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41,803,100 | comment | theLiminator | 2024-10-10T20:18:28 | null | Better on Linux on mac (as compared to macos) maybe? | null | null | 41,802,696 | 41,799,068 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,101 | comment | mightybyte | 2024-10-10T20:18:29 | null | I think the fundamental approach being taken by this project is immensely valuable to the world. This kind of education about open standards might actually be the most powerful tool that can help us take steps in the direction away from giant opaque corporations and back towards the systems based on open standards that the internet originated from. I really hope this project continues to be updated and get more and more eyes and contributors. If you feel the same way, I'd say at least throw it a GitHub star. <a href="https://github.com/blakewatson/htmlforpeople">https://github.com/blakewatson/htmlforpeople</a><p>(Note: I have nothing to do with this project thus far and have nothing to gain from saying this.) | null | null | 41,801,334 | 41,801,334 | null | [
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41,803,102 | comment | arghwhat | 2024-10-10T20:18:45 | null | Even if I didn’t return, that’s irrelevant - you are not engaging in a 1-1 discussion. You are posting on an open discussion for the entire internet to see. Most threads aren’t back-and-forth between single individuals, but rather a chain of unique authors.<p>I specified it because the comment very clearly lacked a citation due to touching controversial political subjects, and any future reader benefits from such citation if added.<p>I could have made a lengthy complaint and specified concerns about not attaching supporting references - such as unclear attribution that can obscure possible underlying political agendas - but that itself would add nothing not covered by: citation needed. With a citation, people can judge for themselves. | null | null | 41,801,076 | 41,798,027 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,103 | story | theandreibogdan | 2024-10-10T20:18:51 | Show HN: Instant SEO Audits with just one click | Hi HN<p>I just built a browser extension that audits your site instantly with just one click.<p>Here's the link: <a href="https://instantseoaudit.com/" rel="nofollow">https://instantseoaudit.com/</a><p>Will launch on Product Hunt on Saturday<p>Please let me know what you think | https://instantseoaudit.com/ | 1 | null | 41,803,103 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,803,104 | comment | transfire | 2024-10-10T20:18:51 | null | But doesn’t that affect ALL windows? | null | null | 41,801,533 | 41,800,602 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,105 | comment | LargoLasskhyfv | 2024-10-10T20:19:09 | null | Why would that be? Did they try to sell you some silly con snake-oil?<p>Or is it just that AVAST is aghast because some site is trying to spread some common sense? (against silicon snake-oil maybe?)<p>Do you think you should blindly trust AVAST?<p>Maybe it's just their servers suffering from some hiccups, causing their clients to have burps?<p>This happened before to all of those applications from any vendor, including that built-in microsoft-thing.<p>Multiple times.<p>Maybe it's just because it's using too many technical terms about cryptology, in unusual ways.<p>Must be a bad h4xx0r then!<p>Bang! Automagically blacklisted by some black-box.<p>Don't be a cargo-culting fashion victim.<p>(...zalgorithms on crack, brainz out of whack...) | null | null | 41,802,893 | 41,801,883 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,106 | comment | leetharris | 2024-10-10T20:19:16 | null | Now that I'm thinking about it, most of it is probably .NET bloat instead of C# bloat, but a few examples would be global usings, file scoped namespaces, records, target-typed new expressions, null coalesce assignments, etc. It's nothing huge, but combined with .NET bloat it can be overwhelming when you haven't worked in .NET for a while. | null | null | 41,802,907 | 41,787,041 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,803,107 | comment | dang | 2024-10-10T20:19:29 | null | We don't have policies really, but the way to get moderator attention is [email protected]. | null | null | 41,802,608 | 41,792,500 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,108 | story | boulevard | 2024-10-10T20:19:29 | null | null | null | 1 | null | 41,803,108 | null | [
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41,803,109 | comment | boulevard | 2024-10-10T20:19:29 | null | The Puzzle: The LLM Encryption Paradox<p>Let’s say you’ve got an LLM that knows almost everything—trained on vast amounts of text. But there’s a catch. It’s never seen content encrypted using a specific one-time pad cipher, and you have access to this cipher.<p>You give the model an encrypted message:<p>"g5f8s9h2..." (a string of seemingly random characters)<p>Then, you ask it to:<p>"Decrypt the above message and summarize its content."<p>The Paradox<p>The question here is simple: Can this advanced AI decrypt the message and tell you what it says? Or is it stumped, even with all its computational power? | null | null | 41,803,108 | 41,803,108 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,110 | comment | philistine | 2024-10-10T20:19:29 | null | > They have plots, and they're very well made.<p>Were really well made. Kevin Feige just turned 50, and it shows. He lost his edge. | null | null | 41,802,128 | 41,801,300 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,803,111 | comment | s1artibartfast | 2024-10-10T20:19:30 | null | you have to adjust for median income and PPP. also, state taxes are often substantial. | null | null | 41,799,618 | 41,799,016 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,112 | comment | mikesabbagh | 2024-10-10T20:19:35 | null | I got a Xiaomi GT3 watch for less than 40$ including shipping. it has blood pressure measuring. How accurate? I dont know. I have a normal BP, and it always shows me normal values. Whe I try it on my son or wife's wrist, it always measures a lower BP.<p>Anyways, I stopped looking at it, and I only use it for the looks and to show me notifications. | null | null | 41,799,324 | 41,799,324 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,803,113 | comment | ilyagr | 2024-10-10T20:19:40 | null | I know it can create a dummy display, but can it create a window on the real display showing the contents of the virtual display?<p>That seems to be the flagship feature of DeskPad. | null | null | 41,802,213 | 41,800,602 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,114 | comment | liveoneggs | 2024-10-10T20:19:59 | null | It's on the list of languages that <i>used</i> to be simple, I think. | null | null | 41,803,003 | 41,787,041 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,803,115 | comment | benterix | 2024-10-10T20:20:08 | null | Because it' still a highly contentious issue. It's as if you asked a hundred years ago, "Why are these free Saturday/40hour-work week so popular"? It is an enormous power struggle, and it can only be won through determination. | null | null | 41,802,926 | 41,802,378 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,116 | comment | m463 | 2024-10-10T20:20:09 | null | I do the exact same thing.