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41,799,800
comment
j45
2024-10-10T15:22:46
null
It&#x27;s important to systemize (get it working manually) before automating.<p>Premature automation can create more complexity in the process as edge cases are usually added in, or needing routing.<p>If you&#x27;re building process management and automation from scratch as a way to learn, it&#x27;s also a red flag of technical debt waiting.
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41,765,594
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41,799,801
comment
dawnerd
2024-10-10T15:22:49
null
And varies by brand. For example stuff from Aldi (their house brands) don’t really last past the best but dates. Often will be spoiling before the date.
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41,799,031
41,765,006
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null
41,799,802
comment
jeberle
2024-10-10T15:22:57
null
Thx for this perspective and info. Regarding &quot;signedness and floating point that closer matches hardware&quot;, I&#x27;m not seeing unsigned integers. Are they supported? I see only:<p>&gt; Two’s complement signed integers in 32 bits and optionally 64 bits.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;webassembly.org&#x2F;docs&#x2F;portability&#x2F;#assumptions-for-efficient-execution" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;webassembly.org&#x2F;docs&#x2F;portability&#x2F;#assumptions-for-ef...</a><p>And nothing suggesting unsigned ints here:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;webassembly.org&#x2F;features&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;webassembly.org&#x2F;features&#x2F;</a>
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comment
lisper
2024-10-10T15:23:05
null
&gt; there&#x27;s been presumably hundreds of applicants<p>Well, that&#x27;s exactly the question, isn&#x27;t it. You can&#x27;t presume this because the answer to the question turns on the actual fact of the matter.
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comment
Sauravsingh6
2024-10-10T15:23:07
null
Thank you for sharing Tenno with the HN community! It&#x27;s always exciting to see new tools that enhance productivity and bridge the gap between document creation and computational analysis.
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41,798,477
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comment
deepmacro
2024-10-10T15:23:10
null
Honestly, no. I heard of it but I never used it. I am sure it has a lot of features that can inspire Tenno, I&#x27;ll look more into it. One of the main points here was making it more approachable, but it depends on who the audience is.
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41,799,483
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41,799,806
comment
stonethrowaway
2024-10-10T15:23:12
null
In other words, avoid pathological behaviour.
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null
41,797,067
41,795,218
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41,799,807
comment
jmb99
2024-10-10T15:23:19
null
$400 billion was spent on advertising alone in the US in 2023. In 1970, that number was $19 billion ($150 billion in 2023 dollars). Relative to GDP, that’s and 0.014% and 0.018% respectively. Depending on how you want to argue, there is either more spending on advertising (in dollars) than there was 50 years ago, or about the same (in relative GDP). Neither would account for products in the past being substantially more expensive than they are today.<p>That is ignoring the many moral arguments against targeted advertising, unnecessary consumerism, etc.
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41,796,734
41,784,287
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story
joemcb
2024-10-10T15:23:20
Spooked: Ghostbusters, Change Management and the Domino Theory of Reality
null
https://www.joemcb.com/posts/spooked-domino-theory
1
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41,799,808
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vegadw
2024-10-10T15:23:24
Language Model Sketchbook, or Why I Hate Chatbots (2023)
null
https://maggieappleton.com/lm-sketchbook
1
null
41,799,809
0
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41,799,810
comment
openasocket
2024-10-10T15:23:27
null
I work with Go a lot at my job, and I definitely prefer functional programming so I chafe at the language a bit. I was excited to incorporate iterators into our code. Unfortunately, I&#x27;m also working in an environment where we are memory constrained, so on our hot path we need to not allocate at all. I tried playing with the iterators a bit, and couldn&#x27;t get it to produce something that didn&#x27;t allocate. I got close, but as much as a tried I couldn&#x27;t get below 1 allocation per loop (not per loop iteration, per loop). Which in any other setting would be fine, but not for our use case.
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41,799,811
comment
actinium226
2024-10-10T15:23:45
null
I&#x27;ve noticed no one seems to look at number of PRs per week or average length of time and MR is open. Those seems like they should be good metrics for both how well a team is collaborating and how fast they&#x27;re moving (perhaps normalized by LOC in the MR, but then again smaller MRs tend to go through faster so maybe LOC is already reflected in the metric).
