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41,800,800 | comment | why_at | 2024-10-10T16:54:58 | null | One thing I find interesting about playing video games in modern day is that with the proliferation of Wikis, there is assumed to be some kind of third party guide for every game. Especially in smaller/newer games it seems like developers sometimes don't bother putting necessary information in the game at all because they don't have the person-hours for it.<p>For instance, back when I first played Minecraft in Alpha the only ways to find the crafting recipes was through a wiki, or trial and error.<p>It's nice that it makes development easier, but I wonder if this trend is making it harder for new people to get into video games, since it's hardly obvious if you're not used to it. | null | null | 41,798,956 | 41,797,719 | null | [
41803366,
41800828
] | null | null |
41,800,801 | comment | stefantalpalaru | 2024-10-10T16:54:58 | null | [dead] | null | null | 41,799,678 | 41,796,914 | null | null | null | true |
41,800,802 | comment | Dalewyn | 2024-10-10T16:55:02 | null | Here's something to blow your mind: Most Americans are not literate.<p>Yes, I'm serious and I say that as a fellow American. We are not literate.<p>So use as few words as possible and a date. Honestly we could probably do without the words, just the date. | null | null | 41,800,754 | 41,765,006 | null | [
41800997
] | null | null |
41,800,803 | story | mpweiher | 2024-10-10T16:55:05 | null | null | null | 3 | null | 41,800,803 | null | [
41801050,
41800808
] | null | true |
41,800,804 | comment | MattRix | 2024-10-10T16:55:12 | null | Ok I think we’ve come to the root of the problem. You don’t realize how much software development people who use engines still have to do! Just because there are things like GameObjects and Components does not mean you don’t have to think about the game logic or structure. There are tons of ways to approach things, those are still just a relatively low level framework.<p>And just so you don’t think I’m making stuff up, I wrote a framework <i>for Unity</i> that acts much like XNA or some other 2D scene graph. It’s 100% code based and essentially doesn’t use Unity at all except as a publishing tool. It’s called Futile and it was used in popular games like Rain World and Mini Metro, as well as many of my own games.<p>However, I also have made games “the Unity way”, with GameObjects and Components etc. These two different approaches to making games are not nearly as different as you claim. I still have to think a lot about game architecture and system design even when using all of Unity’s built-in foundational stuff. | null | null | 41,799,459 | 41,779,519 | null | [
41801463
] | null | null |
41,800,805 | comment | rsynnott | 2024-10-10T16:55:15 | null | > Does that mean that every Californian is wasting a pound of food every day? That seems suspiciously high to me.<p>That seems plausible. Figures vary a bit, but generally you're looking at 20-30% of food in supermarkets ultimately being wasted. An average person eats something like 1.5kg a day, so a pound seems about right. (Of course it's not as simple as that, because there's also wastage at home, and that's very hard to measure.)<p>That said, there's also a lot of wastage by restaurants and other catering operations, and this won't really help there, so the impact may not be as great as people hope. | null | null | 41,800,331 | 41,765,006 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,806 | comment | bee_rider | 2024-10-10T16:55:18 | null | All the statues I’ve seen of him make his hair look not so curly, and they don’t show him having a beard. This open up the possibility that many royal titles are ultimately named after some Italian guy’s magnificent chest hair (which would be hard to capture in a statue). | null | null | 41,800,633 | 41,798,027 | null | [
41800853
] | null | null |
41,800,807 | comment | thunder-blue-3 | 2024-10-10T16:55:31 | null | for TC? | null | null | 41,800,152 | 41,792,055 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,808 | comment | null | 2024-10-10T16:55:35 | null | null | null | null | 41,800,803 | 41,800,803 | null | null | true | null |
41,800,809 | comment | itsoktocry | 2024-10-10T16:55:48 | null | Is "falls to" the correct interpretation here?<p>It's higher-than-expected. | null | null | 41,800,642 | 41,800,642 | null | [
41800920,
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] | null | null |
41,800,810 | comment | thrww120956 | 2024-10-10T16:55:51 | null | Found the theoretical informatician... Nope, not in real world software engineering. Especially not in JIT runtimes like V8. Try it!<p>I tried it, code: <a href="https://pastebin.com/cA8YkE8R" rel="nofollow">https://pastebin.com/cA8YkE8R</a><p>Result:<p><pre><code> process1: 2s 251.327833ms
process2: 1s 537.721625ms</code></pre> | null | null | 41,800,682 | 41,769,275 | null | [
41801404,
41801337
] | null | null |
41,800,811 | comment | edelsohn | 2024-10-10T16:55:54 | null | [flagged] | null | null | 41,800,642 | 41,800,642 | null | [
41801412,
41800822
] | null | true |
41,800,812 | comment | rahimnathwani | 2024-10-10T16:56:09 | null | How does washing eggs extend shelf life?<p>Let's say I have unwashed eggs and washed eggs, and I put both in the refrigerator. Won't the unwashed ones last longer, because they haven't had the natural protective coating removed? | null | null | 41,800,564 | 41,765,006 | null | [