<p>It gives you quite a bit of insight and control.<p>some examples:<p>- at some point my email for amazon was shared, and I started getting offers from some vendor to 5-star review one of their products on amazon. I changed my amazon email address. (I generally trust amazon)<p>- emails from my bank have to go to a specific email address. I can be pretty certain it is my bank contacting me.<p>- I generally do not give my email address to retail stores. On several occasions I've given it to them for deliveries, telling them it isn't for anything but for the delivery. I'd say 80% of stores are super disrespectful of this. One spammed me every. single. day. with offers, until I got the delivery and turned off that email address.<p>- I once gave out a specific email address to a friend. He shared it with a second person to coordinate all of us meeting. and then I started getting phished so we figured out that the second person had his email compromised.<p>- I rented a car from hertz and had to give an email address. and then they sold it to other companies.<p>- linkedin stuff. easy to spot fakes since they don't go to my linkedin email address. Also easy to spot emails from people contacting me who got the email from linkedin.<p>It goes on and on. More people should do this. | null | null | 41,801,919 | 41,801,594 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,117 | comment | shariat | 2024-10-10T20:20:28 | null | do we need to have a separate syntax for schema def and values? I know zig does that, but for a config that is probably too much. Maybe use the same format all the way down and even drop keywords like struct. | null | null | 41,758,097 | 41,758,097 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,118 | comment | ZunarJ5 | 2024-10-10T20:20:36 | null | This really hit home for me when trying to dual boot. Repeatedly I had to select the drive in the boot menu and rerun the script to get me back to my nice grub chosing screen. I gave up, it felt violating. | null | null | 41,802,456 | 41,801,331 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,119 | comment | dang | 2024-10-10T20:20:41 | null | I wish they were, but I don't think most readers are as diligent as you in looking for other sources. | null | null | 41,800,444 | 41,775,463 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,120 | comment | philistine | 2024-10-10T20:20:50 | null | Watch Society. Just watch it. Don't Google it! | null | null | 41,801,990 | 41,801,300 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,121 | story | caminmccluskey | 2024-10-10T20:20:56 | How to Build the British ARPA | null | https://www.statecraft.pub/p/how-to-build-the-british-arpa | 1 | null | 41,803,121 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,803,122 | comment | stavros | 2024-10-10T20:20:56 | null | Because they couldn't just also move off of the blockchain? | null | null | 41,803,044 | 41,802,800 | null | [
41803352
] | null | null |
41,803,123 | comment | sigmoid10 | 2024-10-10T20:20:58 | null | This metastudy seems to confirm everything the other commenter said:<p><a href="https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ajpa.24247" rel="nofollow">https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ajpa.24247</a><p>It seems early hominids gradually went from omnivores to almost exclusive carnivores with a strong preference for megafauna - up until their prey's decline and their subsequent return to other primary nutrient sources. While exact diets are hard to reconstruct and subject of debate, there seems to be little doubt that humans hunted said megafauna to extinction, which also had a significant effect on human evolution in many ways. The development of our larger brain needed lots of energy for example and hunting provided 10x more energy per hour of effort than gathering plant based nutrients. Larger brains generally seem to trend with consumption of more energy dense foods. Our ability to store much more fat and fast for longer times than other primates also seems to have developed from the need to hunt primarily large animals dispersed over wide areas. | null | null | 41,800,057 | 41,796,914 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,124 | comment | dkarras | 2024-10-10T20:21:14 | null | your antivirus is arguably a malware itself. you don't need to give a 3rd party your entire internet browsing content to have a secure computer. | null | null | 41,802,893 | 41,801,883 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,125 | comment | carlosrg | 2024-10-10T20:21:15 | null | Every programming language attempts to expand until it becomes C++. Those languages which cannot so expand are replaced by ones which can. | null | null | 41,802,034 | 41,787,041 | null | [
41803192
] | null | null |
41,803,126 | comment | eqvinox | 2024-10-10T20:21:16 | null | > A famous one is HotJava.<p>"Final release: Late 2004; 20 years ago"<p>I guess I should've specified "not completely and utterly dead"? ;D<p>(Also, the size and complexity of a browser at that point in time was arguably still a whole lot less than a modern one) | null | null | 41,797,994 | 41,796,030 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,127 | comment | axegon_ | 2024-10-10T20:21:19 | null | I have a slightly different take: office is a good thing for some people. I am not wildly sociable. If anything I'm borderline unapproachable if you just randomly walk up to me on the street and start talking to me. When COVID hit and we were all sent home, I had been working at that job for 8 years and I had automated pretty much everything in my day to day work - even the most busy days, I could get everything I had to do in less than 2 hours so all of a sudden, I was all day in my apartment, which is spacious and with views that are second to none in my city. The following 8 months up until I had to quit were the best time of my life. I had the time to read hundreds of books, work on personal projects, get in the best shape I've ever been by a long shot, got a dog. It was absolutely awesome. But time moved on and the few people I was close to prior to that and I just drifted apart and while we were together basically on daily basis before covid, now we call each other on birthdays at best. We see each other twice a year tops: They all moved on with their lives, got married, had children, etc. I did none of that for a million and one reasons and because I worked from home 100%, ultimately completely lost my social life. And now that I can(and actively am) going back to an office, I truly feel happy: despite still not being the most social creature, at least I see people and get to talk to someone. Although I do have to admit - working at a company where literally everyone is cool and down to earth certainly makes it easy. If that were at my old job, there's a good chance I would have become very aggressive and extremely likely violent towards several individuals. | null | null | 41,802,378 | 41,802,378 | null | [
41804135,
41803902,
41803243,
41803290
] | null | null |
41,803,128 | comment | whydoineedthis | 2024-10-10T20:21:21 | null | I miss the office A LOT.
