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41,799,200
comment
rthnbgrredf
2024-10-10T14:29:10
null
Well buying 220pb of storage space is really not the problem nowadays, at least from a cost perspective. But you need to maintain all that stuff. What happens when a disk goes broke, what if a network switch goes broke, how do you update your software at scale and so on.<p>I think it would be best to put it on AWS S3 Glacier Deep Archive for about 2.5 million dollar per year.
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41,796,686
41,789,815
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[ 41799337 ]
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41,799,201
comment
orochimaaru
2024-10-10T14:29:12
null
How exactly do you plan to do business in India without the bribes?<p>In fact after a certain scale you need to bribe in the US too. It’s just that it’s legalized in the US as lobbying and PACs.
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41,798,596
41,795,218
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[ 41799916 ]
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comment
asl98
2024-10-10T14:29:12
null
What are people&#x27;s thoughts on putting wikis on web3 infrastructure
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41,797,719
41,797,719
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[ 41799396 ]
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comment
hombre_fatal
2024-10-10T14:29:30
null
Reminds me of Animal &#x2F; Cat &#x2F; Dog examples.<p>For the love of god just use User &#x2F; RegisteredUser &#x2F; GuestUser and other abstractions that have some basis in the real world.
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41,797,794
41,764,163
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comment
triceratops
2024-10-10T14:29:38
null
&gt; animal shelters... is just hunting with additional steps<p>Explain
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41,796,258
41,795,218
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[ 41799443 ]
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41,799,205
comment
theGnuMe
2024-10-10T14:29:38
null
Well there are is neurogenic bladder and congenital causes.
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41,799,206
comment
elric
2024-10-10T14:29:46
null
I&#x27;ve been hearing disturbing rumours about ads&#x2F;trackers, can anyone comment to that?
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41,798,615
41,798,615
null
[ 41799537, 41799284 ]
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41,799,207
story
mattcbaker
2024-10-10T14:29:47
Show HN: LLM-Powered Edge Functions
null
https://edgellm.dev/
1
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41,799,207
0
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41,799,208
comment
Smeevy
2024-10-10T14:29:48
null
Oh my goodness, I wouldn&#x27;t last a day with someone who did that. That sort of casual disrespect while you&#x27;re talking to someone is wholly unacceptable behavior.<p>There&#x27;s only one person you work with that&#x27;s like that, right? Right?
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41,798,783
41,765,594
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[ 41801306, 41799584 ]
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comment
nick3443
2024-10-10T14:29:52
null
Having dealt with some truly awful run &amp; gun painters, it&#x27;s visceral.
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41,798,097
41,797,009
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41,799,210
comment
dcchambers
2024-10-10T14:29:54
null
I love this post. I also LOVE wikis. I have railed against Fandom for years and I have often shared my view on this in the past[^1]. It&#x27;s an absolute blight on so many beloved game communities at this point.<p>I like this approach much more than the games that have decided to move to another managed&#x2F;hosted service like <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;wiki.gg" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;wiki.gg</a> - which has a very real change of becoming the &quot;next&quot; Fandom.<p>Truly <i>independent</i> wikis are the best.<p>[^1]: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;publish.obsidian.md&#x2F;dakota&#x2F;Hobbies&#x2F;Gaming&#x2F;Gaming+Wikis" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;publish.obsidian.md&#x2F;dakota&#x2F;Hobbies&#x2F;Gaming&#x2F;Gaming+Wik...</a>
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41,797,719
41,797,719
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[ 41799390 ]
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41,799,211
comment
Ekaros
2024-10-10T14:30:01
null
I wonder should we just see in century again. Remembering that 100 years ago world population was circa 2 billion. So maybe we need to take some time and see how things develop and only really panic in maybe 3 or 4 generations.
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41,799,145
41,798,726
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[ 41799288 ]
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41,799,212
comment
hn72774
2024-10-10T14:30:12
null
Chances are there is OSS already running in commercially available vehicles.<p>Owners tinkering with ICE vehicles was and is a thing and I don&#x27;t see how an electric power train makes that too much different.<p>Open standards and data formats would be a good middle ground to help avoid the type of problem with Fisker &quot;unable&quot; to migrate to a different provider. Although I wish that vehicles did not have to phone home to the mother ship at all.
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41,796,331
41,795,075
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[ 41799863 ]
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comment
7e
2024-10-10T14:30:22
null
That post was also heavily censored to protect Sam Altman under the bromide of &quot;intellectual curiosity.&quot;
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41,792,342
41,792,179
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41,799,214
comment
Ambroos
2024-10-10T14:30:24
null
If you can run your application on Cloudflare Pages &#x2F; Workers with Cloudflare&#x27;s storage&#x2F;DB things, it really gets dirt cheap (if not free) and very fast. And even without that, Cloudflare&#x27;s caching CDN is very good, very cheap and very easy.
