 ]
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41,798,885
comment
matheusmoreira
2024-10-10T13:57:34
null
&gt; Google funnels a lot of their profits to make Chrome and Android into OSS<p>No, that is incidental. What is the first and principal thing it does, what needs does it serve by making open source browsers and operating systems?<p>Control. Google maintains appreciable control over mobile devices and the web by making their own mobile operating system and browser. In cases such as these, it is only a matter of time before they tightening the screws. They already have.<p>&gt; we will be left with an even more profitable ad giant, that sends back all profits to it&#x27;s share holders<p>But not one that can kill ad blockers or ram remote attestation down people&#x27;s throats.
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null
41,793,933
41,784,287
null
null
null
null
41,798,886
comment
RalfWausE
2024-10-10T13:57:34
null
Huh? I mean, even major news outlets in germany (even government owned) reported about the... ehm... &quot;interesting&quot; relationship of the various intelligence agencies and the far right...<p>Just to be curious, what did you write about Israel and Germany?
null
null
41,786,370
41,776,721
null
[ 41799799 ]
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null
41,798,887
comment
disdi89
2024-10-10T13:57:42
null
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;shop.mntre.com&#x2F;products&#x2F;mnt-reform" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;shop.mntre.com&#x2F;products&#x2F;mnt-reform</a>
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null
41,792,570
41,792,570
null
null
null
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41,798,888
comment
ColinWright
2024-10-10T13:57:47
null
&gt; <i>The majority of the comments, including all the top ones, expressed insights as original, that were pretty thoroughly analyzed in the article. Just read my mildly frustrated replies.</i><p>I have thoughts about this, but I can find no way to contact you to open a conversation. You might want to think about adding something to your HN profile.<p>Meanwhile ... from this and other sources, I feel your pain.
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41,797,091
41,789,242
null
null
null
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41,798,889
comment
vegadw
2024-10-10T13:58:06
null
Allow me to introduce you to the furry fandom:<p>Here, here&#x27;s someone I&#x27;m commissioning now, a basic sketch is $10 <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.shiroganestudios.com&#x2F;work&#x2F;commissions" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.shiroganestudios.com&#x2F;work&#x2F;commissions</a><p>Given the project is FOSS, they&#x27;d probably be fine with that price still.<p>I could go through a list of literally hundreds of artists where $20 is within budget. The quality of simple logo like is needed here is about on part with what many would do for a telegram sticker, which are often about $5&#x2F;piece.<p>Hundreds of dollars is totally reasonable if commercial. This isn&#x27;t.
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41,798,764
41,790,619
null
null
null
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41,798,890
comment
icedchai
2024-10-10T13:58:07
null
I learned C on the Amiga, back in the late 80&#x27;s, and the OS made heavy use of &quot;OO-ish&quot; physical subtyping with structs everywhere. I don&#x27;t think anybody even thought about strict aliasing violations.
null
null
41,757,701
41,757,701
null
[ 41799021, 41798974 ]
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null
41,798,891
story
2OEH8eoCRo0
2024-10-10T13:58:23
The American Who Waged a Tech War on China
null
https://www.wired.com/story/jake-sullivan-china-tech-profile/
2
null
41,798,891
0
[ 41798902 ]
null
null
41,798,892
comment
bob1029
2024-10-10T13:58:24
null
Much of the pain can be reduced by considering if you should bother automating the thing in the first place.<p>Some kinds of automation are absolutely essential. Aligning wafer stages during photolithography, shipping logistics, high frequency trading, etc. The business absolutely wouldn&#x27;t work without it.<p>The other kinds of automation are more questionable. Developing E2E CI&#x2F;CD automation for an internal tool that is redeployed once every quarter might be a more difficult sell to management. For these cases, even if the rate of manual process invocation is somewhat high (i.e. frustrating for some employees), the customer can&#x27;t see it. They won&#x27;t pay one additional cent for this.<p>There is also this entire meta time wasting game where the mere debate about &quot;should we automate&quot; takes up so much resources you could have manually invoked the thing more times than it would ever be feasibly invoked automatically during its projected lifetime. Alternatively, you could have just let your developers build the damn thing to get it out of their systems.
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41,765,594
41,765,594
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41,798,893
comment
duxup
2024-10-10T13:58:30
null
It&#x27;s not even accurate at times. I think a lot of the dedicated fans have given up on it. I&#x27;ve seen several that have chunks of straight wrong information.<p>Usually it&#x27;s stuff where the fan seems to have picked up on something implied in a story, but missed where it is clearly stated that isn&#x27;t the case ... but then they go and write on fandom and make lots of assumptions from there and fill in other gaps with guesses.
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null
41,798,566
41,797,719
null
[ 41799040, 41799387, 41799124, 41798963, 41800090 ]
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41,798,894
comment
jerf
2024-10-10T13:58:30
null
Straight from the designers: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;go.googlesource.com&#x2F;proposal&#x2F;+&#x2F;refs&#x2F;heads&#x2F;master&#x2F;design&#x2F;43651-type-parameters.md#no-parameterized-methods" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;go.googlesource.com&#x2F;proposal&#x2F;+&#x2F;refs&#x2F;heads&#x2F;master&#x2F;des...</a>
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41,798,834
41,769,275
null
null
null
null
41,798,895
comment
fullspectrumdev
2024-10-10T13:58:35
null
Really? Didn’t realise it was still available.<p>I remember one of the online smartshops used to sell it, it was actually rather pleasant as a caffeine alternative.
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41,796,856
41,787,798
null
null
null
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41,798,896
comment
null
2024-10-10T13:59:12
null
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null
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41,798,862
41,798,862
null
null
true
null
41,798,897
comment
felix089
2024-10-10T13:59:13
null
Thanks, and yes, tracking logs is included in the free plan!
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null
41,798,740
41,789,176
null
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41,798,898
comment
wasteduniverse
2024-10-10T13:59:15
null
[dead]
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41,798,474
41,798,027
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null
null
true
41,798,899
comment
dlahoda
2024-10-10T13:59:15
null
thing located in place it was before <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;f-droid.org&#x2F;pt&#x2F;packages&#x2F;com.fsck.k9&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;f-droid.org&#x2F;pt&#x2F;packages&#x2F;com.fsck.k9&#x2F;</a>
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null
41,798,615
41,798,615
null
[ 41800381 ]
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