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41,800,400
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null
2024-10-10T16:19:10
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comment
robertlagrant
2024-10-10T16:19:25
null
It's more like: if you have a website that (sometimes) gets a lot of traffic, do you want Cloudflare to cache it and serve it with very few hits to your cheap server, or do you want your compute costs to expand to cope with the requests?
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41,797,719
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41,800,402
story
pseudolus
2024-10-10T16:19:38
After Hurricane Milton, a growing risk: Flooded electric cars going up in flames
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https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/after-hurricane-milton-a-growing-risk-flooded-electric-cars-going-up-in-flames/ar-AA1s1bLC
4
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41,800,402
0
[ 41800587 ]
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41,800,403
comment
spease
2024-10-10T16:19:44
null
I’m guessing 90% don’t care, 9% vote, 1% comment?
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41,799,831
41,791,773
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41,800,404
comment
pfortuny
2024-10-10T16:19:59
null
In some sense, a ball is more “natural” than a cube in Euclidean n-space. Once you add the metric, cubes become artificial constructs (despite being the natural elements in <i>just</i> product spaces).
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41,790,891
41,789,242
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comment
SoftTalker
2024-10-10T16:20:01
null
There are millions of websites like that. They don&#x27;t show up on the first page of search results, so nobody finds them.
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41,799,987
41,797,719
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41,800,406
comment
ChrisArchitect
2024-10-10T16:20:02
null
Related:<p><i>AAA Gaming on Asahi Linux</i><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=41799068">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=41799068</a>
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41,799,011
41,799,011
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[ 41803465 ]
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41,800,407
comment
null
2024-10-10T16:20:04
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41,800,354
41,800,354
null
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41,800,408
comment
nemothekid
2024-10-10T16:20:13
null
Seriously? How does that even make sense to you? The OP had an asset generation 10k+ a month in profit and was so squeezed for cash he had to sell it.<p>Doesn’t it make more sense that a media have site would have been paying through the nose for bandwidth, hence the callout for cloudflare which would have made that cost free?
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41,800,186
41,797,719
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41,800,409
comment
jcrash
2024-10-10T16:20:18
null
Clickbait.
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41,793,371
41,793,371
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41,800,410
comment
fmbb
2024-10-10T16:20:20
null
This is not a Product Owner problem, nor a Scrum problem. Get ready for some No True Scotsmanning:<p>The product backlog is a collection of User Stories. The user story describes a problem and starts out as a placeholder for a discussion in the team to figure out what the problem is and how we can solve it.<p>The Product Owner prioritizes these problems against eachother. The team members can communicate. Talking is not forbidden, in fact it is encouraged.
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41,797,009
41,797,009
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41,800,411
comment
genrilz
2024-10-10T16:20:32
null
The comment is not something someone would say to a person they intend to treat as a peer. I personally wouldn&#x27;t post a comment like that unless I thought the person I was talking about was a danger to other people, regardless of how I felt.<p>Also, if I was Marcan or Lina^, then I would probably be the type of person who would like to read and participate in Hacker News, but would likely not because of that type of comment. (I suspect I could have found more toxic ones if I searched harder. This was in the first result) Since they have in effect been excluded from Hacker News, it feels fair to me that they put up an easily bypassable barrier to inform people visiting their site that they have been excluded, and what can be done to fix that.<p>^ I neither know nor care if the two are the same. I haven&#x27;t reviewed the evidence, and it&#x27;s bad internet educate to try and dig up someone&#x27;s anonymous persona, so I won&#x27;t try.
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41,800,315
41,799,011
null
[ 41800902 ]
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41,800,412
comment
nox101
2024-10-10T16:20:35
null
yes you&#x27;re missing something. Java applets and flash outside of any security and they ran the users code in that insecure environment<p>WASM, in broswers, runs entirely inside a secure environment with no access to the system.<p><pre><code> js-&gt;browser-&gt;os | +--Flash&#x2F;java--&gt;os </code></pre> vs<p><pre><code> wasm-&gt;browser-&gt;os </code></pre> further. WASM and Js are in their own process with no os acesss. they can&#x27;t access the os except by rpc to the broswer<p>flash&#x2F;java tho, ran all user code in the same process with full access to the os
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41,796,715
41,795,561
null
[ 41803376 ]
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41,800,413
comment
abhiyerra
2024-10-10T16:20:43
null
Yes, Indians go hunting. Some of my earliest memories were going hunting with my uncle for pheasants in India.
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41,796,258
41,795,218
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41,800,414
comment
max-throat
2024-10-10T16:20:44
null
This is why BitTorrent and other P2P solutions were invented, but alas: A. The RIAA, MPAA, and ESA have given these technologies a terrible reputation. B. Nobody likes to seed. Some kind of seeding-based crypto would have been a great incentive if cryptocurrency wasn&#x27;t also demonized by now.