41800988,
41800888
] | null | null |
41,800,813 | comment | Vampiero | 2024-10-10T16:56:09 | null | The only thing that defines portability is everyone adhering to the same standards.<p>You say that the web is portable, but really, only Google's vision for the web is relevant, seeing how they have the final say in how the standards are implemented and evolved.<p>So it's basically another walled garden, only much bigger and not constrained to the CPU architecture and OS kernel.<p>Chromium IS a platform. And indeed many applications that do work on Chrome don't work on Firefox. So we're pretty much back where we started, but the problem is harder to see because Chrome has such a monopoly over browsers that for most intents and purposes, and for most devs, it's the only platform that exists.<p>Everyone is good at multiplat when there's only one plat. | null | null | 41,799,125 | 41,795,561 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,814 | comment | evilduck | 2024-10-10T16:56:20 | null | I understand, but this is very much like promises in JS. You can pass promises around without awaiting their return values too but async and/or promise code inevitably infects the rest of the codebase. I've never really seen anyone just have promises walled off in one specific module where the rest of the codebase sticks to callbacks.<p>Passing Effects around will similarly infect the entire codebase, resulting in the entire dev team who interacts with it needing to buy in. Limiting the output of Effects to a single module owned by one zealot dev undermines having it around in the first place and it'll get removed and replaced as soon as that person leaves or gives up the fight. | null | null | 41,800,626 | 41,764,163 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,815 | comment | ashu1461 | 2024-10-10T16:56:24 | null | I think static type inference can be a big win, considering that the typescript type is already a contract and defining the contract again for validation libraries (joi / zod) feels like an overkill. | null | null | 41,764,163 | 41,764,163 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,816 | comment | starkparker | 2024-10-10T16:56:26 | null | There have been several competitors formed in response to or predating Wikia/Fandom over the years, particularly Gamepedia/Curse Media (which Fandom acquired). Fandom also acquired other game-focused community knowledge resources, like GameFAQs and Giant Bomb.<p>There's also now wiki.gg, which focuses on official wikis run by game developers and was launched after the Gamepedia acquisition by Gamepedia's founder and a former Fandom president. Several wikis are on independent MediaWiki farms like Miraheze or ShoutWiki, and numerous others self-host entirely independently.<p>This Weird Gloop effort seems to be more like wiki.gg, but for community-run wikis rather than gamedev-run wikis — bespoke relationships with communities that want to migrate or relaunch, rather than open sign-ups to a platform like Miraheze or ShoutWiki. | null | null | 41,800,668 | 41,797,719 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,817 | comment | null | 2024-10-10T16:56:29 | null | null | null | null | 41,800,730 | 41,800,730 | null | null | true | null |
41,800,818 | story | prmph | 2024-10-10T16:56:31 | null | null | null | 1 | null | 41,800,818 | null | [
41800844
] | null | true |
41,800,819 | comment | neonsunset | 2024-10-10T16:56:35 | null | > very strongly implies that they're completely interchangeable<p>Not completely but they <i>are</i> interchangeable. C# at its inception was as much inspired by C++ as it was by Java. Since then, it only further evolved to accommodate far more low-level scenarios and improve their performance.<p>It provides the kind of capabilities you'd usually expect from C++, so this statement holds true. Calling C exports is one `static extern ...` method away, you can define explicit layout for structs (that satisfy 'unmanaged' constraint), you have fixed arrays in structs, stack buffers, pointers and ability to do raw or abstracted away manual memory management, etc. You can mmap device-shared memory and push data into GPU. You can accept pointers from C or C++ and wrap them into Span<T>s and pass those to most standard library methods. | null | null | 41,800,418 | 41,791,773 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,800,820 | comment | exsomet | 2024-10-10T16:56:46 | null | Speaking as a user of wordpress (hosted on my own infrastructure, not theirs), this is an entertaining - if pathetic - fight between two entities that doesn’t really involve me.<p>What would change that, and make me more likely to abandon Wordpress (taking the money my business spends in that ecosystem with it), is if things start to happen, such as a login checkbox with potential legal implications, that gets in my way of using the thing that Wordpress wants me to use.<p>Whether or not that sentiment is shared across a larger subset of wordpress users I do not know, but I have a pretty strong spidey sense that this crusade is burning down the countryside it’s supposedly trying to save. | null | null | 41,797,497 | 41,796,748 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,821 | comment | consteval | 2024-10-10T16:56:51 | null | Right but differences in values for a business is definitely reason enough to give up your patronage. | null | null | 41,793,290 | 41,784,287 | null | [