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41,799,188
41,797,719
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41,799,215
comment
pzmarzly
2024-10-10T14:30:36
null
I opened the docs page, tried editing one of the examples, the page immediately crashed. You may be interested in setting up some error boundaries between your components.<p><pre><code> Unexpected Application Error! Cannot read properties of null (reading &#x27;alternate&#x27;) TypeError: Cannot read properties of null (reading &#x27;alternate&#x27;) at Uh (https:&#x2F;&#x2F;tenno.app&#x2F;assets&#x2F;index-y2OkIpP6.js:38:18238)</code></pre>
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41,798,477
41,798,477
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[ 41799263 ]
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41,799,216
story
driesdep
2024-10-10T14:30:37
Close your eyes to charge art installation
null
https://www.creativeapplications.net/objects/recharge-xl-well-being-meets-digital-necessity/
1
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41,799,216
0
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41,799,217
comment
namaria
2024-10-10T14:30:42
null
Like I said, our brain proves that the way to solve the problem of &#x27;how to get autonomous systems capable of non trivially complex behavior&#x27; is &#x27;planetary ecosystems sustained by starlight based on self reproducing cellular nanobots&#x27;.<p>Companies selling ways around that apparatus to achieve intelligent behavior are selling you perpetual motion machines, or slavery. There has been zero &#x27;AI&#x27; systems that don&#x27;t depend on painstakingly collected and analyzed data beforehand.
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41,799,218
story
msolujic
2024-10-10T14:30:42
Google DeepMind Leaders Hassabis and Jumper Win Nobel Prize for Chemistry
null
https://fortune.com/2024/10/09/google-deepmind-leaders-hassabis-and-jumper-win-nobel-prize-for-chemistry/
3
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41,799,218
1
[ 41799481, 41800731 ]
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41,799,219
comment
tightbookkeeper
2024-10-10T14:30:45
null
Vegetarian is in India is often class signaling.
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41,796,465
41,795,218
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41,799,220
comment
languagehacker
2024-10-10T14:30:53
null
Former Wikia engineer, here. I left right around when they changed their name to Fandom and kind of saw the writing on the wall. Despite the tremendous amount of information they have at their disposal, they never really saw themselves (or positioned themselves) as more than a low market cap media company. I spent a lot of time in the mid-teens trying to encourage them to be early on AI&#x2F;NLP kind of stuff and use that to drive new product development. Needless to say, it didn&#x27;t work out. Imagine the data moat they could have built and monetized, and all without needing to degrade the customer experience.
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41,797,719
41,797,719
null
[ 41799541, 41800052, 41799639, 41801478, 41801104 ]
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41,799,221
comment
vb-8448
2024-10-10T14:31:01
null
How did it compare with <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;observablehq.com&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;observablehq.com&#x2F;</a> ?
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41,798,477
41,798,477
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[ 41799282 ]
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41,799,222
comment
card_zero
2024-10-10T14:31:04
null
If they&#x27;re non-tracking ads (related to the content of the wiki, instead of the content of the visitor), I could almost <i>like</i> them.
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41,798,670
41,797,719
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41,799,223
comment
teddyh
2024-10-10T14:31:08
null
&gt; <i>people use ad blockers, making the websites less money, so they add more advertisements for the people who don&#x27;t have ad blockers</i><p>I have serious doubts about this step in the spiral. IIUC, people who use ad blockers are still <i>vanishingly few</i>, and therefore the loss of ad impressions should not be that large.
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41,799,171
41,797,719
null
[ 41799570, 41799420 ]
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41,799,224
comment
theGnuMe
2024-10-10T14:31:24
null
And that&#x27;s why a therapist will try to really make sure you are not in an abusive relationship as well.
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41,795,113
41,794,807
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41,799,225
comment
sigh_again
2024-10-10T14:31:38
null
fextralife has the exact same behavior as Fandom: autoplaying their Twitch streams to farm views and displaying ads, at times hiding it in invisible iframes, or making it so small you can&#x27;t find it, leading to Twitch making rules against embedding autoplays, ads everywhere, shitty AI generated stubs for half the articles, botting and automatically piling on criticism, and fundamentally, it&#x27;s just plain wrong, everywhere.<p>The initial Dark Souls wikidot was excellent. Fextralife bullied and threatened them into closing down. At this point, people don&#x27;t move on because of habit, but the quality for the Elden Ring wiki is dramatically bad. Information is outdated, poorly maintained, actual fixes are being reverted by their own, paid editors, other wikis are suspiciously often the target of attacks and deleted content.
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41,799,036
41,797,719
null
[ 41802556, 41799437, 41799471 ]
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41,799,226
comment
rurban
2024-10-10T14:31:44
null
Just take sugar instead. Cheaper, stronger and legal.