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41,793,397
41,792,500
null
[ 41803139 ]
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41,800,415
comment
nchmy
2024-10-10T16:20:58
null
Just read the article that the guy wrote about the trademark and you&#x27;ll have no choice but to conclude that he got his law degree from an internet college.
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null
41,796,144
41,791,369
null
[ 41800874 ]
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41,800,416
comment
stewh_eng
2024-10-10T16:21:08
null
I&#x27;m a med device engineer and have watched the hopes and dreams of cuffless BP monitoring tech. I hope we get there as it will be hugely important. However, remember tech is only a small part of the battle. We need to figure out clinically what to do with all this new continuous data.<p>I am very sceptical PPG alone will be capable for many reasons. Aktiia does indeed have European regs clearance. But, they don&#x27;t have FDA clearance. The FDA is a very different beast (more hands on - and they&#x27;ll be absolutely much more heavy with such a new approach) - and they must have concerns on the approach for it to take this long. The FDA even has accelerated programmes for breakthrough high impact tech as they really do want it to get to market safely.<p>The main cuffless FDA cleared devices I know measure the pulse transit time betwen a central ECG patch and a peripheral based PPG (that time is then calibrated to a BP with the Moens Kourteweg equation) - see Biobeats watch and a now defunct wearable ICU monitor company I can&#x27;t find the name of.<p>The issue with PPG is that it is wildly sensitive. The PPG waveform morphology will changed dramatically based on the pressure of the sensor against the skin, unconstrained changes in orientation of the human and arm etc. Changes in morphology != changes in system wide BP.<p>Speak to an anaesthesiologist and they&#x27;ll tell you blood pressure is function many things eg cardiac output, stroke volume, heart rate, blood volume, total peripheral resistance etc etc (<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.sharinginhealth.ca&#x2F;multimedia&#x2F;images&#x2F;blood_pressure.jpg" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.sharinginhealth.ca&#x2F;multimedia&#x2F;images&#x2F;blood_press...</a>). The question is whether PPG alone can measure all these things. I suspect it&#x27;s really just measuring lots of proxies of all these things. And that&#x27;s fine - however in the presence of people with conditions or on therapeutics that alter these in very personalised and unpredictable ways then error may start to creep in on free living measurement. Paradoxically, it&#x27;s probably these people for whom this tech would have most impact - not the worried well.
null
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null
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null
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41,800,417
comment
null
2024-10-10T16:21:17
null
null
null
null
41,800,392
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null
null
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null
41,800,418
comment
almostgotcaught
2024-10-10T16:21:19
null
&gt; As usual the typical argument that if it doesn&#x27;t cover 100% of everything it isn&#x27;t good enough.<p>This text<p>&gt; When I’m happy with the level of performance delivered by idiomatic C++ and standard collections, I tend to avoid C++ all together because I also proficient with C# which is even faster to write and debug.<p>very strongly implies that they&#x27;re completely interchangeable. They&#x27;re not. It&#x27;s as simple as that.<p>Sometimes it&#x27;s hard to keep track of whether I work in software or politics.
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41,798,555
41,791,773
null
[ 41800819 ]
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41,800,419
story
LinuxBender
2024-10-10T16:21:27
RFC for 700 HTTP Status Codes
null
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/joho/7XX-rfc/refs/heads/master/README.md
3
null
41,800,419
0
[ 41800445 ]
null
null
41,800,420
comment
JumpCrisscross
2024-10-10T16:21:28
null
&gt; <i>wonder if Pontifex Maximus is the oldest title still in use</i><p>The titles Kaiser and Czar literally derive from Cæsar. Meanwhile, we still maintain consuls in diplomatic relations between countries who often have Senate houses filled with Senators.
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41,798,981
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null
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41,800,421
comment
jasonpeacock
2024-10-10T16:21:33
null
Yes, you&#x27;re correct. I think I was trying to find a succinct way to say &quot;everyone was happily using &#x27;they&#x27; without concern until gendering became a hot topic and suddenly they noticed their usage of &#x27;they&#x27; and didn&#x27;t like that it was already an acceptable and in-use solution for including genderless people&quot; or something like that :)
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41,798,187
41,787,647
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null
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41,800,422
story
chistev
2024-10-10T16:21:35
Building Global Event-Driven Applications on AWS: A Comprehensive Guide
null
https://practicalcloud.net/building-global-event-driven-applications-an-in-depth-guide/
2
null
41,800,422
0
null
null
null
41,800,423
comment
robertoandred
2024-10-10T16:21:37
null
A WordPress fork without Gutenberg doesn&#x27;t really work as an alternative for sites built in the last five years or so.
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null
41,790,440
41,791,369
null
[ 41801097 ]
null
null
41,800,424
story
shaburn
2024-10-10T16:21:39
Ask HN: Any Test Driven Development tools or frameworks for LLM prompt evals?
