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41,802,100
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Technetium
2024-10-10T18:54:09
null
O&amp;O ShutUp10++ is a requirement for me. It is my preference because every debloat script tends to legitimately break the OS. I have had to do clean installs multiple times this year after customers ran them. MS provides registry keys that can be configured, but they do consistently move them around. Without an application which can easily revert automated changes, it&#x27;d be nearly impossible to keep track of it all, let alone notice changes. Upside is not having a broken system, downside is needing to open it once every week or two. I agree with the other comments that LTSC would be better, but there&#x27;s no reasonably legal way to obtain it, and nobody wants to have the BSA knock on their door asking for a quarter million USD per license violation. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.oo-software.com&#x2F;en&#x2F;shutup10" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.oo-software.com&#x2F;en&#x2F;shutup10</a>
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41,801,331
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[ 41802412 ]
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kelipso
2024-10-10T18:54:15
null
It&#x27;s interesting, friend once told me, we are what we have read in the past five years. Similar to the food we eat and how quickly it can change our body, our mind can change quickly based on what we have read, what we watch, the conversations we have, what we do...I feel like a lot of people underestimate our malleability.
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dyauspitr
2024-10-10T18:54:15
null
It isn’t but it kinda is. If 95% of your meals are vegetarian then I think the designation holds.
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41,802,103
comment
Habgdnv
2024-10-10T18:54:30
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I&#x27;ve lived in Bulgaria, Ireland, and Poland, and I&#x27;ve never seen dirty eggs in the stores. Are you sure about that?
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41,765,006
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41,802,104
comment
fastball
2024-10-10T18:54:34
null
Isn&#x27;t the cold-start for the JVM still relatively slow, even in [current year]?<p>EDIT: seems like yes[1], at least where AWS Lambda is concerned.<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;filia-aleks.medium.com&#x2F;aws-lambda-battle-2021-performance-comparison-for-all-languages-c1b441005fd1" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;filia-aleks.medium.com&#x2F;aws-lambda-battle-2021-perfor...</a>
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[ 41802613 ]
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pjmlp
2024-10-10T18:54:41
null
C23 has just been ratified, and C2y has already quite a few proposals.<p>Programming languages are like any other software product, evolution or stagnation.<p>Eventually they might implode, however whatever comes after will follow the same cycle yet again.
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41,787,041
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[ 41802958 ]
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comment
skrebbel
2024-10-10T18:54:45
null
why?
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41,801,852
41,787,041
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41,802,107
comment
Andrex
2024-10-10T18:54:46
null
Maybe a dumb question, but would a 70-80 year old be able to use cocaine without dying? If you&#x27;re not using it often enough for it to be a problem, you also probably don&#x27;t have much of a tolerance. I would think anyways.
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41,801,886
41,787,798
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[ 41802743 ]
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41,802,108
comment
ryandvm
2024-10-10T18:54:53
null
Seems like it ought to be possible to link your identity on another platform (e.g. Blue Sky or Threads) with your Twitter identity through some sort of specific post (similar to a DNS proof) and just transplant entire swaths of the network graph to another social network.
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41,801,795
41,801,795
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[ 41802159, 41803362, 41802153 ]
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41,802,109
comment
johannes1234321
2024-10-10T18:55:00
null
DVDs are an insult anyways. No idea who and the idea that enforcing an unskippable piracy warning was a smart idea. Pretending paying customers might be bad actors.<p>(Of course when using an &quot;illegal&quot; player or pirated copy one could avoid it from the start ... a lot better experience)
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comment
wccrawford
2024-10-10T18:55:21
null
I have never seen it or the trailer. Thank you for the recommendation!
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41,802,031
41,801,300
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comment
rlpb
2024-10-10T18:55:25
null
You&#x27;ve hit the nail on the head and I wish I could give you ten upvotes.<p>A different example I sometimes use is the task of translating a children&#x27;s book that has &quot;busy bees&quot; in it. The illustrations show bees being busy. The story might even resolve around that to some extent. But another reason the bees are busy is that &quot;busy&quot; sounds like the buzzing sound they make. So what does one do when translating this into a language where the word for the regular meaning of &quot;busy&quot; does not sound like &quot;buzz&quot;? Whatever one does, something must be lost in the translation.<p>I have tried and failed to translate into my ancestral language the books I read to my children for exactly this reason. Another issue is that the specific choices of foods, animals and so forth are awkward to translate smoothly, but they are pictured so I cannot change them.
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comment
wakawaka28
2024-10-10T18:55:28
null
I suppose it can be dependent on the platform. For example, any given platform can provide options to ignore anonymous users who lack a certain level of verification. So, you can either trust the platform with your real identity (and hide it), or else you can pay to be truly anonymous. This could get ridiculous with higher and higher prices but it&#x27;s on us to resist anything too unreasonable in that situation.