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41,798,086
41,787,798
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[ 41800489 ]
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41,799,227
comment
xyst
2024-10-10T14:31:51
null
This is how we end up in another 2008 crash. Regulators asleep at the wheel, again
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41,798,658
41,798,027
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[ 41799498 ]
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41,799,228
comment
aklemm
2024-10-10T14:31:58
null
You projected a lot on to my comment that&#x27;s not there. Your comment is interesting, but would be more useful if you brought a rhetorical style that was less needlessly confrontational. Also drop the subtext that you&#x27;re a rational authority simply by your presence here.
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41,799,145
41,798,726
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41,799,229
comment
pjc50
2024-10-10T14:32:01
null
Not quite - &quot;everything is a blob&quot; has very different concurrency semantics to &quot;everything is a POSIX file&quot;. You can&#x27;t write into the middle of a blob, for example. This makes certain use cases harder but the concurrency of blobs is <i>much</i> easier to reason about and get right.<p>Personally I think you might actually need a DB to do the work of a DB, and you can&#x27;t as easily build one on top of a blob store as on a block device. But I do think most distributed systems should use blob and&#x2F;or DB and <i>not</i> the filesystem.
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41,798,143
41,797,041
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comment
tightbookkeeper
2024-10-10T14:32:01
null
Every prominent person will have controversy. Expressing values means choosing one thing over another.
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41,796,191
41,795,218
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41,799,231
story
marklit
2024-10-10T14:32:02
Microsoft's 1.4B Global ML Building Footprints
null
https://tech.marksblogg.com/microsofts-global-ml-building-footprints.html
3
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41,799,231
0
[ 41800727 ]
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41,799,232
comment
closewith
2024-10-10T14:32:10
null
Context does matter, and you&#x27;re missing the forest for the trees. It&#x27;s native to think there&#x27;s any other metric that matters.
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41,798,356
41,775,238
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[ 41799725 ]
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41,799,233
comment
JohnFen
2024-10-10T14:32:14
null
&gt; Cool URIs don&#x27;t change<p>That&#x27;s talking about the portion of URIs after the domain name. In reality, domain names themselves do change from time to time and it&#x27;s wise to be able to accommodate that.<p>A cool URI makes that change easier for the provider because it means the only part of the URI that would have to change is the domain name. The rest can remain the same as always.<p>&gt; This will cause a massive amount of links to go dead on the web and that&#x27;s a fact.<p>Well, sure, and the maintainer of those links need to change them. I&#x27;m not seeing how this is a major crisis. Link go dead all the time. It would be an annoyance, certainly.
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41,799,018
41,789,941
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41,799,234
comment
globalise83
2024-10-10T14:32:15
null
Now that is a real use case!
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41,798,928
41,793,597
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41,799,235
comment
7e
2024-10-10T14:32:25
null
TechCrunch is doing me a service; I was not going to watch the Geoff Hinton video, so I would have remained ignorant of this important bit of news without TC highlighting it. Now I <i>am</i> going to watch the entire video, so it&#x27;s a win all around. HN censorship, on the other hand, is doing us all great harm.
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41,792,179
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[ 41803777 ]
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41,799,236
comment
ForHackernews
2024-10-10T14:32:27
null
Nice to see something using IP multicast!
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41,794,577
41,794,577
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41,799,237
comment
krisoft
2024-10-10T14:32:31
null
&gt; You think this policy is worth alienating your tech workers for?<p>Why do you think this policy would be alienating your tech workers? Or rather what do you think the &quot;policy&quot; is which would be causing this alienation in your opinion?<p>As far as I see they recommend that if you see someone struggling and &quot;knocking on the wrong door&quot; help them reach the right door and add what context you can add to their situation. That just feels common sense to me. What do you find &quot;insulting&quot; about it?
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41,765,127
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41,799,238
comment
compootr
2024-10-10T14:32:41
null
Yeah, the site is down (502 status)
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41,798,560
41,797,719
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41,799,239
comment
swsieber
2024-10-10T14:32:52
null
It seems relevant since we are in a thread asking to compare WASM to java applets.
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41,798,332
41,795,561
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41,799,240
comment
SoftTalker
2024-10-10T14:32:56
null
Just avoid those types of foods altogether.
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41,799,031
41,765,006
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41,799,241
comment
toomuchtodo
2024-10-10T14:33:14
null
It would be wise to build today for service life of whatever is being built (housing, infrastructure, etc) that anticipates many less humans available in the future to maintain.
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41,799,148
41,798,726
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[ 41799354 ]
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41,799,242
comment
joe8756438
2024-10-10T14:33:18
null
It’s true that some companies will place a PO in order to establish a hierarchy over a scrum team. But that’s not a scrum problem, it’s an organization problem.<p>In a reasonable team theres a dialog between product and engineering that establishes direction and priority.
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41,797,009
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41,799,243
comment
ricardobeat
2024-10-10T14:33:22
null
Pretty sure that’s the recommendation to deodorize your fridge, not related to the baking soda’s shelf life. The other side of the box says “keep in a cool and dark place”.<p>It does seem to go “flat” after a few months regardless, even when the expiry date is 2 years in the future.