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null
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story
rbanffy
2024-10-10T15:23:55
null
null
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41,799,813
comment
ryandvm
2024-10-10T15:24:00
null
That extra money comes in handy when you&#x27;re paying $15K&#x2F;year for health insurance because if you don&#x27;t a few hours in the hospital would cost you triple that.
null
null
41,799,449
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null
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41,799,814
comment
null
2024-10-10T15:24:01
null
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41,799,815
comment
ko_pivot
2024-10-10T15:24:03
null
Azure is the only major (or even minor) cloud provider refusing to build an S3 API. Strange to me, because Azure Cosmos DB supports Mongo and Cassandra at the API level, for example, so idk what is so offensive to them about S3 becoming the standard HTTP API for object storage.
null
null
41,799,076
41,797,041
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41,799,816
comment
null
2024-10-10T15:24:10
null
null
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41,796,500
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comment
Arch-TK
2024-10-10T15:24:14
null
You&#x27;re very right that this goes above and beyond anything the C standard specifies aside from stating that the end result should be the same as if the expressions were evaluated separately (unless you have -ffast-math enabled which makes GCC non-conformant in this regard).<p>If the end result of the calculation differ (and remember that implementations may not always use ieee floats) then you can call it a bug in whatever compiler has that difference.
null
null
41,799,268
41,757,701
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comment
dawnerd
2024-10-10T15:24:14
null
Been seeing that in the states too. A lot of old produce, but I blame high prices not moving it fast enough.
null
null
41,774,293
41,765,006
null
null
null
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41,799,819
comment
diggan
2024-10-10T15:24:19
null
If I imagine being Norwegian, I bet the answer to that question is &quot;Nope&quot; more than &quot;Yes&quot;.
null
null
41,799,750
41,799,016
null
[ 41801578 ]
null
null
41,799,820
comment
chrsig
2024-10-10T15:24:22
null
the &quot;which ones are deployed where&quot; bit is nice. if you&#x27;re managing a lot of repos and deployments, yeah, that kind of thing can get really messy.<p>i don&#x27;t care how it&#x27;s presented, via webpage or cli tool or whatever -- just saying that when you <i>are</i> working at larger scale, those are very reasonable things to want to see in one spot at a glance.<p>the need dissipates as you scale down.
null
null
41,799,306
41,765,594
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[ 41802263 ]
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41,799,821
comment
kqr
2024-10-10T15:24:35
null
Hypothetically, wouldn&#x27;t an abuser start to find it suspicious when a blank page loads BBC Weather as they enter the room?
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null
41,793,597
41,793,597
null
null
null
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41,799,822
comment
lisper
2024-10-10T15:24:42
null
The difference between coca and cocaine is rather like the difference between sugar cane and refined sugar. In fact, that is quite a good analogy in more ways than one.
null
null
41,787,798
41,787,798
null
[ 41801430 ]
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41,799,823
story
rbanffy
2024-10-10T15:24:51
No Time Like MEMS Time – By Dr. Ian Cutress
null
https://morethanmoore.substack.com/p/no-time-like-mems-time
1
null
41,799,823
0
null
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41,799,824
comment
schwartzworld
2024-10-10T15:24:53
null
How do you know this happened as a result of the sellby, as opposed to being improperly stored? The package could get wet at any point.
null
null
41,799,652
41,765,006
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comment
shtopointo
2024-10-10T15:24:54
null
Won&#x27;t the producers just leave the same date in, but change the wording before it?
null
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41,765,006
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41,799,826
comment
null
2024-10-10T15:25:04
null
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41,799,277
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41,799,827
comment
HarHarVeryFunny
2024-10-10T15:25:09
null
Exchange rates are determined by markets based on supply and demand, with demand being based on things like investment opportunity, as well as structural demand such as for petro-dollar oil payments.<p>Currency markets are mostly too big for governments to be able to manipulate (e.g. George Soros &amp; GBP).
null
null
41,799,575
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41,799,828
comment
yoavm
2024-10-10T15:25:19
null
You can generally see the version for any Android app by swiping up to reveal the app switcher, then click the app icon, &quot;info&quot;, and scroll down to see the version.
null
null
41,799,621
41,798,615
null
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41,799,829
comment
immibis
2024-10-10T15:25:21
null
Depends what it&#x27;s sending. I don&#x27;t blame Mozilla for wanting to know the distribution of number of email servers (this influences UX decisions) nor for defaulting sync to something that Just Works (that&#x27;s the reason everyone uses Apple and Google products after all, they Just Work).<p>My concern is they&#x27;ll just make it worse. My other concern is they felt the need to use the same Thunderbird brand on several independent products.