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[ 41802382 ]
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comment
teejmya
2024-10-10T18:55:28
null
How to create an Echo Chamber 101
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41,801,795
41,801,795
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[ 41803378 ]
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41,802,114
comment
vector_spaces
2024-10-10T18:55:30
null
I was disappointed reading this article after seeing the headline -- essentially this is a fairly boring and bog-standard critique of social media and screen addiction. We&#x27;ve heard these same exact critiques so many times on this site! It&#x27;s been rehashed to the point that it is entirely cliche, which makes the post&#x27;s comments on how thoughtless screen time diminishes &quot;unique insights, ... and exceptional outcomes&quot; feel like self-parody.<p>Mainly I am disappointed because this blog post never expands on what is meant in the headline by creating space -- the headline is why I bothered reading it at all, and yet the only connection the post bothers make to it is the singular exhortation that we should &quot;[c]reate space for something better&quot;, which feels like a glib afterthought.<p>I&#x27;m being harsh here, firstly, because IMO it&#x27;s important for titles to connect meaningfully with content, because otherwise there&#x27;s a negative mismatch in expectations. And specifically if the connection feels like an afterthought, I feel duped. The headline seemed interesting! You grabbed my attention! But the content failed to deliver<p>Secondly, as I said, there&#x27;s nothing new here -- this horse has been flogged to death and then some. And there&#x27;s not even a hint of awareness that this is the case, no attempt to engage with other posts or research on this, and there is no sense of awareness that this is a conversation we&#x27;ve been having now for decades. You aren&#x27;t a hermit philospher, nor are you an island of a person -- at least you shouldn&#x27;t strive to be those things when writing for other people<p>Finally, the analysis of our usage patterns is reductive. I realize this isn&#x27;t a PhD thesis, but there are lots of reasons people use &quot;the apps&quot; other than that it is the bread and circuses which we have been handed and therefore mindlessly consume. I realize that the apps encourage mindless consumption, and our lizard brains are more than happy to oblige, but not everyone who engages with social media is an idiot, and original thought and meaningful connection does indeed happen there.
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comment
xenadu02
2024-10-10T18:55:37
null
There&#x27;s Fed Reserve research on this. The only thing recourse does is make borrowers a bit less sensitive to negative equity and only for high value homes:<p>&quot;Importantly, recourse affects default only through lowering borrowers sensitivity to negative equity. Unconditionally, there is no difference between the default rates in recourse and non-recourse states.&quot;<p>&quot;The effect of recourse is significant only for higher-appraised properties.&quot;<p>&gt; Credit standards and interest rates will be different on non-recourse loans<p>&quot;To the extent that borrowers in recourse states are less likely to default in response to negative equity, and are more likely to default in a lender-friendly way if they do default, lenders are likely to face smaller losses from default in recourse states. Thus, one might expect interest rates to be lower in recourse states. However, we find no evidence that they are; in fact, we find that loans are more expensive in recourse states.&quot;<p>You can read the paper for yourself: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;papers.ssrn.com&#x2F;sol3&#x2F;papers.cfm?abstract_id=1432437" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;papers.ssrn.com&#x2F;sol3&#x2F;papers.cfm?abstract_id=1432437</a>. Note that this paper (and many other sources) classify Texas as recourse but it is not. I&#x27;m not certain why that is.<p>Many recourse states require the bank to credit you the full appraised value, not the actual foreclosure sale value - because banks often bid against themselves at foreclosure auctions and control bid acceptance so they effectively set the foreclosure price. Various things (wages, personal property, retirement accounts) are often excluded from recourse for your primary home. In some states like Minnesota a jury must determine the fair market value of a foreclosed home. Other states have strict requirements (like short filing deadlines) or lengthy procedures (all attorney billable hours!).<p>This effectively makes non-foreclosure options way more popular - where a bank will ofter to take the deed and cancel the debt. In the end it is more cost-effective for the bank and better for the borrower.<p>Furthermore even if you get a deficiency judgement the old proverb &quot;You can&#x27;t squeeze blood from a stone&quot; applies. Someone who can&#x27;t pay their mortgage is unlikely to have significant assets to draw on. All you get for your trouble is a bankruptcy filing from the borrower. After all that time and trouble your deficiency judgement gets discharged anyway.<p>In the end recourse states mean more defaults happen through a voluntary non-foreclosure process but lending standards and interest rates are not that different and very few borrowers ever actually have a deficiency judgement let alone pay a dime toward one.
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comment
guerrilla
2024-10-10T18:55:37
null
This was awesome. Don&#x27;t just read the comments. Spoiler: psychology is not stupid, it&#x27;s just young.<p>I completely agree. This is how I see psychiatry after having experienced it for decades: it&#x27;s just slightly better than going to a shaman. It&#x27;s witchcraft and it mostly doesn&#x27;t work because, well, it&#x27;s witchcraft. We just are not at a point in history where we can do much about these things and we have to be adults and accept that. It&#x27;s okay, there was a time when we&#x27;d die of simple infections too. That&#x27;s how psychology is now, very young and full of witchcraft.<p>Also, the article was funny... And wtf is that cheeseboat?
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41,780,328
41,780,328
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[ 41803531, 41802739 ]
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comment
ForOldHack
2024-10-10T18:55:38
null
I keep God Mode and a text file of all the reg settings... in case the porkchopolips arrives, which I was greeted with Monday morning. By early after noon, all was quiet again.<p>I recommend ALL these sites, and would only add Black Viper:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.tenforums.com&#x2F;performance-maintenance&#x2F;18394-black-viper-s-windows-10-service-configurations-very-useful-info.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.tenforums.com&#x2F;performance-maintenance&#x2F;18394-blac...</a><p>and...<p>Windows 10 Integral Edition:<p>Zone 94 and the Internet archive are temporarily offline,<p>Hopefully MassGrave.dev is still working.
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comment
crubier
2024-10-10T18:55:39
null
PIGS Countries don&#x27;t have capital available to invest in salaries &#x2F; services &#x2F; fun &#x2F; comfort in the first place, due to historical reasons, the 2010s debt crisis etc.<p>So the move of bringing people and capital by available means (tax breaks) and be less hostile to startups &amp; companies (they have been very hostile and bureaucratic historically) is one of the few things they can do, and it works.
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comment
andyjohnson0
2024-10-10T18:55:50
null
&gt; the company announced today that creators are instead going to be paid based on “engagement with your content from Premium users.”<p>Circling the drain.<p>The incentives only point one way now. If Twitter&#x2F;X ever was a forum for genuine conversation or debate, they just killed it.