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41,799,158
41,765,006
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[ 41799369 ]
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41,799,244
comment
abcd_f
2024-10-10T14:33:29
null
&gt; DEA source<p>It has a step-by-step description of cocaine extraction process further down the page.<p>I mean you can probably find the same on the YT, but seeing it on a DEA site is still a bit jarring.
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41,798,673
41,787,798
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comment
xyst
2024-10-10T14:33:33
null
Too indebted to fail
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41,798,027
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41,799,246
comment
layer8
2024-10-10T14:33:36
null
&gt; I don’t think we would ever do a “self-service” thing where you could just sign up and immediately make a wiki.<p>It’s very useful, however, to have a place where that’s possible, even if that’s currently Fandom. Many wikis wouldn’t exist without that non-barrier to entry. Those that gain traction can then decide to move elsewhere.
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41,797,719
41,797,719
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[ 41800107 ]
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comment
namaria
2024-10-10T14:33:39
null
Yes, I am saying that AGI is impossible.<p>AGI is either human intelligence behind the curtains or a pie in the sky.
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41,751,444
41,749,371
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41,799,248
comment
ykonstant
2024-10-10T14:33:42
null
You can exit the UK Government, but you can never escape.
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41,793,597
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41,799,249
comment
compsciphd
2024-10-10T14:33:49
null
the point is that 8200 didn&#x27;t create them. Alumni did. The wording of the article tries to imply that 8200 created them and perhaps were just marketed by private companies (the only way I can understand their wording). This simply isn&#x27;t true.<p>The point of comparing alumni of 8200 to a university was to give the more favorable reading to the concept of &quot;product&quot; of, but why I also dont think its a fair reading.
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41,783,867
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41,799,250
comment
tightbookkeeper
2024-10-10T14:33:49
null
Exactly. Contribution ethic vs purity ethic.
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41,795,218
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41,799,251
comment
pm215
2024-10-10T14:33:51
null
Mmm, I don&#x27;t think that would be a sufficiently personal contact for anybody to seriously refer to that person as &quot;my banker&quot;.
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41,798,793
41,798,027
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[ 41801013 ]
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41,799,252
comment
notavalleyman
2024-10-10T14:34:01
null
And if the banking system were actually designed by poor people to suit the needs of poor people.<p>How would this scenario play out differently?<p>A bank is underwater on loans to a certain house. If they pull the plug now, the bank takes a loss. If they work with the household to raise the household wealth, then they can recoup their loan amount from the new wealth.<p>So what&#x27;s your alternative solution, in the world where banks are designed for the poor?<p>I ask because I don&#x27;t see how the personal assets of the people who designed this system come into play, at all
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41,799,168
41,798,027
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[ 41799894, 41799707 ]
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story
Jackobrien
2024-10-10T14:34:27
The only software skills that matter: Taste and Tradeoffs
null
https://thejackobrien.com/blog/taste-and-tradeoffs
1
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41,799,253
0
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41,799,254
comment
Aardwolf
2024-10-10T14:34:34
null
I found Wikia a great product name which evoked the feeling &#x27;this topic may be too obscure for Wikipedia, but here you can make an entire Wiki about it!&#x27;, and I never understood why it was changed to &#x27;Fandom&#x27;
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41,797,719
41,797,719
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[ 41802722, 41802826 ]
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comment
rrwo
2024-10-10T14:34:39
null
One solution is to use a unique email address for every website, and change the address if the site gets compromised (with the old address getting added to a spam filter).
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41,795,324
41,792,500
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comment
bombcar
2024-10-10T14:34:51
null
Ten years ago bandwidth was expensive. Still is, even if not as much. A simple VPS gets overwhelmed, but a simple VPS behind cloudflare can do quite well.
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41,799,188
41,797,719
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[ 41799554 ]
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41,799,257
comment
SoftTalker
2024-10-10T14:34:58
null
I don&#x27;t pay dates much mind. If it looks good, smells good, and tastes good I eat it. We are pretty adept at smelling and tasting spoiled food.
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41,765,006
41,765,006
null
[ 41800327, 41799380, 41801492, 41799322 ]
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41,799,258
comment
atombender
2024-10-10T14:35:01
null
Why reverse the slice at all? Collect the input into a slice, then return an iterator that navigates the slice in backward order.<p>What this sort of thing lacks is any ability to optimize. For example, let&#x27;s say the operation is Reverse().Take(20). There&#x27;s no reason for the reverser to keep more than 20 elements in its buffer. But to express that, you have to make sure the iterator can be introspected and then rewritten to merge the operators and maybe unroll some of the loops to get better cache locality. This is what Haskell can achieve via Stream Fusion, which is pretty neat. But not so viable in Go.
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41,798,809
41,769,275
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[ 41800173, 41799456 ]
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comment
Apocryphon
2024-10-10T14:35:09
null
I’m not sure if the electors are legally allowed to decide in the absence of voter turnout. Besides, if you can suppress popular vote, you can also suppress the electors.