41803380
] | null | null |
41,800,822 | comment | itsoktocry | 2024-10-10T16:56:51 | null | Imagine believing inflation is 25%. | null | null | 41,800,811 | 41,800,642 | null | [
41801542,
41801498,
41800857,
41801493,
41800928
] | null | null |
41,800,823 | comment | bloopernova | 2024-10-10T16:57:01 | null | Fun fact: in the UK, <i>Encino Man</i> was titled <i>California Man</i> | null | null | 41,800,783 | 41,798,259 | null | [
41801553,
41800970,
41801219
] | null | null |
41,800,824 | comment | Apocryphon | 2024-10-10T16:57:01 | null | Amending the Constitution does seem like a fairly remote possibility, but then there's also this:<p><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Popular_Vote_Interstate_Compact" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Popular_Vote_Intersta...</a> | null | null | 41,799,086 | 41,792,780 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,825 | comment | null | 2024-10-10T16:57:04 | null | null | null | null | 41,800,717 | 41,800,717 | null | null | true | null |
41,800,826 | comment | dragonwriter | 2024-10-10T16:57:09 | 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<p>“Programmers” are not, software developers/software engineers, who are more like systems analysts than programmers in scope of job role at the full working level, though generally employed in organizations that do not also employ separate programmers, however, are and should be.<p>The kind of organization with wide organization/and interaction distance between users and people working on code with large numbers of over-the-wall handoffs in between is obsolete in many areas of software development because of advances in tooling, because of recognition of the quality costs imposed by that structure given the dynamics of many application domains where whiteboard analysis without real active use is <i>not</i> effective in getting accurate requirements, and because of the <i>costs</i> of that organization style which has long cycle times and high coordination overhead. | null | null | 41,800,469 | 41,797,009 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,827 | comment | renewiltord | 2024-10-10T16:57:09 | null | I’ve been vegetarian all my life because I’ve eaten plants with almost all my meals. One time I was a pure carnivore and eat a meat platter but most of the time I’ll manage at least one olive or something. | null | null | 41,800,745 | 41,795,218 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,828 | comment | christianqchung | 2024-10-10T16:57:14 | null | I don't really know how exploratory most games are compared to old Minecraft. Some games like Stardew Valley have certain things that are much easier to do because of third party wikis but I don't think the same is true of a lot of games in the same way it was for Minecraft. | null | null | 41,800,800 | 41,797,719 | null | [
41803280
] | null | null |
41,800,829 | comment | CraigJPerry | 2024-10-10T16:57:24 | null | That video turned out way more interesting than I first thought. I never really considered why the 380 makes that noise, i assumed it was a maintenance issue. | null | null | 41,757,808 | 41,757,808 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,830 | comment | Suppafly | 2024-10-10T16:57:24 | null | >Today the extract of the coca leaves, a de-cocainized version, is manufactured in the United States and used in the flavoring for Coca-Cola."<p>Interesting, I had always heard that they had to "de-cocainize" the extract outside the US and import the resulting product. | null | null | 41,798,673 | 41,787,798 | null | [
41801009
] | null | null |
41,800,831 | comment | RGamma | 2024-10-10T16:57:31 | null | Kinda wonder if/how we could/should turn having (and caring for!) children into its own serious career. As in: Have 8 well-tended children and you're top 10% of disposable income (someone needs to work out the math on this). | null | null | 41,799,454 | 41,798,726 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,832 | comment | null | 2024-10-10T16:57:40 | null | null | null | null | 41,800,764 | 41,800,764 | null | null | true | null |
41,800,833 | story | selimthegrim | 2024-10-10T16:57:53 | Elite colleges accused of price-fixing to make divorced parents pay more | null | https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2024/10/09/colleges-price-fixing-lawsuit-financial-aid-divorced-parents/ | 3 | null | 41,800,833 | 0 | [
41800856
] | null | null |
41,800,834 | comment | airstrike | 2024-10-10T16:58:01 | null | It's called nuance and context. | null | null | 41,797,583 | 41,784,387 | null | [
41801336
] | null | null |
41,800,835 | comment | bee_rider | 2024-10-10T16:58:10 | null | If every layer of abstraction and emulation is set up to allow it to pass through. It still seems really impressive to me, like lining up a bunch of targets and shooting an arrow through to get multiple bullseyes or something, haha. | null | null | 41,800,562 | 41,799,068 | null | [
41803722
] | null | null |
41,800,836 | story | ahmed33213 | 2024-10-10T16:58:15 | null | null | null | 1 | null | 41,800,836 | null | [
41800837
] | null | true |
41,800,837 | comment | ahmed33213 | 2024-10-10T16:58:15 | null | [dead] | null | null | 41,800,836 | 41,800,836 | null | null | null | true |