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41,798,615
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41,799,830
comment
null
2024-10-10T15:25:26
null
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41,799,718
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41,799,831
comment
kedarkhand
2024-10-10T15:25:35
null
What is the 90-9-1 rule?
null
null
41,794,054
41,791,773
null
[ 41800403 ]
null
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41,799,832
comment
FrustratedMonky
2024-10-10T15:25:37
null
&quot;10,000 and yours is a wide range of 3.6 to 5.2 MILLION, I will dismiss you out of hand&quot;<p>Except the article did NOT say that.<p>You are taking a miss-reading and spreading your own misinformation.<p>It said &quot;7,000 to 11,000 excess deaths&quot; Per Storm.<p>Across ALL storms from 1930 , 3.6-5.2 Million.<p>For Impact. Maybe to also reach, since you are ok with reaching, what if one of the reasons the South East, AL, Miss, Florida, GA are 3rd world dumps, is because of constant bombardment of storms and it has had an economic impact.
null
null
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comment
tuetuopay
2024-10-10T15:25:40
null
And there&#x27;s no need to be to speak some &quot;obscure&quot; language (from the point of view of the US-centric designers) to hit this issue. iOS got better at mixed french &#x2F; english, but it still cannot prevent itself from correcting &quot;the&quot; (the english the) to &quot;thé&quot; (french for tea). Oh well.
null
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41,796,471
41,793,597
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41,799,834
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null
2024-10-10T15:25:40
null
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comment
lotsofpulp
2024-10-10T15:25:46
null
&gt; 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.<p>How does omnivore not cover most people’s diets in India? (in the context of a discussion about populations of people that avoid eating animals)<p>It seems like Indians use vegetarian to describe frequency or proportion of one’s diet that is animals. Seems like there could be better terminology used to avoid confusion.
null
null
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comment
bombcar
2024-10-10T15:25:50
null
Tell me about it; playing GregTech:New Horizons and trying to figure out <i>vanilla</i> mechanics related to 1.7.10 is annoying. All the GTNH specific stuff is on their wiki, but vanilla mechanics are just assumed.
null
null
41,799,343
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comment
verdverm
2024-10-10T15:25:54
null
torus and mobius strip are both genus 1<p>imagine inflating the mobius strip like a long balloon, so that it loses the edge
null
null
41,798,525
41,762,483
null
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null
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41,799,838
comment
pjmlp
2024-10-10T15:25:58
null
Editions only cover syntax changes, and are hardly any different from compiler language switches when semantic and standard library changes are part of the picture.<p>Lets see how complex Rust turns out to be, if it is still around after 30 years, to actually have fair comparison.<p>We can also compare Rust in 2024, with the equivalent C++ version at 10 years old, when C++98 was still around the corner, C++ARM was the actual reference, and in that case the complexity fairs pretty equal across both languages.<p>As for safety, as someone that is a hardcover believer in systems programming languages with automatic resource management, I would rather see C++ folks embrace security than rewrite the world from scratch.<p>After all, Rust is in no rush to drop the hard dependency on LLVM and GCC infrastructure.
null
null
41,799,658
41,791,773
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[ 41800262 ]
null
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41,799,839
comment
engineer_22
2024-10-10T15:25:59
null
&quot;DO NOT CONSUME AFTER&quot;
null
null
41,798,935
41,765,006
null
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41,799,840
comment
sddsdd
2024-10-10T15:26:09
null
Primary home mortgages are all non-recourse in CA. Texas is similar. The exceptions are things like cash out refis, second mortgages, fraud.
null
null
41,799,394
41,798,027
null
null
null
null
41,799,841
comment
adityaathalye
2024-10-10T15:26:12
null
Have you heard the Radia tapes? I have, in their entirety. They&#x27;re out there to listen to, if you want. Fascinating piece of the zeitgeist.<p>My listening suggests he lived up to his legacy of above-board, gentlemanly conduct.<p>Compare Radia&#x27;s phone calls to Ratan, with her conversations with the rest of the lot.<p>Ratan is a master class in, well class and restraint.<p>I think when you&#x27;re that big and are so hard-wired into the real economy of a country as huge and populous as India, you can&#x27;t not &quot;play the game&quot;, so to speak.<p>The question is do you remain <i>human</i> despite every incentive to turn into a self-serving gluttonous tyrant?<p>The TATAs weren&#x27;t and aren&#x27;t saints. They are humans we should have more of, in those positions of wealth and power.
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null
41,797,857
41,795,218
null
null
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41,799,842
comment
adamc
2024-10-10T15:26:17
null
Labor prices will go up but scarcity will go down. People will end up doing more of their own labor, in all likelihood, but I still think it is likely to help.
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null
41,799,148
41,798,726
null
null
null
null
41,799,843
comment
null
2024-10-10T15:26:19
null
null
null
null
41,798,857
41,764,465
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41,799,844
story
tmostak
2024-10-10T15:26:20
Embed AI fuzzy logic into your SQL
null
https://www.heavy.ai/blog/making-sql-smarter-how-to-embed-ai-into-your-queries-with-heavyiq
1
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comment
FireBeyond
2024-10-10T15:26:30
null
You&#x27;d be entirely wrong, then. That event was WordCamp, &quot;the largest annual gathering in the U.S. of WordPress users&quot;, an event started by Matt Mullenweg:<p>&gt; WordCamps come in all different flavors, based on the local communities that produce them, but in general, WordCamps include sessions on how to use WordPress more effectively, beginning plugin and theme development, advanced techniques, security, etc. To get an idea of the types of sessions typically seen at WordCamps, check out the WordCamp channel at WordPress.tv.