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null
1
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41,800,424
0
null
null
null
41,800,425
comment
null
2024-10-10T16:21:39
null
null
null
null
41,800,307
41,800,307
null
null
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null
41,800,426
comment
yandrypozo
2024-10-10T16:21:44
null
“I was making frequent use of cocaine at that time ... I had been the first to recommend the use of cocaine, in 1885, and this recommendation had brought serious reproaches down on me.”<p>“... a big wild man who has cocaine in his body.”<p>― Sigmund Freud
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null
41,787,798
41,787,798
null
[ 41800705 ]
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null
41,800,427
comment
Dwedit
2024-10-10T16:21:45
null
I used to have a lot of bot spam, but then I mostly foiled them with the world&#x27;s silliest captcha. Looks like a math problem, but the solution isn&#x27;t what&#x27;s required to proceed.
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41,799,869
41,797,719
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41,800,428
comment
null
2024-10-10T16:21:51
null
null
null
null
41,798,493
41,797,009
null
null
true
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41,800,429
comment
the_gorilla
2024-10-10T16:21:52
null
I can&#x27;t imagine having to experience the world exclusively through WW2 propaganda.
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null
41,793,664
41,792,500
null
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null
41,800,430
comment
bezier-curve
2024-10-10T16:21:58
null
The sheer volume of social information we process daily through social media might be straining our emotional machinery beyond the abilities we evolved with [1]. If someone is going through a loss, I try to make their lives a little easier. I feel like our constant growth-based economic society with income inequality issues has poisoned our ability to empathize with coworkers because of competition, and speaking only for myself personally, I would like to rein in these traits of my nature. Be the change you want to see in the world, it doesn&#x27;t have to be solely about yourself.<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov&#x2F;26189988&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov&#x2F;26189988&#x2F;</a>
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41,797,084
41,797,084
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41,800,431
comment
fmbb
2024-10-10T16:22:00
null
Not only is this easy to solve, Scrum is one solution. Like this is the core of what it attempts to solve.
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null
41,800,071
41,797,009
null
null
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null
41,800,432
story
Crowgirl
2024-10-10T16:22:01
null
null
null
1
null
41,800,432
null
null
null
true
41,800,433
story
speckx
2024-10-10T16:22:12
Wimbledon will replace all 300 line judges from next year with AI technology
null
https://www.skysports.com/tennis/news/32498/13230764/wimbledon-championships-all-england-club-to-replace-all-300-line-judges-after-147-years-with-electronic-system-next-year
2
null
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0
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null
null
41,800,434
comment
null
2024-10-10T16:22:12
null
null
null
null
41,800,360
41,800,360
null
null
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null
41,800,435
comment
null
2024-10-10T16:22:21
null
null
null
null
41,800,379
41,800,379
null
null
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null
41,800,436
comment
jorams
2024-10-10T16:22:33
null
&gt; It&#x27;s quite similar to how Fextralife embeds twitch streams to farm viewer counts.<p>Fextralife notably stopped streaming almost a year ago after Twitch announced that embedded views would no longer be counted. The solution is in the incentive, but unfortunately on the modern internet those generally don&#x27;t favor the user.
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41,798,992
41,797,719
null
null
null
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41,800,437
comment
matteason
2024-10-10T16:22:35
null
The component has some JavaScript which blanks out the page immediately after the button being pressed, so if it takes a while for the browser to load the weather page it shouldn&#x27;t matter as much<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;design-system.service.gov.uk&#x2F;components&#x2F;exit-this-page&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;design-system.service.gov.uk&#x2F;components&#x2F;exit-this-pa...</a>
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41,800,162
41,793,597
null
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41,800,438
comment
shju19
2024-10-10T16:22:35
null
Yes I totally agree on it. I need to open my mind from &#x27;I need to do something in order to start some others&#x27; into &#x27;how can I start from here&#x27;. I&#x27;ll think about it deeply again. I really appreciate your feedback.
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41,707,671
41,649,488
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null
41,800,439
comment
null
2024-10-10T16:22:37
null
null
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null
41,800,433
41,800,433
null
null
true
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41,800,440
comment
tivert
2024-10-10T16:22:40
null
&gt; It&#x27;s bad if you&#x27;re a search engine. It&#x27;s not as bad if you&#x27;re a human who is capable of parsing natural language semantics.<p>I am a human capable of parsing natural language semantics, and &quot;use by&quot; is terrible. It&#x27;s one of those completely unexplained commands you often find in instructions. <i>Why</i> should I use it by that date? If you&#x27;re not a mindless drone who just unquestioningly follows instructions, the total lack of reason creates a lot of space to decide to do something else. For instance: without consulting California food labeling legislation (which, I admit, Californians all carry around the statute book those regulations several times a day), it&#x27;s reasonable to interpret &quot;use by&quot; as &quot;best if used by,&quot; for instance.<p>They should use clearer language <i>because they can and have no excuse not to</i>.