41,800,838 | comment | Suppafly | 2024-10-10T16:58:19 | null | >"Equality before the law" is unfortunately a farce in this country, if you didn't already know.<p>This specific case seems like it's more about the law grandfathering in an existing product vs whatever conspiracy theory you have in mind. | null | null | 41,798,599 | 41,787,798 | null | [
41800968
] | null | null |
41,800,839 | comment | jermaustin1 | 2024-10-10T16:58:21 | null | I've definitely triggered sticky-keys with my shift before, but I can't remember a time it was while typing - potentially while shift + arrow to highlight, though.<p>But it is one of those features that I turn off the second it annoys me 1 too many times. | null | null | 41,800,723 | 41,793,597 | null | [
41801705
] | null | null |
41,800,840 | comment | null | 2024-10-10T16:58:24 | null | null | null | null | 41,800,794 | 41,800,794 | null | null | true | null |
41,800,841 | comment | Clubber | 2024-10-10T16:58:27 | null | There was a study on it that made a big splash a while back. The interpreted version is that policy is made for the wealthy and special interest groups. If it happens to coincide with was the public wants, it's merely coincidence.<p><a href="https://www.vox.com/2014/4/18/5624310/martin-gilens-testing-theories-of-american-politics-explained" rel="nofollow">https://www.vox.com/2014/4/18/5624310/martin-gilens-testing-...</a><p>Sorry for the Vox link, that's what came up. | null | null | 41,794,743 | 41,784,287 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,842 | comment | Arch-TK | 2024-10-10T16:58:29 | null | > I write database storage engines.<p>Oh, wait, I just saw your name, I know who you are. But you are one of very few people on this planet writing C or C++ who get a pass on this kind of thing.<p>Almost nobody is using C or C++ to write super duper large data high performance databases. And even people who do work on databases don't need these breakneck levels of performance that you've dealt with.<p>In most cases people are breaking aliasing rules for no real performance advantage. These people should just stop, a large majority of code doesn't need to worry about aliasing rules because the vast majority of code written in C doesn't have these crazy performance requirements.<p>> The intrinsic ambiguity about the contents of a memory address create many opportunities to inadvertently create strict aliasing violations.<p>I don't get what you mean, at least the way you've explained it. Your memory might be volatile in the sense that it gets reused but if code is still operating on that memory then you don't have aliasing issues, you just have issues.<p>You can operate in terms of char * when it comes to your userspace paging implementation and your code which requested this paging (do you use use a segfault handler to implement this?) just operates in terms of whatever type it originally cast the void * value returned by your userspace mmap reimplementation. Am I misunderstanding something here?<p>> std::start_lifetime_as<p>I got into reading, since I don't know C++, I only know C, and this sounds like a relevant whitepaper:<p><a href="https://www.open-std.org/JTC1/SC22/WG21/docs/papers/2022/p2590r1.pdf" rel="nofollow">https://www.open-std.org/JTC1/SC22/WG21/docs/papers/2022/p25...</a><p>This lead me to:<p><a href="https://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2020/p0593r6.html" rel="nofollow">https://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2020/p05...</a><p>By the sounds of it, this is a problem in C++ only, so it explains why I wasn't aware of such an issue. So you're telling me that in C++ you can't reliably implement a userspace mmap (or even use normal mmap) implementation before C++23 because without std::start_lifetime_as the C++ abstract machine doesn't provide a way of specifying when an object's lifetime starts?<p>This makes me wonder, what even is the incantation you're referring to? | null | null | 41,800,247 | 41,757,701 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,800,843 | comment | thot_experiment | 2024-10-10T16:58:30 | null | You're missing the forest for the trees. You already have the bytecode interpreter in front of you and so does everyone else. You are already running it, the difference between "it's definitely already running" and "you could trivially make this work if you put a bit of effort in" is enormous. | null | null | 41,799,959 | 41,795,561 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,844 | comment | null | 2024-10-10T16:58:38 | null | null | null | null | 41,800,818 | 41,800,818 | null | null | true | null |
41,800,845 | comment | ensignavenger | 2024-10-10T16:58:45 | null | It seems to me like a quibe about verbage. I suppose "sell by" could be interpreted as a supplier telling a store what to do with their own goods. But on the other hand, the supplier has a brand on those goods and has a significant interest in protecting the brand. | null | null | 41,800,457 | 41,765,006 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,846 | comment | randomdata | 2024-10-10T16:58:48 | null | For all intents and purposes, when is the hardware not fully abstracted away? Even through the 2010s when running as a server was the norm, for the most part you could throw the same code onto basically any hardware without a second thought.<p>But pedantically, serverless is to be taken literally. It implies that there is no server in your application. | null | null | 41,800,692 | 41,795,561 | null | [