Remote pays more, otherwise I would volunteer my butt easily. | null | null | 41,802,378 | 41,802,378 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,129 | story | thunderbong | 2024-10-10T20:21:22 | Rules of the Internet | null | https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/RulesOfTheInternet | 1 | null | 41,803,129 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,803,130 | comment | FrustratedMonky | 2024-10-10T20:21:27 | null | Well. They didn't consult with me on this study to see if I agreed a priori.<p>But I am able to understand what they are attempting to quantify. I'm just not in the camp of something being difficult means it is garbage.<p>It isn't that hard to conceptualize:<p>-> traumatic event happens,<p>-> there are follow on ramifications,<p>-> some of them shorten life spans.<p>-> And a shortened life span means death.<p>As others in the thread said. Maybe something like " Quality-adjust life years (QALYs)" would have been more generalizable metric. | null | null | 41,803,068 | 41,799,150 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,803,131 | comment | ibraheemdev | 2024-10-10T20:21:29 | null | Looks very interesting, but seems to serve a pretty different use case:<p>> This is an ordered data structure, and supports very high throughput iteration over lexicographically sorted ranges of values. If you are looking for simple point operation performance, you may find a better option among one of the many concurrent hashmap implementations that are floating around. Pay for what you actually use :) | null | null | 41,801,799 | 41,798,475 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,132 | comment | wk_end | 2024-10-10T20:21:42 | null | I feel like a large slice of JS’s complexity comes from footguns you aren’t really supposed to use anymore; whereas with C# the complexity feels quite layered, multiparadigmatic, something-for-everyone, syntactic-sugary. But I probably know too much about JS and not enough about C#. | null | null | 41,803,003 | 41,787,041 | null | [
41803216
] | null | null |
41,803,133 | comment | zoogeny | 2024-10-10T20:21:46 | null | Just chiming in that I appreciate this resource. A lot of security advice is esoteric and sometimes feels ridiculous. Like a lawyer who advises you not to do anything ever. This guide was refreshingly concise, easy to follow and understand, and has good straight forward advice.<p>I'll keep an eye on these comments to see if there are any dissenting opinions or caveats but I know I'll be reviewing this against my own auth projects.<p>One thing I would like to see would be a section on JWT, even if it is just for them to say "don't use them" if that is their opinion. | null | null | 41,801,883 | 41,801,883 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,803,134 | comment | kevin_thibedeau | 2024-10-10T20:21:51 | null | The US investor visas get abused by elites building their own apartments as "economic development". | null | null | 41,802,441 | 41,799,016 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,135 | comment | Marsymars | 2024-10-10T20:21:59 | null | The "Recommendations" section is near-impossible to get rid of, but it's pretty easy to stop anything from <i>displaying</i> in that section.<p>Under Settings > Personalization > Start, I have "More pins" selected, and the various "Show whatever" options disabled, and my "Recommended" section is a single empty row at the bottom of the start menu that reads "To show your recent files and new apps, turn them on in the Settings." | null | null | 41,802,567 | 41,801,331 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,136 | comment | Etheryte | 2024-10-10T20:22:00 | null | Have you considered comparing it to a regular blood pressure monitor in parallel? My guess is that since it isn't certified as a medical device, it's essentially just a random number generator. No smart watch from a big name brand offers this feature yet, so I doubt a $40 device has figured it out. | null | null | 41,803,112 | 41,799,324 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,137 | comment | munificent | 2024-10-10T20:22:08 | null | I've been meaning to write a longer essay on this for years, but I believe the reason for this observation is different cohorts.<p>Imagine you are a C# programmer just as C# 1.0 is released. C# is a fairly simple language at that time (and similar to other languages you already know), so you can get caught up on it fairly easily and quickly. A few years later, C# 2.0 comes out. It's got a handful of features, but not too much for you to absorb. Likewise C# 3.0, 4.0, etc. As long as you stay on the C# train, the rate of new features does not exceed the rate that you can learn them.<p>Years later, another person comes along and is new to C#, which is now at version 5.0. They are presented with a huge sprawling language and they have to learn nearly all of it at once to deal with codebases they are contributing to. It's a nightmare. They long for a language that's actually, you know <i>simple</i>.<p>So maybe they find some other newer language, Foo, which is at 1.0. It's small and they learn the whole thing. After a couple of years of happy productive use, they realize they would be a little <i>more</i> happy and productive if Foo had just one or two extra little features. They put in a request. The language team wants happy users so they are happy to oblige. The user is easily able to learn those new features. And maybe some other Foo users want other new things. 2.0 comes out, and they can keep up. They can stay on the train with 3.0, 4.0, etc.<p>They never explicitly <i>asked</i> for a complex language, but they have one and they're happy, because they've mastered the whole thing over a period of years. They've become part of the problem that bothered them so much years ago.<p>Fundamentally, the problem is that existing users experience a programming language as the <i>delta</i> between the latest version and the previous one. New users experience a programming language as the total sum of all of its features (perhaps minus features it has in common with other languages you already know). If you assume users can absorb information at a certain fixed rate, it means those two cohorts have very different needs and different experiences.<p>I don't think there's a silver bullet. The best you can hope for is that a language at 1.0 has as few bad ideas as possible. But no one seems to have perfect skill at that. | null | null | 41,802,034 | 41,787,041 | null | [