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41,801,795
41,801,795
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[ 41802709 ]
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story
coloneltcb
2024-10-10T18:55:55
Interest Analogues: When Algorithms Force You into Weird Niches
null
https://tedium.co/2024/10/10/social-media-algorithms-fake-interests/
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41,802,120
0
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41,802,121
comment
krapp
2024-10-10T18:56:03
null
Modern flat earth theory owes more to fringe Christian theology and the general normalization of conspiracy theory and meme culture than anything to do with the Flat Earth Society.
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41,801,719
41,801,271
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41,802,122
comment
theideaofcoffee
2024-10-10T18:56:03
null
As much as I love the futuristic and sophisticated sounds that electric traction drives make as compared to their fossil-fueled counterparts, I do think that the driving and control systems that actually generate the PWM waveforms that are sent to the motors are even more interesting. Huge, massive IGBTs weighing a kilo+ each chopping up hundreds of thousands of joules&#x2F;s of energy without destroying themselves, current transformers, contactors, it really tickles parts of my brain. He only spent a handful of seconds on those, would be interesting to hear a deeper dive.
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41,757,808
41,757,808
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[ 41803386, 41803595, 41803014 ]
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41,802,123
comment
pjmlp
2024-10-10T18:56:08
null
That was gone with GPU access and WebAssembly.
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41,801,835
41,787,041
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41,802,124
comment
VirusNewbie
2024-10-10T18:56:13
null
I would drive to my FAANG job in a Rolls Royce most days instead of a model 3 Tesla.<p>I&#x27;d not sweat it if things slipped. <i>shrug</i><p>The work is interesting enough for now.
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41,802,125
comment
allenu
2024-10-10T18:56:21
null
I had a similar experience when I popped in an old DVD of Star Wars (i.e. A New Hope) recently. If I recall correctly, there are some short clips and audio that play as part of the intro before you even get to the main menu, and it includes the famous John Williams theme. I hadn&#x27;t seen the movie in ages, so I wanted to go in fresh, and this totally ruined the experience.<p>I had the opposite experience when I popped in another old DVD, this time Amadeus. I hadn&#x27;t seen the movie before, but I was shocked and pleasantly surprised when it literally started playing from the very beginning of the movie. No DVD menu or previews at all. It just felt so good to go straight to the story.
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41,801,300
41,801,300
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[ 41802494 ]
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41,802,126
comment
victor9000
2024-10-10T18:56:30
null
Having followed the same path, you won&#x27;t regret it. I jumped ship 15 years ago after starting off my career as a C# dev and I never looked back. Linux makes it easy for you to be a developer, while other platforms fight you every step of the way. You&#x27;ll eventually get into situations where you need to update something manually or rollback a dependecy, but it will be possible, and you&#x27;ll find bug tickets describing the problem and what you can do about it.
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41,801,864
41,801,331
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[ 41802476, 41802993 ]
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41,802,127
comment
fguerraz
2024-10-10T18:56:34
null
It&#x27;s too bad they focused on commercial closed-source solutions providers. The ecosystem would have really benefited if they had put their efforts to, for example, do the same work with NextCloud.
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41,798,359
41,798,359
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[ 41802176 ]
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41,802,128
comment
wccrawford
2024-10-10T18:56:34
null
In care you are really un-aware... Yes. They have plots, and they&#x27;re very well made.
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41,801,969
41,801,300
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[ 41803301, 41803110 ]
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41,802,129
comment
kragen
2024-10-10T18:56:39
null
&gt; <i>His point is not about compensating for loss.</i><p>&gt; <i>It&#x27;s the fact that options laid out on the table with unknowns can be preferable to people than no options, or fewer options.</i><p>Assuming you&#x27;re talking about me, that&#x27;s not exactly my point. I didn&#x27;t intend to make any assertions about what patients or their families should or should not do, or in general any normative points (though I did use the word &quot;justification&quot;, which I shouldn&#x27;t have).<p>Rather, what I was saying is that businesses that aren&#x27;t profitable cease to exist, and if the business&#x27;s product is an experimental medical therapy that could end up killing a substantial fraction of its patients, the business might lose money when those patients&#x27; families sue the business. It&#x27;s fairly predictable that a good fraction of experimental therapies will have this outcome, even if you don&#x27;t know which ones in advance. Consequently, businesses that don&#x27;t price it into their business model will, in most cases, go bankrupt after their first few successful therapies, making them unattractive for venture capital.<p>So the high price tag is somewhat predictable, whatever you may think of its moral status.<p>Separately, your comment seems to imply that damages on breach-of-contract and similar civil tort cases are paid to the plaintiff by the state rather than the defendant. That is not correct. They are paid by the defendant if they are paid at all. In the US, you can also file a civil tort case for conversion against someone who stole your car and get awarded damages in the same way.
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conradev
2024-10-10T18:56:39
null
Serverless, to me, is purely about efficiency. One way to measure that is the time for a &quot;cold start&quot; or &quot;going from a state where you pay no money to one where you pay money&quot;. These gains in efficiency remove the need for over-provisioning and in many cases allow you to pass these savings onto the consumer (if you want to).<p>Heroku is a few seconds:<p>&gt; It only takes a few seconds to start a one-off dyno process or to scale up a web or worker process.<p>Lambda created Firecracker to be snappier:<p>&gt; The duration of a cold start varies from under 100 ms to over 1 second.<p>I think App Engine is in the same ballpark as Lambda (and predated it). Fly.io uses Firecracker too:<p>&gt; While Fly Machine cold starts are extremely fast, it still takes a few hundred milliseconds, so it’s still worth weighing the impact it has on performance.<p>but WASM is yet an order of magnitude faster and cheaper:<p>&gt; Cloudflare Workers has eliminated cold starts entirely, meaning they need zero spin up time. This is the case in every location in Cloudflare&#x27;s global network.<p>WASM is currently limited in what it can do, but if all you&#x27;re doing is manipulating and serving HTML, it&#x27;s fantastic at that.