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41,798,845
41,792,780
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[ 41799663 ]
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41,799,260
comment
maxerickson
2024-10-10T14:35:12
null
It&#x27;s not how long they can get away with, it&#x27;s how long they are willing to listen to complaints about it.<p>A sell by date makes perfect sense on salt. No packager wants to be responsible for material that sat on someone else&#x27;s shelf for years and years.
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41,799,158
41,765,006
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41,799,261
comment
aziaziazi
2024-10-10T14:35:14
null
Veganism = no animals &quot;used&quot; to make food or <i>whatever</i> (soap, shoes, invivo testing...)<p>Many people here seems to make the confusion that veganism is about the food. It&#x27;s not, it&#x27;s about the animals.<p>&gt; What is the purpose of the word vegetarian if one uses it to mean consuming some animals but not others?<p>Languages are not like mathematics, one word can convey many meaning and nothing is stone-defined (dictionaries are only an interpretation of a language). In the Indian context there&#x27;s a BIG part of the population that have a diet that does not have a definition in the Official Oxford Dictionary.
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41,797,594
41,795,218
null
[ 41799835 ]
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41,799,262
comment
cynicalpeace
2024-10-10T14:35:25
null
The answer is obviously not, since there&#x27;s only 1 and there&#x27;s been presumably hundreds of applicants (at least) who have tried the same and been rejected.<p>It&#x27;s actually a fascinating example of where government backs a private monopoly as opposed to breaking it up, which is often a case for having a strong government apparatus.
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41,798,976
41,787,798
null
[ 41799803, 41800669 ]
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41,799,263
comment
deepmacro
2024-10-10T14:35:28
null
Right, I did not put a lot of checks in place for such failures. Does it keep happen if you refresh? I&#x27;ve never seen it TBH <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;tenno.app&#x2F;docs" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;tenno.app&#x2F;docs</a>
null
null
41,799,215
41,798,477
null
[ 41799899 ]
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41,799,264
comment
pjc50
2024-10-10T14:35:35
null
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Silicon_Valley_Bank" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Silicon_Valley_Bank</a> hit $15bn of unrealized losses and exploded. It was destroyed by the collective action of its depositors in a classic bank run.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Se%C3%A1n_Quinn" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Se%C3%A1n_Quinn</a> is another example; he managed to persuade the bank, via accomplices, to lend him €451 million to buy its own shares in a sort of circular pyramid scheme to inflate its value.
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41,798,380
41,798,027
null
[ 41799363 ]
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41,799,265
comment
Ajedi32
2024-10-10T14:35:39
null
If the only options are &quot;full access to everything&quot; or &quot;no access at all&quot; then users are going to pick the former every time, because there&#x27;s no alternative. And worse, they&#x27;ll get used to extensions requiring &quot;full access to everything&quot; and become more likely to approve that permission even for malicious extensions. That&#x27;s essentially the situation for lots of extensions prior to manifest v3 (and arguably post-v3 too, but it&#x27;s a step in the right direction).<p>Fine-grained permissions are a good thing, even though they do unfortunately make things more challenging for developers.
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41,789,409
41,784,287
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41,799,266
comment
MisterBastahrd
2024-10-10T14:35:46
null
Yeah, I&#x27;m sure the 1% of people this actually affects will be really big mad and stuff.
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null
41,796,112
41,780,569
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null
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null
41,799,267
story
davidbarker
2024-10-10T14:35:51
null
null
null
1
null
41,799,267
null
null
null
true
41,799,268
comment
AlotOfReading
2024-10-10T14:35:51
null
&gt; List them. I am not aware of any well defined parts of the C standard where GCC and Clang disagree in implementation.<p>Perhaps it&#x27;s not &quot;well defined&quot; enough for you, but one example I&#x27;ve been stamping out recently is whether compilers will combine subexpressions across expression boundaries. For example, if you have z = x + y; a = b * z; will the compiler optimize across the semicolon to produce an fma? GCC does it aggressively, while Clang broadly will not (though it can happen in the LLVM backend).
null
null
41,798,669
41,757,701
null
[ 41799892, 41799817 ]
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null
41,799,269
story
Brajeshwar
2024-10-10T14:35:56
What is MSG, how does it enhance flavor, and is it safe to eat?