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null
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41,799,846
comment
cookmeplox
2024-10-10T15:26:36
null
We&#x27;re already turning a profit! And there are no third-party investors (or debt) – it&#x27;s all controlled by wiki people[1]<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;meta.weirdgloop.org&#x2F;w&#x2F;Weird_Gloop_Limited" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;meta.weirdgloop.org&#x2F;w&#x2F;Weird_Gloop_Limited</a>
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null
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comment
hauxir
2024-10-10T15:26:39
null
We&#x27;re using it with great success at kosmi.io
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null
41,792,304
41,792,304
null
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41,799,848
comment
staticvoidstar
2024-10-10T15:26:42
null
I think OP means internal compulsion, not external compulsion. If I have tons of money why wouldn&#x27;t I want to try to &quot;buy&quot; influence.
null
null
41,799,442
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null
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41,799,849
comment
highfrequency
2024-10-10T15:26:45
null
This is missing one key attribute, which encompasses:<p>- mental flexibility &#x2F; open-mindedness<p>- learning from others &#x2F; humility<p>- seeking out breadth<p>- aggressively addressing blind spots, removing ignorance and correcting weaknesses by <i>constantly evolving to add new, orthogonal competencies.</i> (Note that you can bypass some of this work by working with people who have orthogonal competencies)<p>These traits are not captured by cleverness. You can be clever, brave and persistent but still fail by exploring too <i>narrowly</i>: applying a narrow range of techniques to a narrow range of problems which turn out to not admit any particularly fruitful paths.<p>Our brains tend strongly toward consistency (following the same cognitive grooves that we have previously etched in). We naturally shy away from things that are unfamiliar, uncomfortable, or that remind us of past failings. This tendency was probably useful in some evolutionary contexts but very clearly counterproductive when seeking sparse pockets of abundance in high dimensional spaces; cognitive dissonance is usually a strong sign that we have something valuable to learn, and thus dissonance should be <i>approached</i> with curiosity rather than avoided in a dismissive or fearful way. (In the ancient past, cognitive dissonance and unfamiliarity often meant there was a real chance of death if we proceeded in that direction!) Deliberately counteracting this tendency toward consistency, stubbornness and tunnel vision is a consistent theme among people from Charles Darwin to Charlie Munger. [0]<p>I would even bet that this attribute could replace a fair amount of cleverness. Someone who is persistent, brave, mentally flexible and who aggressively seeks out best practices from others will almost certainly be successful.<p>[0] An example from a book I read last week: the Google founders were initially stubborn about not putting ads on their site because of preconceived notions that ads would necessarily corrupt the integrity of search ranking. For a while they kept trying to make money by <i>licensing</i> search as a service to other businesses. This simply didn&#x27;t work, and they were rapidly running out of the money necessary to buy the servers to keep scaling Google with the Web&#x27;s growth. Fortunately they eventually bumped into Overture which was pioneering pay-per-click advertising. They studied the business model open-mindedly and found a number of distasteful things, but they also saw that these were false fails. More importantly they realized that 1) that business model actually works, 2) Google could maintain search integrity by simply displaying a clear boundary between ads and normal search results, and 3) they could provide real value by returning ads for items and information that people actually wanted based on their search results, and 4) they could avoid the pop-ups and obnoxious banner ads that they detested and keep the search UI clean and respectful. &quot;To their eternal credit, Larry and Sergey both lighted on what was happening with [Overture&#x27;s] business model and came to understand pretty rapidly what an attractive business that was...it made sense to go where the money was being spent. And it was being spent in the advertising business much more readily than in the licensing business.&quot; (<i>The Google Story</i>, p.87-89) There are a number of good lessons in here: the value of aggressively seeking breadth in exposure, learning from others&#x27; discoveries, open-mindedness over stubbornness, and the fact that if you view something as a huge tradeoff you are probably just not being creative enough.
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null
41,689,366
41,689,366
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null
null
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41,799,850
story
rbanffy
2024-10-10T15:26:48
Intel Announces Core Ultra 200S Arrow Lake CPUs Review
null
https://www.phoronix.com/review/intel-core-ultra-200-arrow-lake#google_vignette
2
null
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[ 41800641 ]
null
null
41,799,851
comment
farts_mckensy
2024-10-10T15:26:50
null
Not proven ≠ Wrong<p>It&#x27;s true, a direct link hasn&#x27;t been proven, and I was debating even mentioning that. Obviously that specific tendency alone isn&#x27;t indicative of a homicidal individual. But I would speculate that it has something to do with dysfunction&#x2F;dysregulation of the autonomic nervous system.