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41,799,907
41,765,006
null
[ 41800595 ]
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41,800,441
comment
markgoho
2024-10-10T16:22:44
null
is each address truly unique or are you doing something like [email protected], [email protected], etc.
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null
41,795,762
41,792,500
null
[ 41803310 ]
null
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41,800,442
comment
kps
2024-10-10T16:22:45
null
All of the keyboards:<p><pre><code> https:&#x2F;&#x2F;g.co&#x2F;double-sided — (current) Gboard Double-Sided version (2024) https:&#x2F;&#x2F;g.co&#x2F;CAPS — Gboard CAPS version (2023) https:&#x2F;&#x2F;g.co&#x2F;_____ — Gboard Bar version (2022) https:&#x2F;&#x2F;g.co&#x2F;yunomi — Gboard Teacup version (2021) https:&#x2F;&#x2F;g.co&#x2F;---o — Gboard Spoon Bending Input version (2019) https:&#x2F;&#x2F;g.co&#x2F;tegaki — Gboard Physical Handwriting version (2018) https:&#x2F;&#x2F;g.co&#x2F;ooooo — Google Bubble Wrap version (2017) https:&#x2F;&#x2F;g.co&#x2F;furikku — Google Physical Flick version (2016) https:&#x2F;&#x2F;g.co&#x2F;___o — Google Party Horn version (2015) https:&#x2F;&#x2F;g.co&#x2F;m9 — Google Lazy Tongs version (2014) https:&#x2F;&#x2F;g.co&#x2F;patapata — Google Split-Flag version (2013) https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.google.co.jp&#x2F;ime&#x2F;-.-.html — Google Morse version (2012) https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.google.co.jp&#x2F;landing&#x2F;drumsetkeyboard — Google Drum set version (2010)</code></pre>
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41,797,676
41,762,483
null
[ 41800542 ]
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41,800,443
comment
citricsquid
2024-10-10T16:22:46
null
I was a teenager at the time. I&#x27;m in my mid 30s now, it feels like I was a kid back then.
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41,799,926
41,797,719
null
null
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41,800,444
comment
thrdbndndn
2024-10-10T16:22:49
null
I know it&#x27;s one day late but I personally don&#x27;t agree with this change.<p>Using the main entry webpage is much easier for people to look for relevant info, including but not limited to: various articles about this specific award; other info about this year&#x27;s Nobel, other info about Nobel in general.<p>This is exactly what the Internet (or WWW) is better than traditional printing media. Using a PDF as a link (which itself can be easily found from the entry point) defeats it.
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41,779,689
41,775,463
null
[ 41803119 ]
null
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41,800,445
comment
null
2024-10-10T16:22:55
null
null
null
null
41,800,419
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null
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null
41,800,446
comment
cloverich
2024-10-10T16:22:59
null
I will say I saw them in concert accidentally once (attending for the headliner, I had no idea they were also playing). I had no real interest in them musically, no hate or anything just no real interest, but wow. They were incredibly good performers compared to the 30 or so other rock bands I&#x27;d seen in my youth, easily top 3 performance wise. It really changed my view on the impact a live performance can have on your perceptions of a band and its music.
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41,794,617
41,790,295
null
null
null
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41,800,447
comment
hshshshshsh
2024-10-10T16:23:06
null
Everything passes but also remains unchanged.
null
null
41,800,035
41,799,170
null
null
null
null
41,800,448
comment
captn3m0
2024-10-10T16:23:10
null
Rosetta 2: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Rosetta_(software)#Rosetta_2" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Rosetta_(software)#Rosetta_2</a>
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null
41,800,275
41,799,068
null
null
null
null
41,800,449
comment
StrangeDoctor
2024-10-10T16:23:10
null
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.is&#x2F;Mwf7e" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.is&#x2F;Mwf7e</a><p>&gt; FedEx said it has bar code and GPS tracking systems and issues regular reminders to drivers about personal and package safety. “This includes remaining vigilant when delivering a package and immediately reporting any unusual activity,” a FedEx spokeswoman said.<p>cool, shift the blame to the driver
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41,800,379
41,800,379
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null
null
null
41,800,450
comment
internet101010
2024-10-10T16:23:20
null
An example of this would be filtering on different attributes of data. You have a complex decision tree interface but ultimately the output is constructed into a single way that can be passed along to a single class&#x2F;function.
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null
41,798,783
41,765,594
null
null
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null
41,800,451
comment
zero-sharp
2024-10-10T16:23:23
null
JD Power does not have a good reputation in the car review&#x2F;rating space.<p>You can find plenty of information online with details regarding its conflict of interest with manufacturers, how it makes money, etc.