41800851
] | null | null |
41,800,847 | comment | cynicalpeace | 2024-10-10T16:58:50 | null | So when you drink Coca-Cola, you're drinking cocaine? | null | null | 41,793,308 | 41,787,798 | null | [
41801482
] | null | null |
41,800,848 | comment | nick__m | 2024-10-10T16:59:24 | null | In an ideal machine you are absolutely correct! But when executed by a real physical CPU, if the array doesn't fit I the cache, iteration strategies matters! | null | null | 41,800,682 | 41,769,275 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,849 | comment | consteval | 2024-10-10T16:59:35 | null | Yes, I think the person you're replying to is noting that's just a really small piece of the puzzle. Google Search is really inconsequential in the grand scheme of Google, other than being a vessel for other business ventures. | null | null | 41,792,263 | 41,784,287 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,850 | comment | Isammoc | 2024-10-10T16:59:36 | null | I love scala that does both greatly | null | null | 41,800,305 | 41,799,793 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,851 | comment | bloppe | 2024-10-10T16:59:41 | null | EC2 and managed kubernetes are two examples where you still have to think about hardware. | null | null | 41,800,846 | 41,795,561 | null | [
41800864,
41800892
] | null | null |
41,800,852 | comment | ebiester | 2024-10-10T16:59:44 | null | Maybe, just maybe, you're mixing cause and effect.<p>If you treat developers like house painters, they will not give you more. They will build the spec that you give them, and hold their tongues when they know it's a bad user experience.<p>If you treat developers like co-creators, and hire explicitly, and you put them in the same room with customers, you get a group thinking about how to solve a problem that your users have. They may be able to deliver something quicker, or develop a better customer experience, or question assumptions that lead to a better product.<p>An empowered engineer will be able to ask, "but what about how this user uses the software? Will this work for them?" And they become great at that by getting experience doing this - it's a skill, not an inborn talent. | null | null | 41,800,469 | 41,797,009 | null | [
41803553
] | null | null |
41,800,853 | comment | saalweachter | 2024-10-10T16:59:51 | null | I'm with you all the way, but I'm <i>pretty sure</i> cognomen had transitioned from nicknames to hereditary by Gaius Julius Caesar's time. Also, clean-shaven was a relatively new fashion in Rome -- Cicero, one of Caesar's political enemies and of the previous generation, had a speech complaining about how women these days liked pretty clean-shaven younger men, and not the robust full-bearded old patricians, like they should. | null | null | 41,800,806 | 41,798,027 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,800,854 | comment | sickofparadox | 2024-10-10T16:59:58 | null | 24% of the entire US federal Medicare budget every year is dedicated SOLELY to dialysis[1], for K-12 we spend nearly a trillion every year, with increasingly worse results [2]. This is less than two years of spending on education spread across 30. The idea that the US does not spend a lot of money on things like education and healthcare is so unbelievably wrong it makes me think I'm taking crazy pills. We spend so much on these things and get essentially nothing for it, because people just keep thinking we don't spend money on it instead of putting pressure to investigate why our public services are money furnaces that turns taxpayer funds into illiterate adults[3].<p>Edited to add a missed word.<p>[1] <a href="https://www.kidney.org/federal-investment" rel="nofollow">https://www.kidney.org/federal-investment</a>
[2] <a href="https://nces.ed.gov/fastfacts/display.asp?id=66" rel="nofollow">https://nces.ed.gov/fastfacts/display.asp?id=66</a>
[3] <a href="https://www.thenationalliteracyinstitute.com/post/literacy-statistics-2022-2023" rel="nofollow">https://www.thenationalliteracyinstitute.com/post/literacy-s...</a> | null | null | 41,799,861 | 41,798,916 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,800,855 | comment | dartos | 2024-10-10T17:00:05 | null | Thank god. Fandom is the most unusable website I have ever landed on. | null | null | 41,797,719 | 41,797,719 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,856 | comment | null | 2024-10-10T17:00:08 | null | null | null | null | 41,800,833 | 41,800,833 | null | null | true | null |
41,800,857 | comment | burnerthrow008 | 2024-10-10T17:00:17 | null | That appears to be cumulative since 2020, which is perfectly plausible. | null | null | 41,800,822 | 41,800,642 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,858 | comment | null | 2024-10-10T17:00:19 | null | null | null | null | 41,800,792 | 41,800,792 | null | null | true | null |
41,800,859 | comment | bobthepanda | 2024-10-10T17:00:21 | null | Humans find lots of value in human effort towards culturally important things.<p>See: a grandmother’s food vs. the industrial equivalent | null | null | 41,799,103 | 41,797,462 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,860 | story | ruihangl | 2024-10-10T17:00:25 | High-Throughput Low-Latency LLM Serving with MLCEngine | null | https://blog.mlc.ai/2024/10/10/optimizing-and-characterizing-high-throughput-low-latency-llm-inference | 8 | null | 41,800,860 | 0 | [