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null
41,796,970
41,794,807
null
null
null
null
41,799,852
comment
steffanA
2024-10-10T15:26:59
null
This is bad enough. This alone is a privacy bug&#x2F;data leak.<p>Theoretically, someone could scrape the pages and compile a list of exposed email addresses.
null
null
41,795,324
41,792,500
null
[ 41800473 ]
null
null
41,799,853
comment
greyface-
2024-10-10T15:27:01
null
&gt; Satoshi’s coins are the elephant in the room. [...] tail risk uncertainty that is holding back Bitcoin.<p>New protocol rule: all coinbase outputs from before block 105,000 are unspendable after block 1,050,000.
null
null
41,799,384
41,783,503
null
[ 41801605 ]
null
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41,799,854
comment
eviks
2024-10-10T15:27:05
null
This discussion is about the current practice where a more widely used Ctrl+W is hard to remember, but somehow a niche 3xShift isn&#x27;t, not a potential future info campaign
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null
41,797,797
41,793,597
null
null
null
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41,799,855
comment
UniverseHacker
2024-10-10T15:27:08
null
You are making the mistake of confusing a mind with a human mind… a vastly different type of mind should not be expected to be good at everything we are good at, even if generally far more intelligent. I think people generally make the same mistake with discounting the more intelligent animals by focusing on their inability to act human, and ignoring or not noticing that they can do things we are incapable of- like a dog navigating spaces in total darkness from scent alone.<p>A human mind, for example is not sufficiently generally intelligent to convincing mimic even a fish mind- we cannot generally emulate minds structured differently from ours- e.g. humans cannot actually do the meta task your concept of the Turing test expects AI to do. Even an actual human mind with vastly different experiences- simulated perfectly in a computer or even just a regular person from a very different culture will fail your concept of the turing test, because our mind is shaped by our experiences.<p>Also, I think your conception of LLM limitations is mistaken. We don’t fully understand them in theory- but I think the way to think of LLMs is that they are a probablistic world model able to simulate almost any scenario if setup properly. They are not themselves a mind, but if sufficiently good, they will simulate minds- and those simulated minds are actually minds but not human minds. Noam Chomsky published an article arguing how LLMs were incapable even in theory of doing things GPT4, which was released shortly after his article can do- showing that either his model of what they are, or of what is required for those tasks is mistaken. Ironically his way of thinking involves failing to understand that intelligent minds vastly different than human minds are even possible- while expecting AI to be able to not just understand but correctly navigate that situation.
null
null
41,794,917
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null
2024-10-10T15:27:08
null
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LinuxBender
2024-10-10T15:27:14
CISA adds fresh Ivanti vuln, critical Fortinet bug to hall of shame
null
https://www.theregister.com/2024/10/10/cisa_ivanti_fortinet_vulns/
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null
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[ 41800638 ]
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aleclarsoniv
2024-10-10T15:27:16
null
* Not the creator of Terser, but the lead maintainer
null
null
41,794,492
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null
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comment
codezero
2024-10-10T15:27:27
null
[dead]
null
null
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comment
Dalewyn
2024-10-10T15:27:39
null
Depending on who you ask, flour isn&#x27;t food.<p>I consider them crazies in the same vein as vegetarians who judge whether something is a vegetable based on how cute it looks.
null
null
41,799,528
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null
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comment
madduci
2024-10-10T15:27:40
null
Imagine investing this insane amount of money in healthcare and education
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null
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null
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null
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null
2024-10-10T15:27:48
null
null
null
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null
41,799,863
comment
bongodongobob
2024-10-10T15:27:54
null
Of course there is, but I don&#x27;t want the whole thing to be OSS code run by people with no skin in the game.
null
null
41,799,212
41,795,075
null
[ 41800308 ]
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null
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comment
spease
2024-10-10T15:27:55
null
I’ll try to keep this comment shorter. :)<p>The thing about Rust abstractions is that they’re a lot more useful and forgiving than C++.<p>Eg: In Rust, I cannot accidentally use an option incorrectly and have the program compile. When it fails to compile, there’s a good chance the compiler will suggest how I could do what I wanted to do.<p>In C++, if I dereference an optional without checking it, I’ve triggered “undefined behavior”. The program will probably just segfault, but it could also return a bogus object of uninitialized memory, but technically it could overwrite my boot sector or call a SWAT team to raid my house, and still be in compliance with the C++ spec.<p>Thus when considering code written in Rust, I mostly need to just consider the happy path. With C++ I need to pedantically check that they used the constructs correctly, and consider many more runtime paths due to how lax the language is.<p>If I see someone dereference an optional without an if-guard, I now need to backtrack through the logic of that entire function to make sure the program doesn’t crash. If I see someone use a destructured value from an Option in Rust, I can rest easy that unless they used unwrap() somewhere, the compiler has done that for me.<p>This scales well for larger abstractions, because if I’m not actively digging into some code I can treat it more as a black box where it interacts with the code I am working with, than as a box of firecrackers that might explode if I do something unexpected with it.