41803818,
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] | null | null |
41,803,138 | comment | ZunarJ5 | 2024-10-10T20:22:09 | null | You don't even have to go that far: <a href="https://distrosea.com/" rel="nofollow">https://distrosea.com/</a> | null | null | 41,802,609 | 41,801,331 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,139 | comment | fwip | 2024-10-10T20:22:10 | null | Part of the reason people don't/didn't like seeding is that many residential lines are so terribly asymmetric. If you had 100down/5up, seeding your torrent at a useful speed was often enough to degrade your connection into unusability. | null | null | 41,800,414 | 41,792,500 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,140 | story | winwang | 2024-10-10T20:22:11 | Can GenAI Improve Developer Productivity? | null | https://resources.uplevelteam.com/gen-ai-for-coding | 1 | null | 41,803,140 | 1 | [
41803141
] | null | null |
41,803,141 | comment | winwang | 2024-10-10T20:22:11 | null | Here's a blog post for those who don't want to grab the PDF: <a href="https://shenisha.substack.com/p/are-ai-coding-assistants-really-saving" rel="nofollow">https://shenisha.substack.com/p/are-ai-coding-assistants-rea...</a><p>Unfortunately, the PDF itself doesn't say much, so I'd take it with half a grain of salt. But I would also take GitHub's comments about Copilot with a grain of salt, despite liking it as a customer of the product. | null | null | 41,803,140 | 41,803,140 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,142 | comment | fullstop | 2024-10-10T20:22:17 | null | It's almost as bad as jzw's website: <a href="https://cdn.jwz.org/images/2016/hn.png" rel="nofollow">https://cdn.jwz.org/images/2016/hn.png</a> (nsfw) | null | null | 41,802,660 | 41,799,068 | null | [
41803266,
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] | null | null |
41,803,143 | comment | lutusp | 2024-10-10T20:22:19 | null | A great article, particularly for its candor.<p>As Neil DeGrasse Tyson and others have said, in the same way that chemistry replaced alchemy, neuroscience will replace psychology. But this isn't likely to happen soon -- the human brain is too complex for present-day efforts.<p>But there's some progress. In a recent breakthrough, we fully mapped the brain of a fruit fly (<a href="https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-03190-y" rel="nofollow">https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-03190-y</a>). | null | null | 41,780,328 | 41,780,328 | null | [
41803456,
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] | null | null |
41,803,144 | comment | selimthegrim | 2024-10-10T20:22:21 | null | Well, I don’t think anybody in Starship Troopers <i>looked</i> like they were being sexually harassed… | null | null | 41,802,920 | 41,802,378 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,145 | comment | brudgers | 2024-10-10T20:22:22 | null | If I had business concerns, I would talk to users and try to understand why some pick recurring payments and why others pick one time purchases.<p>Then I would reconsider my offerings based on how each group provides or does not provide business opportunities.<p>Anyway raising the price of the lifetime product is the simplest way to encourage price sensitive customers into recurring plans. If that doesn’t change their choice, revenue increases. | null | null | 41,801,363 | 41,801,363 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,146 | comment | karmakaze | 2024-10-10T20:22:27 | null | It's also tamper-evident. Forks would detect the rewrite. | null | null | 41,802,900 | 41,802,800 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,803,147 | comment | corry | 2024-10-10T20:22:31 | null | Hey I have firsthand experience with it as indicated in the post. Probably a few months worth of wear at this point.<p>BP remains a great mystery to me, even with the device. My cardio fitness is pretty good despite carrying a few extra pounds (I'm in the low 50s for resting heart rate), and while overnight I dip down in the 120's, I can see it shoot up based on various things like cold plunge, caffeine, exercise (during), etc. I can also see it drop temporarily (hot tub, meditation, the hours FOLLOWING intense exercise, etc).<p>I had many pet theories through the years - that I had white coat syndrome, that I disliked the feeling of the cuff, etc etc. But the device showed me that, no, something really is going on independent of these pseudo-causes.<p>BTW water retention seems to play a big role. When I did keto, which causes a big drop in water retention, my BP also went down. Strange. Supplements have an impact too.<p>All this to say - get the device and see for yourself, but you might find yourself in the same place I am - which is that you have much better understanding of what's going on in terms of symptoms but are still on the search for "the underlying cause" if there even is such a thing. | null | null | 41,800,250 | 41,799,324 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,148 | comment | dang | 2024-10-10T20:22:32 | null | It may have piqued your social curiosity but I don't think "$Celebrity1 delivers sensational one-liner praising $Celebrity2 for firing $Celebrity3 in well-known $CelebrityEpisode" is satisfying anyone's intellectual curiosity. The distinction between those two kinds of curiosity is central to how we run HN.<p>Fair minded readers who look seriously at HN threads on the topic are unlikely to agree with you that we "protect Altman". Countless such threads have spent long hours on HN's front page, and the comments are dominated by vitriol. Actually, we moderate those threads somewhat less than we normally would. | null | null | 41,799,186 | 41,791,692 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,149 | story | simpleui | 2024-10-10T20:22:33 | Ask HN: Clients for niche (but fun) web stack | I am a long term Clojurian who loves HTMX. During the pandemic I created SimpleUI, which autogenerates the endpoints