41801234
] | null | null |
41,800,861 | comment | paulpauper | 2024-10-10T17:00:28 | null | <a href="https://archive.is/lLqM2" rel="nofollow">https://archive.is/lLqM2</a> | null | null | 41,800,736 | 41,800,736 | null | [
41801317
] | null | null |
41,800,862 | story | gilsoares | 2024-10-10T17:00:35 | Duck Typing in Go | null | https://linuxsoares.github.io/posts/duck-typing-in-go/ | 1 | null | 41,800,862 | 1 | [
41800863,
41800880
] | null | null |
41,800,863 | comment | gilsoares | 2024-10-10T17:00:35 | null | Continuing my studies in Go, here’s a simple example of how Duck Typing works in Go and how it differs when compared to Python and Java in terms of "implementing" an interface in Go.<p>Happy reading, and as I mentioned in another post, keep studying, don’t stop, never stop!!! | null | null | 41,800,862 | 41,800,862 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,864 | comment | null | 2024-10-10T17:00:36 | null | null | null | null | 41,800,851 | 41,795,561 | null | null | true | null |
41,800,865 | comment | null | 2024-10-10T17:00:53 | null | null | null | null | 41,800,710 | 41,800,710 | null | null | true | null |
41,800,866 | comment | qart | 2024-10-10T17:00:54 | null | I don't think that has anything to do with the continent. People like Haruki Murakami and Liu Cixin have achieved immense reader-bases with their English translations. | null | null | 41,800,670 | 41,799,170 | null | [
41800934,
41801039,
41801343
] | null | null |
41,800,867 | comment | Xcelerate | 2024-10-10T17:01:03 | null | Haha, I was more so meaning that cryptography depends on the actual existence of hard problem instances, which appears to be the case but hasn’t been conclusively proved. | null | null | 41,799,531 | 41,753,626 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,868 | comment | int_19h | 2024-10-10T17:01:12 | null | It would be meritocracy if both kids had equal opportunity to earn those merits. If the ability to do so is itself gated, it's only meritocratic within the privileged group. | null | null | 41,796,409 | 41,793,597 | null | [
41801671
] | null | null |
41,800,869 | comment | ensignavenger | 2024-10-10T17:01:25 | null | "best buy" is pretty plain English. It means the manufacturer beleives the product will be at its best up to that date. | null | null | 41,800,219 | 41,765,006 | null | [
41802570
] | null | null |
41,800,870 | comment | jcims | 2024-10-10T17:01:26 | null | Side note, I started monitoring with a cuff-style monitor over the past month, and one thing that’s super important is keeping the cuff at about heart level. The cuff I got actually reminds you of this verbally. While it obviously makes sense, it’s a bit surprising how much a change in elevation affects the readings. | null | null | 41,799,324 | 41,799,324 | null | [
41800910
] | null | null |
41,800,871 | comment | HPsquared | 2024-10-10T17:01:31 | null | And if something is everyone's problem, we just ignore it. | null | null | 41,798,960 | 41,798,027 | null | [
41803626
] | null | null |
41,800,872 | comment | eastbound | 2024-10-10T17:01:32 | null | This. Engineers talk about feature creep, but forget to mention configuration creep. You can make anything you want! Yes it’s taken two years and no we didn’t nail the principal usecase. But we can make a version 2! | null | null | 41,799,615 | 41,797,009 | null | [
41801307
] | null | null |
41,800,873 | comment | null | 2024-10-10T17:01:47 | null | null | null | null | 41,800,656 | 41,800,656 | null | null | true | null |
41,800,874 | comment | everforward | 2024-10-10T17:01:48 | null | The article is also far more PR-y than I would have expected; the only law-related item is basically just a very long explanation of consideration and an assertion that what they’ve done counts as consideration. I have no idea if it does or not, but putting a lawyers name at the top doesn’t convince me it’s correct any more than if PR wrote it.<p>The whole thing is strange, and I can’t figure out why anyone would tie their ship to Matt in this storm. He’s a liability not just to himself, but to everyone supporting him as his antics start to reflect on his supporters. Even if people did support his position, Matt is preventing them from doing so publicly without also looking insane. | null | null | 41,800,415 | 41,791,369 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,875 | comment | theamk | 2024-10-10T17:01:54 | null | total block on _old_ tablets - Android 4.4 specifically, and I am sure many people on HN would be horrified to see those anywhere close to internet. New tablets are fine.<p>As for "more user-friendly captchas" - I have seen some of those (like AliExpress' slider) but I doubt they will work as well as hydrants. And with new AI startups (1) slurping all the data on the web and (2) writing realistic-looking spam messages, I am sure anti-bot measures would be more important than ever. | null | null | 41,800,187 | 41,797,719 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,876 | comment | wolrah | 2024-10-10T17:01:54 | null | > Wish they had a community version I could play with, but understand they would be worried about cannibalising their already small market.