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null
41,800,211
41,798,287
null
null
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41,800,452
comment
joncrocks
2024-10-10T16:23:25
null
The big difference is that the US will sting you for tax wherever you are in the world, whereas most will only tax residents (complexities in terms of tax treaties notwithstanding).<p>Hence in both cases they are both looking to realise gains at the point where they no longer have control over the taxes being charged. A `penalty` for leaving their tax jurisdiction, notionally for the tax they are &#x27;owed&#x27;.
null
null
41,799,943
41,799,016
null
null
null
null
41,800,453
comment
Kiro
2024-10-10T16:23:26
null
And yet, when YouTube cracks down on adblockers, people on here get outraged instead of just paying for Premium. Everyone keeps saying &quot;just let me pay&quot; but when the option exists, it seems like most still avoid it and stick to complaining.
null
null
41,799,900
41,797,719
null
[ 41801144, 41803265 ]
null
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41,800,454
story
paulcarroty
2024-10-10T16:23:29
Africans recruited to work in Russia say they were duped into building drones
null
https://apnews.com/article/russia-ukraine-war-drones-shahed-africans-11602ab837f0ff4635926d884b422185
6
null
41,800,454
0
[ 41800463 ]
null
null
41,800,455
comment
JumpCrisscross
2024-10-10T16:23:30
null
&gt; <i>If you are holding gold, you dont want someone to flood your market with more</i><p>Right, this is why it’s a stupid analogy. That’s true for gold. But if you’re hiring young, educated people, you <i>do</i> want your country flooded with them.
null
null
41,800,314
41,799,016
null
[ 41801198 ]
null
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wahern
2024-10-10T16:23:56
null
&gt; These are all things that have to be dynamically resolved at runtime with zero copies in every context the memory might be touched. Fairly standard high-performance database stuff. The intrinsic ambiguity about the contents of a memory address create many opportunities to inadvertently create strict aliasing violations.<p>So how would do this in Rust, if at all? (That&#x27;s the context of this subthread and the admonition not to play type punning games.)<p>Rust assumes noalias even for objects of the same type, and that&#x27;s because the entire language is built on the foundational assumption that you cannot have both a mutable and immutable reference (or two mutable references) to the same object alive at the same time.
null
null
41,800,247
41,757,701
null
[ 41801527, 41801147 ]
null
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gandalfian
2024-10-10T16:23:59
null
&lt;must state “Best if Used By” to indicate peak quality, and “Use By” to designate food safety.&gt;<p>This sounds perfectly sensible and uncontroversial?
null
null
41,765,006
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null
[ 41801576, 41800845, 41800517 ]
null
null
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null
2024-10-10T16:24:02
null
null
null
null
41,792,793
41,792,055
null
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null
41,800,459
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null
2024-10-10T16:24:12
null
null
null
null
41,800,367
41,800,367
null
null
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null
41,800,460
comment
kubb
2024-10-10T16:24:18
null
Go people will do this and they&#x27;ll be content:<p><pre><code> a := []int{1,2,3,4} it := slices.All(a) it = slices.Reverse(it) it = slices.Map(it) it = slices.Filter(it, func(i int) bool { return i % 2 == 0 }) slices.ForEach(it, func(i int) { fmt.Println(i) }) </code></pre> I don&#x27;t judge the Go enjoyers, but I prefer writing TypeScript to Go which says it all.<p>Type-inferred arrow lambda for function arguments would go such a long way in making this code nicer... And not make compilation slower at all.<p><pre><code> it = slices.Filter(it, i =&gt; i % 2 == 0) slices.ForEach(it, i =&gt; fmt.Println(i))</code></pre>
null
null
41,769,275
41,769,275
null
[ 41800546, 41802335, 41803422, 41801224 ]
null
null
41,800,461
comment
anthk
2024-10-10T16:24:21
null
Ah, like a reduced version of Org-Mode.
null
null
41,798,477
41,798,477
null
[ 41800898 ]
null
null
41,800,462
comment
jandrese
2024-10-10T16:24:24
null
It seems like the shift key is still problematic, especially if it is conflicting with stickykeys. Why not use for example the letter &#x27;q&#x27;? You could set it up as a mnemonic that you need to quit quit quit as fast as possible.<p>But for the most part I agree that this is silly and unnecessary. Ctrl-W is a better solution and this would really only make sense if it also scrubbed the site from the browser&#x27;s history at the same time. In fact this solution is worse because the abuser can just hit the &quot;back&quot; button when they see BBC Weather loaded.
null
null
41,793,597
41,793,597
null
null
null
null
41,800,463
comment
null
2024-10-10T16:24:26
null
null
null
null
41,800,454
41,800,454
null
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null
41,800,464
comment
dewey
2024-10-10T16:24:28
null
I&#x27;ve been using <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;iptvx.app" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;iptvx.app</a> on my iPad &#x2F; Apple TV. It looks pretty decent, but a lot of them look extremely ugly.