null
null
41,798,683
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null
[ 41799889 ]
null
null
41,799,865
comment
kaba0
2024-10-10T15:27:56
null
You can’t just compare across decades of software and hardware development. Even downloading native binaries would have been sluggish, as the download would have been slow with those download speeds.
null
null
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null
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null
null
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null
2024-10-10T15:27:56
null
null
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null
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comment
ChrisMarshallNY
2024-10-10T15:27:59
null
Nah. Just fishing for the typical HN veiled insult.<p>Thanks. Much appreciated.
null
null
41,799,636
41,797,084
null
[ 41800918 ]
null
null
41,799,868
comment
eesmith
2024-10-10T15:28:01
null
When my US high school US history teacher told us that expression in the 1980s, he used the &quot;bank&quot; variant, not &quot;banker&quot;. He was also from the US.
null
null
41,798,505
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null
null
null
null
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comment
ChocolateGod
2024-10-10T15:28:08
null
Ironically its now easier for robots to solve Google Captchas than it is for humans, as evident by the browser extensions that solve them that exists.
null
null
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null
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null
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comment
mistermann
2024-10-10T15:28:19
null
Oh, I was disagreeing with the proposition!! :)
null
null
41,791,810
41,782,534
null
null
null
null
41,799,871
comment
null
2024-10-10T15:28:22
null
null
null
null
41,793,587
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null
41,799,872
comment
kuon
2024-10-10T15:28:24
null
I&#x27;m a rust,zig and elixir developer and I had to work on a large typescript project that use zod.<p>I felt like I was being punished for everything. (Maybe some things were project specific so I am not saying this as an absolute) It&#x27;s slow, syntax is horrible, error are obscure super long lines, it can compile and explode later (which is what elixir does, except elixir will happily restart and recover)...<p>Elixir is based on duck typing mostly, but it works very well because you just pattern match your data when you use it. Rust is very strict and can have cryptic errors, but as everything is baked in the language it is way easier to manage.<p>I am not saying this to be snob about typescript and JS, but I really felt pain when working with that ecosystem, and I wonder if I&#x27;m old and stupid or if those tools are really half baked and over complicated.
null
null
41,764,163
41,764,163
null
[ 41800961, 41800174 ]
null
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41,799,873
comment
preciousoo
2024-10-10T15:28:24
null
Or how they use every square pixel of the dom
null
null
41,798,677
41,797,719
null
null
null
null
41,799,874
comment
adamc
2024-10-10T15:28:24
null
Well, that&#x27;s a separate issue. Even if true, it will make the situation less bad than it otherwise would be.<p>But disasters don&#x27;t usually make things that bad in the longer term -- the big effect is that it forces us to spend money, which tends to improve the economy, at a cost to stored wealth.
null
null
41,799,071
41,798,726
null
null
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41,799,875
story
LinuxBender
2024-10-10T15:28:24
Palo Alto Patches Critical Firewall Takeover Vulnerabilities
null
https://www.securityweek.com/palo-alto-patches-critical-firewall-takeover-vulnerabilities/
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null
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[ 41799897, 41800661 ]
null
null
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comment
teraflop
2024-10-10T15:28:25
null
That&#x27;s the goal -- to make the wording clearer.<p>As the article says, many people misunderstand &quot;sell by&quot; to mean &quot;only safe if used by&quot;.
null
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41,799,825
41,765,006
null
null
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KomoD
2024-10-10T15:28:28
null
You don&#x27;t need to pay anything to run TBs through Cloudflare, you could use the free plan.<p>Rent VPS or managed hosting or host wherever you want, proxy it with Cloudflare on the free plan, Cloudflare caches it.