<p>They may not have a choice either. IBM still owns OS/2. ArcaOS, like eComStation before it, is a licensed distribution. Their FAQ entry on refunds indicates that they have to pay IBM for their part of every license and that portion is both nonrefundable and nontransferable so if they refund a license they've lost that amount. It also presumably sets a lower bound on how little they could charge without actually losing money on every copy distributed. It would not actually surprise me to find out that their "personal edition" license is as cheap as they can consider "worth it" to offer.<p>IBM clearly stopped caring about growing the OS/2 market decades ago and I don't think Arca Noae really has any ambition to either. It's not like there's any realistic scenario where it suddenly becomes appealing as a target platform for anyone not already heavily invested in it outside of occasional hobbyists. The lack of any concept of users and privilege levels makes it undesirable for most desktop and server use cases that don't basically come down to "appliance" and as an appliance it's hard to see what OS/2 via ArcaOS on modern x86 offers over more popular platforms, especially with the 32 bit 4GB ceiling forever overhead. Changing those things would require substantial compatibility breaks which is not really viable when your core business is supporting environments that don't want to change their software. | null | null | 41,798,640 | 41,795,919 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,877 | comment | sph | 2024-10-10T17:02:02 | null | > And goes without saying, your blood pressure SHOULD go up and down based on your activity and time of day. You just aren't used to seeing it other than at true rest.<p>Yeah, people panic reading a single 150 systolic, yet routinely it can reach 220+ during heavy exercise. It's perfectly fine. The health metric is the BP at rest, i.e. how low it goes when you're completely idle.<p>I find it takes up to 20 minutes to reach its lowest sometimes, in state of absolute calm: no movement, no talking, no anxiety. Hence the 'white collar hypertension', i.e. high BP when measured in hospitals and GPs office, where they don't give you enough time to settle down, or are not spaces that induce calm mental states.<p>The way I take my BP reading is every 5 minutes, until I get a similar reading after 2 consecutive measurements. It takes longer than you'd expect. | null | null | 41,800,122 | 41,799,324 | null | [
41803236,
41801693
] | null | null |
41,800,878 | comment | csmcg | 2024-10-10T17:02:06 | null | I haven't played DCSS regularly since probably v0.24 or v0.25, so things may have changed - but if I recall correctly, it was not kept up to date very well, character guides are flat-out wrong, etc... | null | null | 41,799,378 | 41,797,719 | null | [
41803807
] | null | null |
41,800,879 | story | rolph | 2024-10-10T17:02:10 | Photochromic Dye Makes Up This Novel Optical Memristor | null | https://hackaday.com/2024/10/10/photochromic-dye-makes-up-this-novel-optical-memristor/ | 1 | null | 41,800,879 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,800,880 | comment | null | 2024-10-10T17:02:16 | null | null | null | null | 41,800,862 | 41,800,862 | null | null | true | null |
41,800,881 | comment | dartos | 2024-10-10T17:02:20 | null | That’s literally what that means…<p>You, the theater owner, are selling the time people are sitting in your theater in view of a large screen to advertisers. That time is literally worth something.<p>If there were no people in the theater, the advertisers wouldn’t pay for the time.<p>You just really don’t understand how advertising works.<p>You’re effectively saying something like “just because people would pay for something, doesn’t mean it has any value”<p>I have to believe that you’re an extremely skilled troll, because otherwise idk what’s going on in your head. | null | null | 41,792,191 | 41,784,287 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,882 | comment | bitbasher | 2024-10-10T17:02:30 | null | Go | null | null | 41,796,693 | 41,764,163 | null | [
41803447
] | null | null |
41,800,883 | comment | paulpauper | 2024-10-10T17:02:33 | null | These are elementary concepts yet the interviews are regarded as very hard, so there must be more to it... | null | null | 41,800,699 | 41,800,699 | null | [
41802962,
41804090,
41801956
] | null | null |
41,800,884 | comment | acallaha | 2024-10-10T17:02:35 | null | I've had the same experience as well, and found SwiftKey to be a decent replacement (though I'd prefer gBoard if it wasn't so crashy) | null | null | 41,798,785 | 41,762,483 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,885 | story | chha | 2024-10-10T17:02:42 | Cyber resilience act: Council adopts new law on security requirements | null | https://www.consilium.europa.eu/en/press/press-releases/2024/10/10/cyber-resilience-act-council-adopts-new-law-on-security-requirements-for-digital-products/ | 1 | null | 41,800,885 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,800,886 | comment | Log_out_ | 2024-10-10T17:02:45 | null | attaching good attributes generously is a sign of nothing but a willingness to produce hot air from calories over abandunt in a non exhausted environment. its easy being noble if you are rich in a still rich world . | null | null | 41,794,807 | 41,794,807 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,887 | comment | null | 2024-10-10T17:02:55 | null | null | null | null | 41,794,790 | 41,790,026 | null | null | true | null |