null
null
41,798,243
41,794,577
null
null
null
null
41,800,465
comment
moate
2024-10-10T16:24:40
null
I think as a general rule, biology loathes blunt instruments. That&#x27;s not to say these things aren&#x27;t more useful than just guessing, but as this legislation (or rather the underlying issue that led to its passing) shows is that a lot of this stuff is very poorly understood.
null
null
41,800,395
41,765,006
null
null
null
null
41,800,466
comment
languagehacker
2024-10-10T16:24:43
null
Oh man, good to see you on here, dude!<p>Yes, extracting the real human-readable text from a Wiki was a lot harder than you&#x27;d expect.<p>There was also a question of investment. I think even with some early successes quantified with A&#x2F;B tests and things like that, there just wasn&#x27;t the executive or product buy-in to broaden the investment.
null
null
41,800,052
41,797,719
null
null
null
null
41,800,467
comment
logical42
2024-10-10T16:24:46
null
I am tempted to write a book called &quot;The carnivore&quot; though.
null
null
41,800,335
41,799,170
null
null
null
null
41,800,468
comment
utschig
2024-10-10T16:24:47
null
Sotera Wireless
null
null
41,800,416
41,799,324
null
[ 41800479 ]
null
null
41,800,469
comment
bitwize
2024-10-10T16:24:49
null
Programmers should not be empowered to perform roles for which they are an ill fit. In general, programmers are detailists who speak the language of the computer; they do not have a big-picture perspective nor do they understand the problem in business terms. Their social skills are very often lacking, and they are prone to arrogance. In a high-functioning information systems organization, the programmer&#x27;s job is one of simple translation from specifications into code; those specifications will have been produced via stepwise refinement by systems analysts who <i>do</i> understand the business and the people within it.<p>See the late Tim Bryce&#x27;s Theory P essay: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.phmainstreet.com&#x2F;mba&#x2F;ss050117.pdf" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.phmainstreet.com&#x2F;mba&#x2F;ss050117.pdf</a> and note that he uses the exact same &quot;artists vs. house painters&quot; analogy. Before his retirement Tim had been managing large software projects since before much of Hackernews was born, and had forgotten more than most internet commenters know about what it takes to manage a successful project.<p>The &quot;software businesses where true creation is happening&quot; are few and far between -- Apple, maybe Google at its peak, and a handful of others. They are run by geniuses, typically from top-tier schools like MIT and Stanford. They are <i>not</i> the typical software organization. The typical software organization produces the software that keeps civilization humming -- and doing that is a proven, teachable, scientific process. Lately we&#x27;ve seen many organizations that <i>should</i> be doing this instead cosplaying as a bunch of genius disruptors, but they have nowhere near the brainpower to actually pull it off, and the world has gone to hell in a handbasket as a result.
null
null
41,799,905
41,797,009
null
[ 41800852, 41800826, 41800600, 41800545, 41800634, 41800685, 41801184, 41800530 ]
null
null
41,800,470
comment
scoofy
2024-10-10T16:24:49
null
Just a shameless plug for <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;golfcourse.wiki" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;golfcourse.wiki</a><p>If you’re into golf, help try to build the most thorough list of courses in the world, accessible to all.
null
null
41,797,719
41,797,719
null
null
null
null
41,800,471
comment
vundercind
2024-10-10T16:25:08
null
I like the style, but this case felt forced. Like when corporate tries to do memes.
null
null
41,798,166
41,797,041
null
null
null
null
41,800,472
comment
alkonaut
2024-10-10T16:25:14
null
Does IA have much information on users? I’ve been in dozens of these HIBP leaks (including this one) but still none have concerned me, since they were mostly just email&#x2F;password and nothing else.<p>Does IA store anything sensitive for any users?p physical addresses, credit cards, etc?