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41,802,131
comment
Const-me
2024-10-10T18:56:40
null
&gt; Dec 13, 2017<p>OK, here’s a newer project which does about the same thing i.e. compiles C# to PTX <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;ilgpu.net&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;ilgpu.net&#x2F;</a> BTW, it supports OpenCL backend in addition to CUDA.
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41,801,286
41,791,773
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[ 41803024 ]
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41,802,132
comment
sunaookami
2024-10-10T18:56:42
null
Not directed at you but I find it funny that people (rightfully!) complain about Microsoft spyware and then run some dubious scripts from who-knows-where. With the added side effects that these scripts <i>always</i> disable&#x2F;remove waaaay too much and break the install which then lead to users cursing Microsoft for things that the user has broken without knowing.
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41,801,749
41,801,331
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[ 41802393, 41802205, 41802467, 41802225, 41802555, 41803240, 41803496 ]
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41,802,133
comment
christkv
2024-10-10T18:57:04
null
It is and the effect is immediate and destructive to any value creation in startups. It basically forces companies to leave before raising any serious money or founders will end up with tax bills that have to be paid out of investment money
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41,802,059
41,799,016
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[ 41803452 ]
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41,802,134
comment
klipt
2024-10-10T18:57:06
null
The EU and USA both have free movement between states.<p>But the USA has massive federal tax revenue and spending which redistributes wealth from rich states to poor states. Federal taxes are much higher than state taxes.<p>By comparison the EU has high state taxes, but very tiny &quot;confederal&quot; EU level revenue. So much less ability to balance things between rich and poor member states.<p>This puts poor states like Portugal into a bad position where they suffer from brain drain due to the free movement, but don&#x27;t get enough monetary benefits from the EU to counteract that.<p>This turns Portugal into a gateway country for the EU: they have loose immigration rules because they want to attract young workers. But as soon as those workers live in Portugal long enough to get an EU passport, many brain drain away to other (better paying) EU countries, and need to be replaced with even more immigrants.
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41,801,642
41,799,016
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[ 41802304, 41802339, 41802214 ]
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41,802,135
comment
s1artibartfast
2024-10-10T18:57:06
null
I like the idea of publishing the actual start times. People who dont want to watch the pre-feature can step out for an ice-cream.
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41,802,008
41,801,300
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[ 41802252 ]
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41,802,136
comment
BuyMyBitcoins
2024-10-10T18:57:11
null
I’ve always appreciated Civ’s quotes. I still quote the ones from IV.
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41,798,375
41,798,027
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41,802,137
story
homarp
2024-10-10T18:57:11
Tiny Table Index: directory of solo and duet tabletop roleplaying games
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https://www.tinytableindex.com/
2
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41,802,137
0
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41,802,138
comment
triyambakam
2024-10-10T18:57:12
null
Hmm, I wish the author had reviewed Proton. I think it&#x27;s kind of seen as a meme here? But I heavily rely on it and generally the Proton ecosystem is getting better and better from a UX perspective
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41,798,359
41,798,359
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[ 41802760 ]
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41,802,139
comment
cjbgkagh
2024-10-10T18:57:26
null
I think the point is that instead of asking cinemas to self regulate one could simply watch to movie at home.<p>I see it as part of a general trend where public spaces are tarnished by a general public that is unable to behave itself.<p>I think in time the process will accelerate and more and more public spaces will be replaced by private spaces. This is fine for people like myself who can afford such private spaces but I think it’s bad for society which I still have to live in.
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41,802,040
41,801,300
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[ 41802495, 41802538, 41803312 ]
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comment
oidar
2024-10-10T18:57:27
null
I think there is a lot of white coat HT that makes up many cases. I think the ACS recommends a measurement 3 times in a row at different office visits. So, maybe anxiety might be a direct cause of HT dx.
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41,800,384
41,799,324
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comment
thomasahle
2024-10-10T18:57:29
null
For those who don&#x27;t know, Microsoft Recall is a system that screenshots what you do every few seconds, and uses OpenAI&#x27;s vision api to allow search on eveything you did in the past.<p>There&#x27;s an article from Sep 27th where they promise you&#x27;ll be able to uninstall Recall: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.theverge.com&#x2F;2024&#x2F;9&#x2F;27&#x2F;24255721&#x2F;microsoft-windows-recall-ai-security-improvements-overhaul-uninstall" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.theverge.com&#x2F;2024&#x2F;9&#x2F;27&#x2F;24255721&#x2F;microsoft-window...</a> , not sure what that means for this explorer.exe dependency.
null
null
41,801,331
41,801,331
null
[ 41802687, 41803794, 41802150, 41802336 ]
null
null
41,802,142
comment
VirusNewbie
2024-10-10T18:57:30
null
Are you seriously asking what reducing the money supply has to do with deflation?
null
null
41,801,530
41,780,569
null
[ 41802583 ]
null
null
41,802,143
comment
oidar
2024-10-10T18:57:36
null
yes
null
null
41,800,734
41,799,324
null
null
null
null
41,802,144
comment
Andrex
2024-10-10T18:57:40
null
Was it approved, denied, or still awaiting a decision?
null
null
41,798,674
41,787,798
null
null
null
null
41,802,145
comment
throw49sjwo1
2024-10-10T18:57:54
null
&gt; And nobody uses most of it!<p>Everybody who does Express, React, or any other popular advanced libraries with TypeScript is using these features. Some things are simply more useful to libraries than line of business code - that&#x27;s fine. The line of business code is much better thanks to it.
null
null
41,802,034
41,787,041
null
[ 41802953, 41803045, 41802388, 41802354, 41802279 ]
null
null
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story
payerplayer1
2024-10-10T18:57:58
null
null
null
1
null
41,802,146
null
null
null
true
41,802,147
comment
EasyMark
2024-10-10T18:58:00
null
Teachers are simply overloaded and parents have given up responsibility for keeping their kids in check. Little Tommy can do no wrong and is just misunderstood. I personally feel if a child is disrupting class and the experience for others, out they go, back to the parents. Public education should be free, but it has to have conditions that your little Tommy isn’t messing it up for those who are there to learn. We’ve grown too lenient and expect teachers to be cops, therapists, babysitters instead of teachers and instructors. It should be more like college.