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null
41,799,710
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41,799,878
comment
null
2024-10-10T15:28:33
null
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null
2024-10-10T15:28:50
null
null
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null
41,799,003
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41,799,880
comment
soderfoo
2024-10-10T15:28:54
null
Well yeah, but think of the poor product managers who must impose their <i>vision</i> on consumers.
null
null
41,799,376
41,795,075
null
[ 41801038 ]
null
null
41,799,881
comment
newtonsmethod
2024-10-10T15:28:59
null
Do you have a reference for the claim that exposure to fluoride from natural dietary sources is far higher than what occurs from fluoridated water?<p>An EPA review on fluoride exposure that I found (<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.epa.gov&#x2F;sites&#x2F;default&#x2F;files&#x2F;2019-03&#x2F;documents&#x2F;fluoride-exposure-relative-report.pdf" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.epa.gov&#x2F;sites&#x2F;default&#x2F;files&#x2F;2019-03&#x2F;documents&#x2F;fl...</a>) puts most estimates of the &quot;natural&quot; dietary fluoride intake at 0.9mg per day. This is in contrast to the estimated 0.7 * 2 = 1.4mg of fluoride a person will ingest from consuming fluoridated water (with a fair number of water systems fluoridated at levels greater than 0.7mg&#x2F;L).<p>Another study I found from the EFSA estimates fluoride <i>intake</i> from non-supplemented food at 0.120mg per day for adults compared to 0.500mg per day from water fluoridated at (1.0mg&#x2F;L) (<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;efsa.onlinelibrary.wiley.com&#x2F;doi&#x2F;epdf&#x2F;10.2903&#x2F;j.efsa.2005.192" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;efsa.onlinelibrary.wiley.com&#x2F;doi&#x2F;epdf&#x2F;10.2903&#x2F;j.efsa...</a>). Admittedly, in countries where salt is fluoridated, this will constitute the majority of fluoride ingested (especially given most of them don&#x27;t fluoridate their water :P). But I don&#x27;t think anti-fluoride advocates would support this either.<p>I also don&#x27;t understand what you mean by the &quot;strong claim&quot; and &quot;weak claim&quot; of the NTP monograph. You seem to have doubts that the claims of the NTP monograph are true, based off of the known mechanisms of fluoride toxicity?<p>My best guess for why the rational anti-fluoride advocates are so stirred up over water fluoridation is that it is a policy proposed without currently a rigorous scientific backing. Per the recent Cochrane review, there is evidence that fluoridation mildly benefits children&#x27;s teeth, and a lack of high-quality evidence that fluoridation presently benefits adults teeth. There also isn&#x27;t good evidence that fluoride consumption isn&#x27;t harmful at present levels (fluorosis is known to occur, and studies evaluated by the NTP point to neurodevelopmental harms, albeit with the conclusion for higher concentrations of fluoride); nor is there strong evidence that systemic fluoride ingestion has any benefits. They might therefore be angry at a somewhat political policy of forced medication that isn&#x27;t well backed.
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41,758,583
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41,799,882
comment
null
2024-10-10T15:29:17
null
null
null
null
41,798,615
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story
LinuxBender
2024-10-10T15:29:18
LLM attacks take just 42 seconds on average, 20% of jailbreaks succeed
null
https://www.scworld.com/news/llm-attacks-take-just-42-seconds-on-average-20-of-jailbreaks-succeed
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[ 41800532, 41800480, 41800487 ]
null
null
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comment
kylebenzle
2024-10-10T15:29:22
null
That is unfair and a mischaracterization of Mozilla.<p>1. Most people are not using a fully encrypted self-hosted email server. &quot;Phoning home&quot; is meaningless if everything is already hosted in the cloud, more like the cloud phoning the cloud. But point taken, it is one MORE person with access to your data.<p>2. Again, sync services are helpful for most people and can easily be disabled for power users.<p>3. Mozilla is doing as much for free software as anyone and should be supported in this expansion.
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null
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41,798,615
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[ 41801117, 41800617 ]
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comment
paranoidxprod
2024-10-10T15:29:32
null
Just tested a bunch and it seems like `path of exile [skill&#x2F;currency]` usually ranks the Fandom higher while `poe [skill&#x2F;currency]` ranks the new wiki higher which is why I never noticed (I actually never noticed because I block the PoE Fandom and pin the new wiki on Kagi)
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null
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[ 41800703 ]
null
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comment
the_gorilla
2024-10-10T15:29:53
null
That&#x27;s a positive feedback loop. Ads are the root of all evil on the internet, and the end of that loop is &quot;no more ads&quot;. And I don&#x27;t want to hear shit about the internet dying without ads, in the same thread people are talking about cloudflare serving TBs of data for free or a $4 unmetered VPS.