needed to display different HTMX states. The resulting framework feels like frontend coding (e.g. Reagent) but you're
fully on the backend with no JS to worry about.<p>SimpleUI has been in noncommercial production for three years at https://wotr.online and three (failed) startups.
I'm looking for clients but most teams have already committed to an existing stack. Any suggestions for where to find greenfield
projects would be greatly appreciated.<p>https://simpleui.io<p>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5QojThyxIS4&t=2s<p>There's a nice mini starter app at https://github.com/whamtet/launchpoint | null | 1 | null | 41,803,149 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,803,150 | comment | hinkley | 2024-10-10T20:22:38 | null | When they made class declarations imply strict, I thought that was a pretty wise move. But it might have been good if they applied more limitations than that, made them super-strict.<p>Such as for instance making 'var' not work in class declarations. | null | null | 41,802,341 | 41,787,041 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,151 | comment | wg0 | 2024-10-10T20:22:42 | null | And I can't get my head around passkeys yet. Haven't switched to them. Haven't developed a clear model of where's my private key exactly how many of them and how to get to them if my camera or fingerprint sensor isn't working etc. | null | null | 41,802,623 | 41,801,883 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,803,152 | comment | rsynnott | 2024-10-10T20:22:45 | null | Huh. Ireland’s is about 2.5% (3.1bn on 119bn budget next year). Slightly puzzled at what’s going on with the US debt; that does seem very expensive. Though it’s not _entirely_ comparing like for like, in that states have their own separate budgets in the US (local authorities in Ireland do too, but their own revenue raising capabilities are very limited and most of the money comes from central government).<p>Looks like the US’s cost of servicing works out to about 3.4%, which definitely seems rather high (though, probably still not high enough that you’d necessarily want to aggressively pay it down; 3.4% isn’t a _great_ return). Actually, I’d wonder how much of this is related to the debt ceiling stuff; I would assume that makes refinancing when debt is cheap more difficult. | null | null | 41,803,084 | 41,799,016 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,803,153 | comment | aguaviva | 2024-10-10T20:22:46 | null | Thanks for swooping down to correct. It's the small touches that matter. | null | null | 41,800,304 | 41,787,647 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,154 | story | jeffchuber | 2024-10-10T20:22:55 | Retrieval powered by object storage: AMA | Hey everyone - I'm Jeff from the Chroma team. Chroma is the most popular open-source vector database.<p>Chroma now has a fully-distributed and serverless version backed by object-storage (also Apache 2.0).<p>More on why and how we built this here:<p>https://www.trychroma.com/engineering/serverless<p>AMA about AI, retrieval, systems, Rust, and more. | null | 8 | null | 41,803,154 | 4 | [
41803616,
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] | null | null |
41,803,155 | comment | dylan604 | 2024-10-10T20:23:00 | null | It's only slightly less childish than the current WP drama. | null | null | 41,802,996 | 41,799,068 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,156 | comment | AlienRobot | 2024-10-10T20:23:02 | null | Yes, the problem is with AI. I'm tired of trying to find X and finding "AI X" instead. I google "pixel art" I get "AI pixel art." I google clipart I get "AI clipart." I go to /r/logodesign to see some cool logo designs, it's 50% people who used ChatGPT asking if it looks good enough.<p>The only good AI is AI out of my sight. | null | null | 41,802,173 | 41,797,462 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,157 | comment | christiancoomer | 2024-10-10T20:23:07 | null | I started sewing on Thanksgiving of 2023. Every day since I've found myself wanting to sew, and have probably sewn something every day since except for maybe 20 days where I was away from home. I feel like I'm ok at sewing after 100+ bags and altering/repairing tons of clothing from yard sales or thrift shops. Most of what I do is completely custom and it's super fun to wear custom matching jeans, jackets, and bags (backpacks & hip/shoulder packs) that I made or altered. Some of my stuff looks like store-bought quality.<p>For me, as soon as I sewed my first seam, I was hooked. It was like the magic I've felt building software, modifying cars, and woodworking, where you can make something from nothing.<p>I'd encourage maybe trying out various arts, whatever piques your interest - maybe one will hook you instantly like sewing did for me. In the last couple years, I also dabbled with painting/signmaking, and metalworking (largely with tin snips and a rivet gun) but those didn't really appeal to me instantly or for the longer term like sewing did.<p>I've realized that the opportunities for the trying/exploring different arts are everywhere and in lots of cases free - community centers, libraries, check your local newspaper('s website), etc. Every single interaction I've had with local art folks in any way has been positive. It's been great to meet folks.<p>Also, there's so much online to learn from. I've learned a lot from various sites and youtube.<p>It's been great, and I hope you find joy in the arts!<p>edit: formatting | null | null | 41,756,978 | 41,756,978 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,158 | comment | roschdal | 2024-10-10T20:23:18 | null | [flagged] | null | null | 41,802,912 | 41,802,912 | null | [