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null
41,801,829
41,801,271
null
null
null
null
41,802,148
story
mfiguiere
2024-10-10T18:58:05
Lots of new cool Gemini stuff in LangChain4j 0.35.0
null
https://glaforge.dev/posts/2024/09/29/lots-of-new-cool-gemini-stuff-in-langchain4j/
2
null
41,802,148
0
null
null
null
41,802,149
comment
josylad
2024-10-10T18:58:08
null
Hello, filling up your profile details is a one-time task, once done, you can always generate resumes at any time without any effort but that said, I will look into CV parsing system.<p>Thanks for checking out ResumeSet.
null
null
41,796,837
41,796,379
null
null
null
null
41,802,150
comment
lostmsu
2024-10-10T18:58:19
null
It supposed to be local.
null
null
41,802,141
41,801,331
null
[ 41802318, 41802306, 41802351 ]
null
null
41,802,151
story
ValentineC
2024-10-10T18:58:29
WordPress' Big "Tragedy of the Commons" Problem
null
https://geary.co/wordpress-big-tragedy-of-the-commons-problem/
1
null
41,802,151
0
null
null
null
41,802,152
comment
sys32768
2024-10-10T18:58:37
null
This happened recently for the screening of The Matrix for its 25th anniversary.<p>My partner had never seen it, and sure enough they spent almost ten minutes spoiling it with a pointless featurette featuring some unknown new star reminiscing about the movie.<p>My partner closed her eyes and I held her ears.
null
null
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null
[ 41802231, 41802315 ]
null
null
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comment
mcherm
2024-10-10T18:58:38
null
I don&#x27;t think that would be possible. Either there would be so few people doing it that it would not be effective at transplanting the network graph, or else it would be widely enough used that X noticed and cared, in which case they would block it.
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null
41,802,108
41,801,795
null
null
null
null
41,802,154
comment
teddyh
2024-10-10T18:58:43
null
&gt; <i>the days of the regular NES.</i> […] <i>back then games were good. There were only a handful out there and they were well-crafted. The emphasis was gameplay and design.</i> […] <i>By the time we reach the days of the N64, Playstation, and high-end PC&#x27;s, we don&#x27;t have a whole lot.</i><p>Two reasons for that:<p>1. The NES was just after of the big video game crash of 1983†. The video game market had imploded, and only really good games would get made, as nothing else would sell <i>at all</i>. Games before this, like on the Atari 2600, were mostly all crap, if you average them all; it’s only in hindsight that we mostly remember the few good games.<p>2. Nintendo had an iron grip on the NES platform, partly as a response to said crash. They would only release good games. On other later (but still contemporary) popular open platforms, like the Commodore 64, quality varied wildly, and crap games were all over the place.<p>† &lt;<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;w&#x2F;index.php?title=Video_game_crash_of_1983&amp;oldid=1246553615" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;w&#x2F;index.php?title=Video_game_crash_...</a>&gt;
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null
41,786,880
41,786,880
null
null
null
null
41,802,155
comment
dudeinhawaii
2024-10-10T18:58:43
null
On the Steam platform for instance there is an option (perhaps developer supported) to stay on a certain version of a game. For instance, in the game Mount and Blade: Bannerlord, players notoriously stay 2, 3, or even 10 versions behind in order to maintain compatibility with specific mods or sets of mods (10s or 100s of mods). Eventually, enough of the modders move to the next or latest version and the players gradually move with them.<p>Games with &quot;always on&quot; or auto-updaters avoid this.
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null
41,801,178
41,797,719
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null
null
null
41,802,156
comment
SketchySeaBeast
2024-10-10T18:58:48
null
That&#x27;s where I&#x27;m at a loss.<p>Are all the people parroting this stuff actually believers? My instinct is that the majority tried to grab the bull by the horns by jumping on the Trump schtick when he took power and are now left riding this increasingly deranged and unpredictable animal. At this point they can do nothing but try to keep holding on lest they be trampled by the beast they created.<p>But there&#x27;s also gotta be true believers in there, and yeah, I don&#x27;t know what those people actually want, and it&#x27;s pretty scary.
null
null
41,801,951
41,801,271
null
null
null
null
41,802,157
comment
mbreese
2024-10-10T18:58:55
null
How likely is it really that you&#x27;d go to a theater to watch a movie if they didn&#x27;t have previews? If you want to see a movie in theaters, that&#x27;s where you&#x27;re going to be. If you&#x27;re taking that view, you&#x27;re probably not in their target <i>(ahem)</i> audience.<p>I suspect that people are more sensitive to ticket prices than they are seeing ads, so if you&#x27;re trying to maximize revenue, you&#x27;d want to limit increases in ticket prices to keep getting viewers in the seats. Then once they are there, try to extract as much additional revenue as possible (concessions, ads, etc). The theaters showing ads aren&#x27;t trying to attract new viewers, they are trying to extract as much revenue as possible from their existing customers.<p>(For better or worse)
null
null
41,801,991
41,801,300
null
[ 41802321 ]
null
null
41,802,158
comment
jsheard
2024-10-10T18:59:03
null
Surely this is only going to encourage the proliferation of LLM reply bots? There&#x27;s already enough of those.
null
null
41,801,795
41,801,795
null
[ 41802190 ]
null
null
41,802,159
comment
tivert
2024-10-10T18:59:12
null
It should be possible, but companies don&#x27;t serve their customers or users, <i>they serve their shareholders.</i><p>Giving a user a feature like that will only hurt the company, so it won&#x27;t be implemented.