null
https://www.abc.net.au/news/science/2024-10-10/msg-monosodium-glutamate-flavour-enhancer-health-safety/104418660
2
null
41,799,269
0
null
null
null
41,799,270
comment
tialaramex
2024-10-10T14:35:56
null
I really am interested in what Safer C++ proposes for [1], but I never found out.<p>Your point [4] is very silly because you&#x27;re assuming that while the unsafe code implementing a safe Rust interface might be flawed the code implementing a safe Java interface such as its garbage collector (which will often be C++) cannot be. As we&#x27;d expect, both these components are occasionally defective, having been made by error prone humans, such flaws are neither impossible nor common in either system. There are indeed even safer choices, and I&#x27;ve recommended them - but they&#x27;re not Garbage Collected.<p>&gt; First and foremost, the phrase &quot;undefined behavior&quot; only applies to C and C++ because the specifications of those languages define it.<p>Nope, those words have an ordinary meaning and are indeed used by Rust&#x27;s own documentation, for example the Rustonomicon says at one point early on, &quot;No matter what, Safe Rust can&#x27;t cause Undefined Behavior&quot;. The purpose there is definitional, it&#x27;s not a boast about how awesome Rust is, it&#x27;s a claim that if there <i>is</i> Undefined Behaviour that&#x27;s not because of the safe Rust, there&#x27;s a soundness problem somewhere else.<p>&gt; Another example: signed overflow being UB is not a memory safety problem unless the value is used for array indexing<p>This is wrong. Because Signed Overflow is UB the C++ compiler is allowed to just assume it will never happen, regardless of the systemic consequences. What that means is that other IR transformations will <i>always be legal</i> even if they wouldn&#x27;t have been legal for any possible result of the overflow. This can and does destroy memory safety. Actually it would be weird if somehow the IR transformations always preserved memory safety, something they know nothing about, despite changing what the code does.
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41,798,049
41,791,773
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null
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41,799,271
comment
tightbookkeeper
2024-10-10T14:36:02
null
I don’t need to know all of those histories are filled with debate and nuance and it’s not clear what would have happened in a counterfactual.<p>You’re repeating someones posthoc thesis as obvious fact.<p>It’s probably a good point to share. Let’s just have a little more skepticism and openness to other analysis.
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41,796,450
41,784,287
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null
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41,799,272
story
Brajeshwar
2024-10-10T14:36:04
Rapid analysis finds climate change's fingerprint on Hurricane Helene
null
https://arstechnica.com/science/2024/10/helenes-carolina-rainfall-made-70-percent-more-likely-by-climate-change/
2
null
41,799,272
0
null
null
null
41,799,273
comment
teddyh
2024-10-10T14:36:04
null
If there actuallt <i>exists</i> a community, they can scare up somebody to host some infrastructure the community depends on. Otherwise the community is dead, and it’s archive.org you should be thanking.
null
null
41,799,052
41,797,719
null
[ 41801035, 41799364 ]
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null
41,799,274
comment
amelius
2024-10-10T14:36:08
null
Our browsers just need a boss-key.
null
null
41,798,317
41,793,597
null
null
null
null
41,799,275
story
Brajeshwar
2024-10-10T14:36:19
The Astrophysicist Decoding the Universe's Most Mysterious Stellar Remnants
null
https://scitechdaily.com/meet-the-astrophysicist-decoding-the-universes-most-mysterious-stellar-remnants/
2
null
41,799,275
0
null
null
null
41,799,276
comment
raxxorraxor
2024-10-10T14:36:26
null
This is very, very targeted with minimal casualties. Just compare it to other conflicts.<p>Of course hitting an air field will likely not kill civilians, but that is not a sensible comparison.<p>Wars can have up to 90% civilian casualty rate, 60%-70% in most modern conflicts.<p>Their operation was impressive and targeted and it crippled the enemy that launched rockets into Israel for months.
null
null
41,792,794
41,783,867
null
[ 41803347 ]
null
null
41,799,277
story
Brajeshwar
2024-10-10T14:36:26
Linus Torvalds declares war on the passive voice
null
https://www.theregister.com/2024/10/08/linus_torvalds_grammar_complaint/
7
null
41,799,277
0
[ 41799826 ]
null
null
41,799,278
story
socialcooling
2024-10-10T14:36:28
Papeg.ai – Free, easy to use, local AI for everyone
null
https://www.papeg.ai
3
null
41,799,278
1
[ 41799279 ]
null
null
41,799,279
comment
socialcooling
2024-10-10T14:36:28
null
Free 100% client-side chatting and writing with AI. Even your documents are stored in your browser.<p>Which means you get 100% privacy: everything happens on your own device.<p>Some features: - Proofreading, rewriting, summarizing, translating documents - Chatting with AI characters, even using your voice - Generating images and music - Transcribing and summarizing meetings - Transcribing audio files - Creating subtitles for video files<p>The only limit is how powerful your own device is.<p>You can find the code on Github here: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;flatsiedatsie&#x2F;papeg_ai">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;flatsiedatsie&#x2F;papeg_ai</a>
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null
41,799,278
41,799,278
null
null
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null
41,799,280
comment
GenerocUsername
2024-10-10T14:36:37
null
This has probably helped so many people.... In the imaginations of other people
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null
41,798,523
41,793,597
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null
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41,799,281
comment
Shocka1
2024-10-10T14:36:40
null
I feel like the point here is that there is a sort of silly manipulation that OP is actively conducting on initial conversations with people that only take one data point. I am 100% sure that people are much more complex than an Atlas Shrugged test, very similar to the way that prediction algorithms use multiple attributes. One test or attribute is overly simplistic.<p>I don&#x27;t think it requires any special insight to understand that a fantastic approach to meeting people is to simply be genuine and honest.