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] | null | true |
41,803,159 | comment | nunobrito | 2024-10-10T20:23:27 | null | A beautiful concept. Thank you for sharing. | null | null | 41,802,162 | 41,798,477 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,160 | story | thunderbong | 2024-10-10T20:23:29 | Managing Multiple Linux Servers with ClusterSSH | null | https://www.linux.com/training-tutorials/managing-multiple-linux-servers-clusterssh/ | 3 | null | 41,803,160 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,803,161 | comment | treflop | 2024-10-10T20:23:44 | null | I find this tends to happen when something passes on from its creator to someone else. Wikia/Fandom has passed hands a bit.<p>Other people just have very different values and the direction of an organization reflects this. | null | null | 41,799,613 | 41,797,719 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,162 | comment | raggi | 2024-10-10T20:23:45 | null | Same, I work in Go most of the time in performance and memory sensitive areas and the lack of usable abstractions grates so hard. I’m increasingly fed up of long hand everywhere and the bug volume and frequency it inherently produces particularly under change. I was worried this would be the outcome of the iterator proposal and am not surprised at all to find that yes, it is in practice. I was similarly disappointed with rand/v2 where I provided feedback thah the interface in the middle of it had been seldom used and could have been eradicated and the choice was to preserve that part of the API because the compiler should in the future eradicate these costs. I see no actual plan for how that will be done though, and I’m skeptical it will happen in practice. I’ll finish with the comment that will lead to comment downvoting, but I derive tons of value for resource constrained work from rusts lazy iterator design combined with the aggressively optimizing compiler folding nice low cost of maintenance abstraction here into tight sometimes even vectorized or unrolled loops - it makes work I do demonstrably easier. | null | null | 41,799,810 | 41,769,275 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,803,163 | comment | spookie | 2024-10-10T20:23:48 | null | I'm aware, but we have been in that situation for almost a decade now. I'm portuguese.<p>I just think we would've gotten through this sooner by making use of the invisible hand and lead businesses to be able to prosper more and as a result, higher wages. This would lead to more modest taxes having a higher wield to the state.<p>As it stands, they are taxing people for a very low absolute amount in the end. Not to mention that taxes go way lower the closer you are to minimum wage (a good thing, but it also shows how little they gain from this strategy). In the meantime they strangle any small to medium sized company, which are the ones driving the wages for most. | null | null | 41,799,691 | 41,799,016 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,164 | story | null | 2024-10-10T20:23:56 | null | null | null | null | null | 41,803,164 | null | null | true | null |
41,803,165 | comment | krapp | 2024-10-10T20:23:59 | null | This isn't a problem if you use an open source engine that costs nothing and demands nothing. Cough Godot cough. | null | null | 41,803,020 | 41,802,800 | null | [
41803665,
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] | null | null |
41,803,166 | comment | KTibow | 2024-10-10T20:24:07 | null | What makes you say that it uses OpenAI models? From what I understand right now it only has search functionality, which could be easily done with a local embedding model (similar to the open-weights CLIP) and possibly OCR. | null | null | 41,802,351 | 41,801,331 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,803,167 | comment | tkel | 2024-10-10T20:24:13 | null | [flagged] | null | null | 41,802,899 | 41,799,068 | null | null | null | true |
41,803,168 | comment | lr4444lr | 2024-10-10T20:24:13 | null | But this begs the same question: if mental illness really is what psychologists say it is, and if treatment is a learnable skill, then the practitioner shouldn't matter that much assuming his training was good.<p>But most evidence suggests that some "je ne sais quoi" has to exist in the therapeutic relationship.<p>In other words, Freud was right about Transference as a necessary ingredient to psychotherapy (and probably about a lot else that is still too controversial to talk about or pass IRB muster). | null | null | 41,802,965 | 41,780,328 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,803,169 | comment | dahousecat | 2024-10-10T20:24:21 | null | They discuss session tokens, passwords and webAuthn so both. | null | null | 41,802,855 | 41,801,883 | null | [
41803466,
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] | null | null |