null
null
41,792,500
41,792,500
null
null
null
null
41,800,473
comment
spease
2024-10-10T16:25:32
null
&gt; Theoretically, someone could scrape the pages and compile a list of exposed email addresses.<p>I laughed. Oh no! Anyways…<p>The people interested in identity theft are probably too busy figuring out what to do with all the SSNs they stole (not from this breach, but from the annual catastrophic breach of a credit bureau or government repository).<p>And the people who want your email probably already got it from one of the hundreds of other services you have to create an account for now.<p>I’m not really sure if there are circumstances where donating to the internet archive could be held against you and lead to persecution. Maybe in certain Luddite communities? The Amish? But then, how would they know…
null
null
41,799,852
41,792,500
null
null
null
null
41,800,474
comment
tiffanyh
2024-10-10T16:25:38
null
Montana uses Sell-By dates to artificially ban out-of-state milk.<p>They want to promote in-state business (dairy farmers).<p>Montana purposefully has short Sell-by diary dates, because it makes it prohibitive for an out-of-state dairy to transport their milk into Montana.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nrdc.org&#x2F;bio&#x2F;dana-gunders&#x2F;how-montanas-sell-date-sends-good-milk-down-drain" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nrdc.org&#x2F;bio&#x2F;dana-gunders&#x2F;how-montanas-sell-date...</a>
null
null
41,765,006
41,765,006
null
[ 41801359 ]
null
null
41,800,475
comment
null
2024-10-10T16:25:39
null
null
null
null
41,799,971
41,799,971
null
null
true
null
41,800,476
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cmacleod4
2024-10-10T16:25:41
null
This is something to be aware of. It can be guarded against, see <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.tcl-lang.org&#x2F;man&#x2F;tcl&#x2F;TkCmd&#x2F;send.htm#M9" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.tcl-lang.org&#x2F;man&#x2F;tcl&#x2F;TkCmd&#x2F;send.htm#M9</a> .
null
null
41,798,298
41,791,875
null
[ 41800747 ]
null
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comment
eddieroger
2024-10-10T16:25:43
null
Reading through the list of providers on your link, I think the answer is that yes, it&#x27;s more common in the parts of the world, and those parts aren&#x27;t necessarily the US.
null
null
41,798,848
41,794,577
null
null
null
null
41,800,478
comment
null
2024-10-10T16:25:53
null
null
null
null
41,799,953
41,799,953
null
null
true
null
41,800,479
comment
stewh_eng
2024-10-10T16:25:53
null
That&#x27;s the one! They were lightyears ahead but seemingly couldn&#x27;t make the commercials work. Thank you!
null
null
41,800,468
41,799,324
null
null
null
null
41,800,480
comment
andrewmcwatters
2024-10-10T16:26:00
null
It seems to me like you&#x27;d need a separate security LLM context from the primary context that simply screens attempts to jailbreak out of system prompts. Something that simply categorizes attempts and then rejects the text from ever even making it to the primary context, like a sandbox.<p>But there are much more informed ML people out there than me, so I assume this and similar techniques have already been thought of.
null
null
41,799,883
41,799,883
null
[ 41800980, 41800536, 41800523 ]
null
null
41,800,481
story
rwmj
2024-10-10T16:26:05
Everyone Got Lost in Netflix's Endless Library
null
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/07/magazine/netflix-library-viewer-numbers.html
1
null
41,800,481
1
[ 41800485 ]
null
null
41,800,482
comment
JumpCrisscross
2024-10-10T16:26:08
null
&gt; <i>that&#x27;s why I&#x27;m asking for other differences</i><p>If the obvious difference explains the gap, this is unnecessary. Switch American taxation to a territorial system and you’d see a similar flourishing of start-ups and founders in Canada and Mexico.
null
null
41,800,089
41,799,016
null
null
null
null
41,800,483
story
lnyan
2024-10-10T16:26:08
Transforming Colors with Matrices
null
https://lisyarus.github.io/blog/posts/transforming-colors-with-matrices.html
2
null
41,800,483
0
null
null
null
41,800,484
comment
dpedu
2024-10-10T16:26:16
null
I was a user of one of the Fandom wikis this group took over. Moving the information to a better platform is fine.<p>What wasn&#x27;t fine is how they made every single page on the existing Fandom wiki redirect to a meme page that didn&#x27;t explain what was happening. This was particularly disruptive because it made every single google result for &quot;&lt;game name&gt; &lt;topic&gt;&quot; invalid as it redirected to this useless page. Fandom has better SEO and the replacement wiki was so new it didn&#x27;t appear in google results for several weeks. It was extremely annoying.
null
null
41,797,719
41,797,719
null
null
null
null
41,800,485
comment
rwmj
2024-10-10T16:26:21
null
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.ph&#x2F;sAsAJ" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.ph&#x2F;sAsAJ</a>
null
null
41,800,481
41,800,481
null
null
null
null
41,800,486
comment
johnm
2024-10-10T16:26:22
null
No, those are the same that have been around forever. They just have a new tool to &quot;justify&quot; their crappy behavior.
null
null
41,800,067
41,765,594
null
null
null
null
41,800,487
comment
null
2024-10-10T16:26:28
null
null
null
null
41,799,883
41,799,883
null
null
true
null
41,800,488
comment
chongli
2024-10-10T16:26:31
null
<i>to put a finer point on it: capitalism.</i><p>That&#x27;s still an extremely blunt point. While we can imagine some alternative world where we all live in a communist utopia and the internet is the great free place it was in its early days, it&#x27;s not so easy to build such a society. All the attempts I&#x27;m aware of either didn&#x27;t scale (small, local communes) or were large-scale disasters resulting in the deaths of millions.<p>What we have now is no paradise, but it&#x27;s not a disaster either. It&#x27;s balanced on the razor&#x27;s edge of disaster, however.