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41,769,684
41,756,432
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41,799,282
comment
deepmacro
2024-10-10T14:36:44
null
I&#x27;d have to look more into it, one thing for sure is that Tenno does not try to be something like Jupyter. The cells execution order is sorted out for you.
null
null
41,799,221
41,798,477
null
[ 41802847, 41801333 ]
null
null
41,799,283
comment
wrsh07
2024-10-10T14:36:47
null
My usual statement on monads is &quot;like any abstraction, it makes sense when you need it&quot;<p>If you write a lot of go code and think &quot;this error management (!= nil anybody?) is a drag, there has to be a better way! The truth is: go largely looks like how cpp is written at Google, EXCEPT in Google cpp you get to use macros like RETURN_IF_ERROR which handles the ubiquitous StatusOr class.<p>Is this StatusOr a monad? I&#x27;m failing to recall what the monad functions look like internally, but I suspect it&#x27;s trivial to make it one (I mean, it probably is! And if it&#x27;s not it would be trivial to make it one)<p>Do you need to understand monads to see why they&#x27;re useful here? I don&#x27;t think so! And so even if you don&#x27;t know how to build the microwave, you know how to use it.
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41,794,944
41,758,371
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41,799,284
comment
kayson
2024-10-10T14:36:51
null
There is a setting for sharing usage data but it was disabled by default.
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null
41,799,206
41,798,615
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null
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41,799,285
comment
ozim
2024-10-10T14:36:54
null
I can see how increasing resources can be useful as &quot;try to stop the bleeding RIGHT NOW!&quot;, but yeah if a single user has issues if there is not much other activity that&#x27;s like doing CPR on a person that is screaming &quot;stop, my foot is bleeding&quot; and &quot;hey man we will try this first, stop screaming&quot; ;)
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41,794,309
41,793,658
null
null
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null
41,799,286
comment
bollu
2024-10-10T14:37:13
null
I&#x27;m curious, which solver did you work on? And yeah, I&#x27;ve been working on formally verifying bitblasting in Lean (<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;leanprover&#x2F;lean4&#x2F;pulls?q=+is%3Apr+author%3Abollu+">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;leanprover&#x2F;lean4&#x2F;pulls?q=+is%3Apr+author%...</a>), and it&#x27;s genius --- the algorithms, the reductions, the heuristics, it&#x27;s all so deep.
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null
41,796,754
41,753,626
null
[ 41799557 ]
null
null
41,799,287
comment
Freak_NL
2024-10-10T14:37:13
null
I totally missed that K-9 Mail would become Thunderbird¹. Given that both Thunderbird on the desktop and K-9 Mail on the smartphone serve the same group and seem to share a similar philosophy, this makes sense. I already use both in any case.<p>1: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;arstechnica.com&#x2F;gadgets&#x2F;2022&#x2F;06&#x2F;email-client-k-9-mail-will-become-thunderbird-for-android&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;arstechnica.com&#x2F;gadgets&#x2F;2022&#x2F;06&#x2F;email-client-k-9-mai...</a>
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41,798,615
41,798,615
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41,799,288
comment
EraYaN
2024-10-10T14:37:13
null
At that point the older generations will already be wielding their political power with an iron fist to get the last drops of all the money and resources that do not get replenished. This was never an apocalypse type issue, but always purely political and the younger generations will suffer for it. THAT is the main issue, if you are old enough now you&#x27;ll be fine, you&#x27;ll get to &quot;eat&quot; the last little bit of stuff and then you pass away. It&#x27;s the folks that have 60 years to go that are in trouble. Convincing the elderly to not vote or to take &quot;their&quot; stuff away is always going to be unpopular when 60% of the voting block in that age.
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41,799,211
41,798,726
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41,799,289
comment
Sander_Marechal
2024-10-10T14:37:43
null
That has absolutely zero to do with PHP itself and everything with the abysmal state of Wordpress code.
null
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41,794,823
41,791,369
null
[ 41800026 ]
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41,799,290
comment
bombcar
2024-10-10T14:37:47
null
The Dwarf Fortress wiki <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;dwarffortresswiki.org" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;dwarffortresswiki.org</a> is perhaps the most impressive I&#x27;ve seen, as it maintains namespaces to maintain (and update!) information about particular versions, because many players end up staying on a version for various reasons.