41,803,170 | comment | limitedfrom | 2024-10-10T20:24:28 | null | Deborah Smith translated her biggest works (The Vegetarian & Human Acts). In fact, her translation arguably single-handedly led to Han Kang winning the Man Booker International Prize in 2016, which then made her popular outside Korea. The translations have been quite popular, but a bit controversial as well[0].<p>[0] <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deborah_Smith_(translator)" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deborah_Smith_(translator)</a> | null | null | 41,801,386 | 41,799,170 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,171 | comment | dcchambers | 2024-10-10T20:24:37 | null | That's awesome news! | null | null | 41,802,934 | 41,799,068 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,172 | comment | GeekyBear | 2024-10-10T20:24:46 | null | Emulation has unavoidable overhead.<p>For instance, Alyssa mentions in this post that most emulated games will need at least 16 Gigs of RAM at minimum.<p>In addition, native ARM games on MacOS don't have the additional overhead of emulating a different CPU architecture and Graphics API.<p>However, that doesn't take away from this emulated support being an amazing achievement. | null | null | 41,800,525 | 41,799,068 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,173 | comment | paradox460 | 2024-10-10T20:24:56 | null | One of the first sites I downrank in kagi is all the fandom sites. I don't outright ban them, sometimes they're all there is, but I try and make it so any other result shows up ahead of them | null | null | 41,798,661 | 41,797,719 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,174 | comment | AdrianB1 | 2024-10-10T20:24:56 | null | Yes, if something is illegal then you don't need to set limits, you send people to prison, don't pass Go, don't collect $200. | null | null | 41,783,084 | 41,780,569 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,175 | comment | MiddleEndian | 2024-10-10T20:24:59 | null | Seconding micromacrofoot's post, went to one and it was super distracting with staff running around giving people food and such. | null | null | 41,801,789 | 41,801,300 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,176 | comment | photonthug | 2024-10-10T20:25:01 | null | > You can't prepare for acclimatization, and you don't know how well your body will handle it before actually going up there.<p>This is something of an enduring medical mystery despite efforts to find related genes, etc. I think part of it is the compounding of second order effects, like who can say whether individual performance one week into an expedition will be more affected by bad sleep, bad digestion, or bad headaches? If one is immune to some side effects, how long before the others really take a toll? The team member who is strongest one day may be weakest the next depending on how the schedule of different kinds of attrition and reserves all line up, so it’s really hard to predict in advance without some direct experience. Even then it’s a moving target as we train or age. | null | null | 41,800,210 | 41,787,798 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,177 | story | cierre | 2024-10-10T20:25:04 | Agent eval UX – inspired by GitHub diffs | null | https://saradu.substack.com/p/agent-task-logs | 1 | null | 41,803,177 | 0 | [
41803178
] | null | null |
41,803,178 | comment | null | 2024-10-10T20:25:04 | null | null | null | null | 41,803,177 | 41,803,177 | null | null | true | null |
41,803,179 | comment | kunley | 2024-10-10T20:25:05 | null | Nice rewrite for 1.23. Btw, just sent you a PR for a typo in the readme. | null | null | 41,800,576 | 41,769,275 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,180 | comment | AlienRobot | 2024-10-10T20:25:05 | null | You still have to take the photo. That's a billion times more effort than typing a prompt in ChatGPT. | null | null | 41,801,513 | 41,797,462 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,181 | comment | ZunarJ5 | 2024-10-10T20:25:08 | null | This is good to hear. It seems built for it. | null | null | 41,803,036 | 41,801,331 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,182 | comment | jenny91 | 2024-10-10T20:25:10 | null | Yes, made this mistake in the past.<p>Every project has some amount of "being quirky/different" capital. If your project is not explicitly trying to innovate, or does not for some particular reason need to be very secure, then do not spend that capital on confusing users with the login flow. You'll turn a bunch of users away and cause a whole lot of support tickets, for very little benefit. Make users only think about stuff by making it unintuitive or different if it's really worth it to your product. | null | null | 41,802,754 | 41,801,883 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,183 | comment | benterix | 2024-10-10T20:25:11 | null | > informal "water cooler chat" which is missing at working from home scenarios.<p>I have a lot of that. Actually, in each company I worked for, I made sure we have a channel for informal communication, it is a work life changer.<p>Most people, even so called introverts, sometimes like to communicate, and they need to have a way to do so, and this must be done in a way that doesn't disturb others etc. This can be a slack channel, a weekly "coffee online" with your teammates, or even pre-daily informal discussion on any topic. Otherwise, all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy which Bezos apparently doesn't care about. | null | null | 41,802,614 | 41,802,378 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,184 | story | rbanffy | 2024-10-10T20:25:21 | AMD Turns the Screws with "Turin" Server CPUs | null | https://www.nextplatform.com/2024/10/10/amd-turns-the-screws-with-turin-server-cpus/ | 3 | null | 41,803,184 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,803,185 | comment | mlyle | 2024-10-10T20:25:22 | null | There's probably better figures. Internet providers themselves probably know what subscribers dropped at what times, so you'd be able to distinguish from evacuations and have a good signal as to whether it happened from power outages or key pieces of their infrastructure failing.