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null
41,799,171
41,797,719
null
null
null
null
41,799,887
comment
adamc
2024-10-10T15:30:01
null
Nah. It will happen gradually and the existence of older housing that is still viable if not work-free will reduce the costs. Older people will for sure be spending some saved wealth on this, and worker wages will go up.
null
null
41,799,184
41,798,726
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41,799,888
comment
ninetyninenine
2024-10-10T15:30:04
null
First off I can’t read that. Please use more common pseudo code for your example if you want me to understand.<p>Second it looks like there’s a function called for here that does something similar to reduce? That’s a functional thing.<p>The topic at hand is for loops as in loops that are procedural statements which is what most people recognize as loops. For, while, do while and those things you see in popular languages. Not some obscure construct in lisp.<p>If your talking about the isomorphism between functional and imperative programming, I already covered that.
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41,797,018
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41,799,889
comment
pjmlp
2024-10-10T15:30:07
null
Use the C++ clippy version, plenty of variants to chose from.<p>Which by way is a good point, even Rust needs its clippy, so not everything is so perfectly designed to make clippy superfluous.
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null
41,799,864
41,791,773
null
[ 41801519 ]
null
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41,799,890
comment
oersted
2024-10-10T15:30:16
null
I tried it once and it instantly showed no results, but then I tried it again and it returned results in &lt;1s. Just try it with a bunch of queries, I think there&#x27;s caching too so it&#x27;s hard to gauge performance properly.<p>The blog post about the demo is from 2021 and they haven&#x27;t promoted it much since. I&#x27;m surprised that they even kept it online, according to the sidebar it was ~$810&#x2F;month in AWS at the time.
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41,799,539
41,797,041
null
null
null
null
41,799,891
comment
meebob
2024-10-10T15:30:17
null
Something I really enjoyed about this article is that really helps explain a counterintuitive result in hand drawn 2D animation. It&#x27;s a well known phenomenon in hand drawn 2D animation that naively tracing over live action footage usually results in unconvincing and poor quality animation. The article demonstrates how sampling and even small amounts of noise can make a movement seem unconvincing or jittery- and seeing that, it suddenly helps make sense how something like simple tracing at 12 fps would produce bad results, without substantial error correction (which is where traditional wisdom like arcs, simplification etc comes in).
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null
41,797,462
41,797,462
null
[ 41800208 ]
null
null
41,799,892
comment
badmintonbaseba
2024-10-10T15:30:19
null
This is behavior is mostly just unspecified, at least for C++ (not sure about C).<p>I&#x27;m aware of some efforts to bring deterministic floating point operations into the C++ standard, but AFAIK there are no publicly available papers yet.
null
null
41,799,268
41,757,701
null
[ 41800176 ]
null
null
41,799,893
comment
jimbob45
2024-10-10T15:30:24
null
Haha wtf that&#x27;s not what I was going for at all. I was talking about hunting within the context of animal population control. Shelters perform animal population control with a few added steps. Not sure why everyone thought it was about eating animals when the whole danger of strays is because of a lack of animal population control.
null
null
41,799,443
41,795,218
null
[ 41799922 ]
null
null
41,799,894
comment
ToucanLoucan
2024-10-10T15:30:35
null
I think you would end up with a lot more institutions designed in the vein of Credit Unions rather than banks. The differences are subtle but noticeable. They still generate profit but they&#x27;re non-profits, and so the profits they do generate are invested immediately back into the institution, by way of expanding their branch offices, providing lower rates or relief to members who are struggling, and other misc. community-focused projects.
null
null
41,799,252
41,798,027
null
null
null
null
41,799,895
comment
TheCoelacanth
2024-10-10T15:30:39
null
I don&#x27;t think local community banks typically hold onto a lot of mortgages. They would originate the loans and then sell them to someone else.
null
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41,798,438
41,798,027
null
null
null
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41,799,896
comment
wruza
2024-10-10T15:30:46
null
[2]<p>Man why doesn’t it have a cli tool?? Wouldn’t it be nice to :&#x27;&lt;&#x27;&gt;!typeboxify a selection.
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41,794,441
41,764,163
null
null
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41,799,897
comment
Circlecrypto2
2024-10-10T15:30:51
null
Wow. This is a big hole. At least the patches didn&#x27;t brick anything like crowdstrikes did.
null
null
41,799,875
41,799,875
null
null
null
null
41,799,898
comment
dartos
2024-10-10T15:30:53
null
The lotus will be pleased.
null
null
41,798,477
41,798,477
null
null
null
null
41,799,899
comment
pzmarzly
2024-10-10T15:31:00
null
Yup, still happens. The easiest way to reproduce it to change a title of one of the charts to `title=&quot;&quot;` (make sure to type it, not copy-paste). I&#x27;m using Safari for macOS if this makes a difference.<p><pre><code> Unexpected Application Error! Unexpected EOF eval@[native code] parseChartCommand@https:&#x2F;&#x2F;tenno.app&#x2F;assets&#x2F;index-y2OkIpP6.js:114:333</code></pre>
null
null
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[ 41800029 ]
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null