null
null
41,802,108
41,801,795
null
null
null
null
41,802,160
comment
s1artibartfast
2024-10-10T18:59:14
null
I was making an argument for before. If 90% of customers want it before so they dont have to sit through credits, it is very understandable that it is shown before.<p>That said, I have no clue what the actual percentage is. Maybe someone has A&#x2F;B tested this
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null
41,801,862
41,801,300
null
null
null
null
41,802,161
comment
Kenji
2024-10-10T18:59:17
null
&gt; For many graphics professionals, that&#x27;s like asking if you&#x27;d consider replacing C++ with Rust.<p>So, that&#x27;s a yes?
null
null
41,802,063
41,801,331
null
[ 41803238 ]
null
null
41,802,162
comment
vid
2024-10-10T18:59:19
null
I did another take on this, that extends Markdown links to include types (like triples, like Semantic Mediawiki) called &quot;mdld&quot;. It&#x27;s quite powerful but I left it at a good-enough stage for my uses. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;vid&#x2F;mdld">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;vid&#x2F;mdld</a>
null
null
41,798,477
41,798,477
null
[ 41803159 ]
null
null
41,802,163
comment
Terr_
2024-10-10T18:59:22
null
&gt; Accidental<p>What? For whom? I&#x27;ve been <i>extremely intentionally</i> breaking up longer expressions into separate lines with local variables for a long time.<p>Writing local variables as &quot;breadcrumbs&quot; to trace what happens is one of the very first things new developers are taught to do, along with a print statement. I&#x27;d wager using a &quot;just to break things up&quot; local variable is about as common as using them to avoid recomputing an expression.<p>... Perhaps the author started out with something in the style of Haskell or Elm, and casual&#x2F;gratuitous use of named local variables is new from that perspective?<p>&gt; However, the local variables are a different kind of breadcrumbs. They’re not explicitly set by the developer, but they are there anyway.<p>While I may not have manually designated each onto a &quot;capture by a third-party addon called Bugsink&quot; whitelist, each one is very explicitly &quot;set&quot; when I&#x27;m deciding on their names and assigning values to them.
null
null
41,754,386
41,754,386
null
[ 41803622 ]
null
null
41,802,164
comment
kaikai
2024-10-10T18:59:38
null
I have seen it from their perspective, I’m not an idiot. I’m fully capable of seeing and understanding another persons perspective, and disagreeing with it. I reject the idea that allowing people to go hungry when there is a EXCESS of food available is a morally correct choice.<p>Laws are rules created by people and we have the ability to change them. At the very least, we have the ability and moral responsibility to ignore them when they are unethical.<p>Also, I have never sold dumpstered food or given it to anyone who didn’t know it was dumpstered. I HAVE gotten injured dumpstering, and didn’t sue anyone for it. I DID get sick once from dumpstered food, and didn’t sue anyone for it (I’ve also gotten sick from eating at restaurants, and didn’t sue them, either).<p>For me, basic human rights and care for each other will always trump laws and property rights. And yes, I’ve done jail time for it and would do it again. I know that we won’t agree, and don’t need to change your mind. I do hope that you can understand the difference between knowing and understanding the rules, and blindly following the rules.
null
null
41,799,993
41,765,006
null
null
null
null
41,802,165
comment
Nasrudith
2024-10-10T18:59:41
null
Fair enough that they are outsized productivity but they are also two places which have managed to basically population-cap themselves, primarily through real-estate mismanagement and refusal to build sufficiently to make it worth living there <i>even as infamously high paying areas</i>.
null
null
41,793,259
41,780,569
null
null
null
null
41,802,166
story
strongpigeon
2024-10-10T18:59:42
Power Tools Meet Vision Pro: Crafting the Minnesota Timberwolves Logo with AR
null
https://www.everydayar.com/projects/power-tools-meet-vision-pro-cratfting-the-minnesota-timberwolves-logo-with-ar
1
null
41,802,166
0
null
null
null
41,802,167
story
p10jkle
2024-10-10T18:59:43
Persistent serverless state machines with XState and Restate
null
https://restate.dev/blog/persistent-serverless-state-machines-with-xstate-and-restate/
1
null
41,802,167
0
null
null
null
41,802,168
comment
joelwilsson
2024-10-10T18:59:46
null
The Forbes article is from April, while The Local article you&#x27;re quoting is from October. Back in April, the proposal was different, as The Local explains.<p>And the biggest problem for startup founders remains: you&#x27;re taxed, on leaving the country, on unrealized gains. Being taxed on 5 millions of profit sounds fair, being taxed on 5 millions (or 30 millions) of valuation used for raising capital, in a startup that then fails and is worth nothing after a few years, maybe not so much. Neighboring countries do not have this kind of taxation.
null
null
41,801,750
41,799,016
null
null
null
null
41,802,169
comment
pjmlp
2024-10-10T18:59:47
null
As Portuguese I have my doubts about this actually being successful.
null
null
41,799,016
41,799,016
null
null
null
null
41,802,170
story
ossusermivami
2024-10-10T18:59:53
Gmail inbox is getting updated summary cards and new section
null
https://blog.google/products/gmail/new-gmail-summary-cards/
2
null
41,802,170
0
null
null
null
41,802,171
comment
sroussey
2024-10-10T18:59:55
null
The editors of the trailers should be editors for the movies themselves!
null
null
41,801,971
41,801,300
null
null
null
null
41,802,172
comment
faefox
2024-10-10T18:59:56
null
With what money? Nobody&#x27;s buying ads and the dollars from &quot;Premium&quot; subscriptions are needed to keep the lights on.
null
null
41,801,795
41,801,795
null
[ 41802184, 41802349 ]
null
null
41,802,173
comment
mindcandy
2024-10-10T18:59:56
null
&gt; if it was clearly labelled as AI I wouldn&#x27;t even look at it.<p>If you dislike it without even seeing it, that would indicate the problem isn&#x27;t with the video...