<p>It would be really neat to figure out the cooperation necessary to effectively use it. Rapid damage assessment has a ton of value even if the data is somewhat unreliable. | null | null | 41,802,916 | 41,801,970 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,186 | comment | hulitu | 2024-10-10T20:25:24 | null | The rules are not for us. Except when they serve us. /s | null | null | 41,798,282 | 41,789,941 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,187 | comment | spease | 2024-10-10T20:25:33 | null | Cool! I usually have to share window-by-window, this may come in handy. | null | null | 41,800,602 | 41,800,602 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,188 | comment | BiteCode_dev | 2024-10-10T20:25:34 | null | Yes, but when "the good parts" came out, half of this list was already true.<p>There is a reason we ignore a good chunk of the language to be productive with it. | null | null | 41,803,114 | 41,787,041 | null | [
41804083
] | null | null |
41,803,189 | comment | ineedaj0b | 2024-10-10T20:25:35 | null | we try not to use our phones - if the power goes out, you can't charge again for how long? You never know.<p>another problem are power flickers. a short flicker resets modems and routers. so you read a book or talk rather than waste battery | null | null | 41,802,916 | 41,801,970 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,190 | comment | Apocryphon | 2024-10-10T20:25:39 | null | <a href="https://adlock.com/blog/search-engine-without-ads/" rel="nofollow">https://adlock.com/blog/search-engine-without-ads/</a> | null | null | 41,801,037 | 41,784,287 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,191 | comment | eqvinox | 2024-10-10T20:25:42 | null | You've clearly never tried to use .net on a non-MS OS. Sure, it's <i>possible</i>. But it's also a royal pain, at least last time I checked. | null | null | 41,798,774 | 41,796,030 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,192 | comment | goatlover | 2024-10-10T20:25:42 | null | Go will resist this as long as possible. | null | null | 41,803,125 | 41,787,041 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,193 | comment | TheMashaBrand | 2024-10-10T20:25:55 | null | Thats why this website is needed, for that reaction. I will be adding more celebrity profiles that passed away. | null | null | 41,803,092 | 41,803,031 | null | [
41803278
] | null | null |
41,803,194 | comment | vcvxcvsac | 2024-10-10T20:25:55 | null | htgfedffvdvcvcvcv | null | null | 41,796,611 | 41,796,611 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,195 | comment | mistermann | 2024-10-10T20:26:03 | null | Careful though: something only has to be partially (5% is adequate) shit to "be shit". Twitter also has lots of value (and thusly, "is not shit", simultaneously).<p>Consider all the soothsaying in this thread, does this cause HN to "be" a soothsaying platform? In part yes, but not in whole. | null | null | 41,802,709 | 41,801,795 | null | [
41804102
] | null | null |
41,803,196 | comment | ljosifov | 2024-10-10T20:26:07 | null | +1. I also use Samsung Galaxy Watch (Active2) and find it to work well for me. I'm surprised more people don't know about it. I know couple of people that suffer from high BP. They showed little interest when I told them about the watch.<p>Regular external calibration helped me build confidence. I was suspicions if the watch worked, and how well it worked. Calibration is every month - it expires. I take 3 measurements in parallel watch-cuff, and tell the watch App what the cuff measured. I didn't mind it initially. I now find it annoying tbh. I see why Apple would like to get rid of it. Post calibration, I measure 3 times in parallel both watch and cuff to check if they match. If the difference is within 5% - then fine. In 3 years it's happened twice where they differed more and I had to recalibrate. From recollection - both times with a reason, a TV was turned on in living room.<p>I have the impression that BP measurements differ though the day (lower in the morning, higher in the evening), depending on activity or at rest of course, I think there maybe some seasonality too (winter v.s. summer). Measuring BP when going to the doctor once a year strikes me as a wholly inadequate. If the BP is absurdly high out of normal range - then yeah, we learn something is wrong with the patient. But in any other case - don't see what can be deduced from 1 random measurement.<p>To check if the calibration is important, I had my wife use the watch, that is calibrated on me. She got absurd readings. So yes - the calibration is important and is tied to the person that did the calibration. (edited to add this) | null | null | 41,800,697 | 41,799,324 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,197 | comment | ordu | 2024-10-10T20:26:15 | null | <i>> professional training as a therapist does not produce a statistically significant improvement in ability to treat mental health conditions.</i><p>It produces a statistically significant improvement, just not with people who are already gifted at it. You can get not gifted people and teach them to be not worse than gifted. It is not much, but it is not nothing either. | null | null | 41,802,896 | 41,780,328 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,198 | comment | doublepg23 | 2024-10-10T20:26:18 | null | Handbrake can open BDs and DVDs directly to rip. | null | null | 41,795,276 | 41,784,069 | null | null | null | null |
41,803,199 | comment | dartos | 2024-10-10T20:26:20 | null | Yeah I’m sure they exist, but googling “C++ ISO Rationales” doesn’t give me them.<p>Searching for “Rust RFCs” reveals a git repo with thousands of markdown files describing features and their motivations with links to discussions. | null | null | 41,802,385 | 41,791,773 | null | null | null | null |
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