null
null
41,799,757
41,797,719
null
[ 41803944 ]
null
null
41,800,489
comment
wholinator2
2024-10-10T16:26:44
null
Are you claiming sugar is a better local anesthetic than cocaine?
null
null
41,799,226
41,787,798
null
[ 41802841 ]
null
null
41,800,490
comment
JumpCrisscross
2024-10-10T16:26:50
null
&gt; <i>how it used to work in the US</i><p>For a definition of “work” which normalises constant financial crisis.
null
null
41,799,933
41,799,016
null
[ 41801032 ]
null
null
41,800,491
story
yusufaytas
2024-10-10T16:26:57
What kind of childhood makes a top scientist?
null
https://twitter.com/paulnovosad/status/1844045388241915960
3
null
41,800,491
2
[ 41802076, 41800566, 41800585 ]
null
null
41,800,492
comment
jjice
2024-10-10T16:27:02
null
&gt; But why beer??? Legit question--I don&#x27;t drink so maybe it&#x27;s obvious and I&#x27;m just a knucklehead.<p>Very fair question. Anecdotally, when I was just graduating university I drank a few 4+ year past expiration macro-brewed beers that were sitting in the fridge that entire time. The results were not good compared to similar consumption of non-expired beer.
null
null
41,799,438
41,765,006
null
null
null
null
41,800,493
comment
krisoft
2024-10-10T16:27:06
null
The idea is that the malware could have infiltrated the system (probably) but couldn&#x27;t have exfiltrated data from it.<p>So a data diode wouldn&#x27;t stop a &quot;stuxnet&quot; scenairo where the malware is trying to sabotage the air-gapped. But it would prevent secret information being leaked out.<p>(Btw. I&#x27;m just explaining what a data diode is, and what guarantees it provides. I don&#x27;t actually think that it would be useful in practice, because it feels to be too cumbersome to use it and therefore the users&#x2F;IT would poke holes into the security it would provide otherwise.)
null
null
41,788,701
41,779,952
null
null
null
null
41,800,494
comment
robsws
2024-10-10T16:27:18
null
As much as I understand that checked exceptions (the general term for the &#x27;throws&#x27; feature) can lead to a bit of a maintenance nightmare and doesn&#x27;t necessarily scale well with deeper call stacks, I have found python documentation extremely lacking in this area too.<p>I think what I&#x27;ve come to understand is that you can treat errors you don&#x27;t know about as non-recoverable, because that&#x27;s most likely what they are anyway if they aren&#x27;t readily documented. Let them bubble up basically, and handle them at the top level if necessary to prevent crashes in prod&#x2F;make sure they are logged correctly and so on.
null
null
41,797,458
41,794,818
null
null
null
null
41,800,495
story
arzzen
2024-10-10T16:27:25
Show HN: Git Py Stats Is a Python-Powered Version of Git Quick Stats
null
https://github.com/git-quick-stats/git-py-stats
1
null
41,800,495
0
null
null
null
41,800,496
comment
Dwedit
2024-10-10T16:27:32
null
&gt; JavaScript did deliver its promise of unbreakable sandbox<p>I&#x27;m sure there&#x27;s a big long list of WebKit exploits somewhere that will contradict that sentence...
null
null
41,796,175
41,795,561
null
null
null
null
41,800,497
comment
fpgaminer
2024-10-10T16:27:35
null
I gave it a try, but when I tried to start a finetune of Llama 3.1 8B it just gave an error every time. I also encountered several server errors just navigating to different pages.
null
null
41,789,176
41,789,176
null
[ 41800608 ]
null
null
41,800,498
comment
dewey
2024-10-10T16:27:35
null
&gt; Do people set up their own IPTV servers to share content? What are the most popular use cases?<p>Most people I know use it to watch (pirated) sports broadcasts that are either very fragmented (So you&#x27;d have to subscribe to 5 providers, which is very expensive) or not available in the geographic location. Personally I use it to watch Sky UK, which isn&#x27;t available in my location even if I wanted to pay for it.<p>You can self-host an IPTV server with <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;ersatztv.org" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;ersatztv.org</a> + Plex. I&#x27;ve recently set that up just for fun and there&#x27;s people running channels with real old ads from their childhood just for nostalgia reasons.
null
null
41,798,848
41,794,577
null
null
null
null
41,800,499
story
agomez314
2024-10-10T16:27:36
Study Suggests AI Coding Assistants Don't Increase Coding Speed
null
https://shenisha.substack.com/p/are-ai-coding-assistants-really-saving
1
null
41,800,499
0
[ 41800575 ]
null
null