null
null
41,798,867
41,797,462
null
[ 41803156 ]
null
null
41,802,174
comment
marcodiego
2024-10-10T19:00:00
null
Xnest is probably enough. I&#x27;ve used it for similar purposes a few times. Don&#x27;t know the equivalent for Wayland though.
null
null
41,801,507
41,800,602
null
[ 41803096 ]
null
null
41,802,175
comment
empiko
2024-10-10T19:00:00
null
The parallels to ML you drew are on point. ML has this tendency to oversimplify complex phenomena with a easy to produce datasets, because that&#x27;s what ML folks do, they find a smart and easy way to create a dataset and then they focus on the models. But this falls apart pretty quickly when you go into societal problems, such as hate speech or misinformation. Maybe there it would be nice to have some rigor and theory behind the dataset instead of just winging it. I am working on societal biases in NLP and I feel confident that majority of the datasets used have practically no validity.
null
null
41,802,016
41,780,328
null
[ 41802522 ]
null
null
41,802,176
comment
kientuong114
2024-10-10T19:00:04
null
NextCloud has already been analyzed by some great people (<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;eprint.iacr.org&#x2F;2024&#x2F;546" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;eprint.iacr.org&#x2F;2024&#x2F;546</a>).
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null
41,802,127
41,798,359
null
null
null
null
41,802,177
comment
Workaccount2
2024-10-10T19:00:11
null
You may or my not recall, but the OG ad-blocker, ad-block plus, struck a deal with the advertising industry where they would let through vetted ads that were deemed non-invasive. Basically a truce where users would get &quot;lite&quot; ads and advertisers would get more impressions.<p>There was a user revolt, people flocked to U-block, and ad-block plus died.<p>Advertisers are greedy, but don&#x27;t be a fool and think users are not equally (if not eve more) so.
null
null
41,801,311
41,784,287
null
null
null
null
41,802,178
comment
jjmarr
2024-10-10T19:00:11
null
If your time is worth a lot of money, you&#x27;ll buy a home theatre anyways.
null
null
41,801,991
41,801,300
null
[ 41802550 ]
null
null
41,802,179
comment
klez
2024-10-10T19:00:15
null
So, the first time I went to see it I was there by chance, because it was in an amusement park and I really didn&#x27;t know the first thing about what I was getting into.<p>And yes, at the time I thought the people were being rude, especially when they where howling at the usherette.<p>Then I saw other performances online and felt like a complete tool :)
null
null
41,801,764
41,801,300
null
null
null
null
41,802,180
comment
djmips
2024-10-10T19:00:15
null
You missed the point of the article.
null
null
41,801,555
41,754,386
null
[ 41803558, 41802328 ]
null
null
41,802,181
comment
Animats
2024-10-10T19:00:16
null
It&#x27;s not a joke. &quot;A three-point downward shift in IQ would increase the number of U.S. adults with an IQ less than 70 from 4.7 million to 7.5 million – an increase of 2.8 million adults with a level of cognitive impairment that requires significant societal support.&quot;<p>Then there&#x27;s long COVID. A detailed overview of that.[1] As of late 2023, about 5% of US adults report having long COVID. It appears that, if it lasts a year, there&#x27;s usually no further recovery.<p>Some new results indicate that at least some long COVID sufferers still have a reservoir of the active virus.[2] That&#x27;s encouraging, because antivirals may help them. It indicates where to look.<p>This is very real. Most people are tired of hearing about COVID, but the virus isn&#x27;t tired.<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;nap.nationalacademies.org&#x2F;read&#x2F;27756&#x2F;chapter&#x2F;8" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;nap.nationalacademies.org&#x2F;read&#x2F;27756&#x2F;chapter&#x2F;8</a><p>[2] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.harvard.edu&#x2F;gazette&#x2F;story&#x2F;2024&#x2F;10&#x2F;getting-to-the-bottom-of-long-covid&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.harvard.edu&#x2F;gazette&#x2F;story&#x2F;2024&#x2F;10&#x2F;getting-to-th...</a>
null
null
41,801,732
41,801,271
null
[ 41804044, 41802300 ]
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null
41,802,182
comment
fsflover
2024-10-10T19:00:27
null
&gt; Everybody who is at least somewhat knowledable about security topics can tell you<p>So nobody. And everyone will add chat bots. And the security will suffer, exactly as the article says.
null
null
41,800,532
41,799,883
null
null
null
null
41,802,183
comment
marssaxman
2024-10-10T19:00:30
null
Sure do - though I have my own domain, so I don&#x27;t need subaddressing. If some address gets compromised, I just set it to bounce.
null
null
41,801,594
41,801,594
null
null
null
null
41,802,184
comment
JumpCrisscross
2024-10-10T19:00:31
null
&gt; <i>With what money?</i><p>The world’s richest man owns it as a plaything.
null
null
41,802,172
41,801,795
null
[ 41802233, 41802290 ]
null
null
41,802,185
comment
kragen
2024-10-10T19:00:34
null
The great thing about free software is that they have the legal right to do that maintenance, and it&#x27;s actually not very difficult to do. The Python 3 Statement was an attempt to use public shaming to disincentivize them from doing it. Astoundingly, it seems to have been successful.
null
null
41,799,970
41,788,026
null
[ 41803564 ]
null
null
41,802,186
story
ahiknsr
2024-10-10T19:00:36
Pixtral 12B Technical Report
null
https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.07073
1
null
41,802,186
0
null
null
null
41,802,187
story
null
2024-10-10T19:00:49
null
null
null
null
null
41,802,187
null
null
true
null
41,802,188
comment
mindcrime
2024-10-10T19:00:50
null
Note that the person you are replying to never said that COVID was the <i>only</i> explanation for this stuff.