41,800,888 | comment | Tyr42 | 2024-10-10T17:03:08 | null | There is also condensation to consider and I think that putting the unwashed eggs in the fridge can be unsafe if the condensation can allow stuff from the poop to move around. But I'm no eggspert. | null | null | 41,800,812 | 41,765,006 | null | [
41801627
] | null | null |
41,800,889 | comment | orthecreedence | 2024-10-10T17:03:09 | null | Does Meili support object store backends? | null | null | 41,799,767 | 41,797,041 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,890 | comment | bee_rider | 2024-10-10T17:03:11 | null | Hot Sauce is kind of annoying because it lasts so long after the best by dates. Like it could just be kicking around in then fridge for a couple years and not grow anything on it, but it is <i>probably</i> time to toss it out eventually? | null | null | 41,800,584 | 41,765,006 | null | [
41801277,
41801139
] | null | null |
41,800,891 | comment | morpheuskafka | 2024-10-10T17:03:12 | null | > Matt's response to questions is that the questioners should hire a lawyer to figure out what Matt's own wording means.<p>Isn't the general rule that uncertainty in a contract is construed against the drafter? If you're deliberately refusing to clarify your own contract that seems like it could jeopardize the ability to enforce it at all. | null | null | 41,799,115 | 41,796,748 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,892 | comment | randomdata | 2024-10-10T17:03:16 | null | Not really. The application doesn't care. Hell, many of these modern serverless frameworks are built so that they can run both server and serverless from the very same codebase, so it is likely you can take the same code built to run on someone's MacBook running macOS/ARM and run it on an EC2 instance running Linux/amd64 and then take it to a serverless provider on any arbitrary hardware without any code modification at all! I've been around the web since Perl was the de facto way to build web apps, and it has always been an exceptional situation to not have the hardware fully abstracted away. Typically, if it will run on one system, it will run on any system.<p>The move away from CGI/FastCGI/SCGI to the application being the server was a meaningful shift in how web applications were developed. Now that we've started adopting the server back out of the application in favour of the process-based model again, albeit now largely through propriety protocols instead of a standard like CGI, serverless has come into use in recognition of that. We don't want to go back to calling it CGI because CGI is no longer the protocol du jour. | null | null | 41,800,851 | 41,795,561 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,893 | story | javatuts | 2024-10-10T17:03:20 | null | null | null | 1 | null | 41,800,893 | null | null | null | true |
41,800,894 | comment | refulgentis | 2024-10-10T17:03:21 | null | > I don’t think animating 1000 things per frame gonna saturate a CPU core doing these computations<p>Oh, my sweet summer child. :)<p>> In modern games none of that bandwidth is processed on CPU. Games use GPU for that, which don’t run Rust.<p>So is your claim that OP is making up stuff about running code on the CPU because its a 3D engine?<p>Also, why mention megapixels if you think it's irrelevant? :)<p>> Weak claim?<p>"_all_ performant data structures in Rust _must_ use unsafe code" is a long tail reading of the original comment. If that was the intent, it is a weak claim, because we can observe <i>many</i> memory-safe languages and runtimes and have performant data structures. (minecraft was written in Java, years and years ago!)<p>> Look at the source code of data structures implemented by Rust standard library.<p>This is the bailey, which was directly covered in the previous comment.<p>The motte was "all performant data structures in Rust must use unsafe code"<p>Here, the bailey, steelmanning as strongly as possible, is "data structures with unsafe code are more performant than ones without", which was directly said in the comment you are replying to.<p>In addition to the swapping, this is a picture-perfect replication of the bomber with holes on it meme, as the other reply notes. | null | null | 41,796,890 | 41,791,773 | null | [
41801914
] | null | null |
41,800,895 | comment | Iwan-Zotow | 2024-10-10T17:03:23 | null | Noone abandons Empire | null | null | 41,799,861 | 41,798,916 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,896 | comment | mikhailfranco | 2024-10-10T17:03:25 | null | Maybe Ken Rogoff should get the Economics prize :) | null | null | 41,788,259 | 41,786,101 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,897 | comment | null | 2024-10-10T17:03:33 | null | null | null | null | 41,800,580 | 41,800,580 | null | null | true | null |
41,800,898 | comment | jnordwick | 2024-10-10T17:03:34 | null | I hate to be that guy: Org mode did it.<p>(actually, I love pimping emacs) | null | null | 41,800,461 | 41,798,477 | null | null | null | null |
41,800,899 | comment | sbuk | 2024-10-10T17:03:37 | null | Google <i>chose</i> a jury trial, rather than a bench trial. The <i>judge</i> maid their ruling based on evidence presented, and largely ruled in Apple’s favour <i>based on evidence</i> provided by both Epic and Apple. No two cases are ever the same, there are always nuances. Throw a jury in to that mix, it’s even more of a crap-shoot. | null | null | 41,795,041 | 41,784,287 | null | null | null | null |
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