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null
41,798,830
41,797,719
null
[ 41799343, 41799378, 41801178 ]
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null
41,799,291
comment
eesmith
2024-10-10T14:38:05
null
You sure they weren&#x27;t using microfilm? Quoting <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Microform" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Microform</a><p>&gt; Libraries began using microfilm in the mid-20th century as a preservation strategy for deteriorating newspaper collections. Books and newspapers that were deemed in danger of decay could be preserved on film and thus access and use could be increased. Microfilming was also a space-saving measure. In his 1945 book, The Scholar and the Future of the Research Library, Fremont Rider calculated that research libraries were doubling in space every sixteen years. His suggested solution was microfilming, specifically with his invention, the microcard. Once items were put onto film, they could be removed from circulation and additional shelf space would be made available for rapidly expanding collections. The microcard was superseded by microfiche. By the 1960s, microfilming had become standard policy.<p>and<p>&gt; Harvard University Library was the first major institution to realize the potential of microfilm to preserve broadsheets printed on high-acid newsprint and it launched its &quot;Foreign Newspaper Project&quot; to preserve such ephemeral publications in 1938
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null
41,798,201
41,789,815
null
null
null
null
41,799,292
comment
sph
2024-10-10T14:38:12
null
A thing that bothers me is that Jimmy Wales, a founder of and arguably the face of Wikipedia, is also the founder and president of Fandom, Inc. (2004–present)<p>I respect the work of Mr. Wales immensely, and I cannot explain how he has allowed his creation to become synonymous with ad-ridden borderline unusable gaming wikis.
null
null
41,797,719
41,797,719
null
[ 41799973, 41799984 ]
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41,799,293
comment
duxup
2024-10-10T14:38:22
null
I enjoyed reading their thought process. That was a good read.<p>But I agree the end result feels like an over thought process that comes up with something completely counter intuitive that someone would seem to need to trigger at a moments notice.<p>To some extent this seems to be one of those &quot;well they did something&quot; solutions that for a lot of work, provides near zero value.
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null
41,793,597
41,793,597
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41,799,294
comment
webninja
2024-10-10T14:38:24
null
The next headline based on this map: “Areas with legalized marijuana are associated with higher software engineer pay.”
null
null
41,792,055
41,792,055
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null
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41,799,295
comment
DonnyV
2024-10-10T14:38:24
null
I wonder how large you can make these. Also is the linear movement limited to one direction? Like could I make one that can move north, south, west and east?
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null
41,790,223
41,766,087
null
[ 41801149 ]
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null
41,799,296
comment
jmpman
2024-10-10T14:38:27
null
Building a business empire your entire life, taking loans against that business, having step up cost basis upon death, leaving everything to your heirs - without estate taxes - isn’t “fair”
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null
41,790,482
41,780,569
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null
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null
41,799,297
comment
ahazred8ta
2024-10-10T14:38:37
null
Sadly, UNIFIL is only authorized to support Lebanese Army efforts to keep Hezbollah out, not to fight in the absence of the Lebanese Army.
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null
41,798,543
41,798,445
null
[ 41799457 ]
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41,799,298
comment
sandreas
2024-10-10T14:38:37
null
Herr is mine..<p><pre><code> # dra - download releases from gh devmatteini&#x2F;dra # bat - modern cat replacement sharkdp&#x2F;bat # btop - process explorer aristocratos&#x2F;btop # difftastic - better diff difft;Wilfred&#x2F;difftastic # eza - modern ls replacement eza-community&#x2F;eza # fd - find replacement sharkdp&#x2F;fd # fzf - fuzzy finder junegunn&#x2F;fzf # gdu - disk usage analyzer similar to ncdu but faster dundee&#x2F;gdu # jless - json viewer PaulJuliusMartinez&#x2F;jless # jq - json query tool jqlang&#x2F;jq # lazydocker - terminal docker management ui jesseduffield&#x2F;lazydocker # pandoc - document conversion tool jgm&#x2F;pandoc # pandoc dependency typst&#x2F;typst # restic - repository based backup tool restic&#x2F;restic # rg - ripgrep, better grep tool rg;BurntSushi&#x2F;ripgrep # rga - ripgrep-all, grep for PDF rga;phiresky&#x2F;ripgrep-all # starship - powerlevel10k replacement starship&#x2F;starship # tone - audio tagger sandreas&#x2F;tone # yazi - terminal file manager sxyazi&#x2F;yazi # zellij - terminal multiplexer zellij-org&#x2F;zellij # zoxide - modern cd replacement ajeetdsouza&#x2F;zoxide</code></pre>
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41,791,708
41,791,708
null
[ 41799568 ]
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41,799,299
comment
ath3nd
2024-10-10T14:38:39
null
&gt; Anyone who is familiar with either health or defense policy details knows that the US taxpayer is absorbing an absurd amount of cost which enables other countries to do things we cannot<p>That, too, is nonsense. The price of insulin in the US is roughly 10 times than the price of the same drug, produced by the same company, in Canada. Same applies for many life-saving drugs which are price-regulated in the rest of the civilized world, while in the US they are left to be determined to a large extent by the &quot;free market&quot;. Whether you import the drugs or services or not, you can still put a price cap on them, but the US govt simply refuses to do so, by choice.
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41,799,064
41,786,818
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