null
null
41,801,732
41,801,271
null
null
null
null
41,802,189
comment
csdreamer7
2024-10-10T19:01:03
null
&gt; For example, there are no drivers for a pretty common steering wheel (Logitech G923).<p>This is a nice, specific detail. Most of these comments are very vague.<p>&gt; There is a driver for an older version of the wheel that kind of works<p>Do you mean an out of tree driver?<p>Would you test this and post back? The 6.3 kernel they mentioned 3 months ago is very old and likely a forked kernel.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.reddit.com&#x2F;r&#x2F;linux_gaming&#x2F;comments&#x2F;vb0b37&#x2F;g29g923_users_correct_guide_to_install_logitech&#x2F;l9dimye&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.reddit.com&#x2F;r&#x2F;linux_gaming&#x2F;comments&#x2F;vb0b37&#x2F;g29g92...</a><p>I am new to steering wheels-not sure if this is the exact version because they mention xbox)? Try a distro with a very recent kernel (6.11; like Nobara for a gaming focused distro).<p>&gt; I also noticed that games from Steam end up taking up substantially more disk space to the point where I can have only a few games installed on Linux.<p>Shouldn&#x27;t be substantially more disk space. Would you provide stats?<p>Proton makes a Windows environment for each game as it installs those 3rd party libraries in the environment and that is used for disk calculations, while on Windows those libraries may be installed directly to the OS. Each 3rd party library and the shader cache is stored separately. This is my guess-I do not work on Proton.<p>&gt; And even the games without any special hardware dongles don&#x27;t work so well as you imply.<p>Anticheat and a few obscure Windows libraries are an issue. River City Girls needs some media foundation library or it does not show cutscenes. Valve is working on them.
null
null
41,801,950
41,801,331
null
[ 41802500, 41803789 ]
null
null
41,802,190
comment
rideontime
2024-10-10T19:01:04
null
And rage-bait. &quot;Engagement farming&quot; was already a term <i>before</i> it became the specific relevant metric for monetization.
null
null
41,802,158
41,801,795
null
null
null
null
41,802,191
comment
sschmitt
2024-10-10T19:01:17
null
There&#x27;s also the BrainScaleS neuromorphic system that features wafer scale integration:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;arxiv.org&#x2F;abs&#x2F;2303.12359" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;arxiv.org&#x2F;abs&#x2F;2303.12359</a>
null
null
41,794,735
41,794,735
null
null
null
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41,802,192
story
null
2024-10-10T19:01:19
null
null
null
null
null
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null
null
true
null
41,802,193
comment
0_____0
2024-10-10T19:01:22
null
They could easily have picked aharmonic intervals, and it would have even been a little easier. But given the opportunity, they chose to make something that added a little bit of color and magic to the world. I love that.
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41,801,946
41,757,808
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41,802,194
comment
soneca
2024-10-10T19:01:24
null
It happened to me when I was reading a new edition of <i>”The Spoils of Poynton”</i> by Henry James.<p>There was an essay in the beginning of the book that I started reading on inertia alone (yes, I know, I should have known better). In the first paragraph (maybe first sentence), it spoiled the dramatic ending.<p>Not only that, in the second paragraph it would give an interpretation of what that means. So I was robbed not only of the plot, but also of a interpretation of my own before reading it. I quit the book after those two paragraphs and never read it.
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41,801,300
41,801,300
null
[ 41802578, 41802391, 41802534 ]
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41,802,195
comment
wcoenen
2024-10-10T19:01:34
null
&gt; <i>And yet, I still don&#x27;t think that explains what&#x27;s going on with people. And the frank truth is, I don&#x27;t have an explanation.</i><p>Humans are social creatures and feel the need to align with those around them. Combine this natural inclination with social media algorithms that show you more and more of whatever they have determined to be &quot;engaging content&quot;, and you get a feedback loop that spreads viral content and drives people insane.
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41,801,891
41,801,271
null
[ 41803488 ]
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41,802,196
comment
brookman64k
2024-10-10T19:01:36
null
Proton, not Photon. ;-) Here is a list with games and their support status: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.protondb.com&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.protondb.com&#x2F;</a>
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41,801,984
41,799,068
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41,802,197
comment
HarHarVeryFunny
2024-10-10T19:01:38
null
Depends where in the US of course. $200K isn&#x27;t going to go very far if you have to pay $1M for a house, 20K for r&#x2F;e taxes, etc... One or two kids in college and you are f&#x27;d.<p>I don&#x27;t know exact salary figure, but my sisters family in UK have medium income (1.5 jobs) new BMW, two kids in college, foreign vacations every year, kids got latest Apple phones&#x2F;watch&#x2F;laptop growing up ... A bit like 1950&#x27;s America living the dream on a single income with foreign holidays and iPhones added.
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41,801,814
41,799,016
null
[ 41803450, 41802427 ]
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null
41,802,198
comment
dfxm12
2024-10-10T19:01:38
null
<i>Why do this before the movie!??!</i><p>Because the movie is 45 years old &amp; in order to get the average person to see an old movie in theaters, you have to give them bonus featurettes in addition to the film itself.
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41,801,300
41,801,300
null
[ 41802510, 41802285, 41802310 ]
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41,802,199
comment
MattRix
2024-10-10T19:01:41
null
I think you’re getting consumed with HOW the game is made rather than WHAT is actually getting made. There are tons of super creative and unique games being made with engines like Unity all the time (or even with Game Maker, for example check out my cousin’s game Fight Knight).<p>The idea that the constraints of an engine are some big problem is absurd. Constraints are a good thing, they breed creativity. There’s a reason every game jam has a theme and a tight time limit, yet result in some of the most unique game concepts.
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41,801,463
41,779,519
null
[ 41802645 ]
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