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eastbound
2024-10-10T21:08:27
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It doesn’t matter, because even if men call for help, they won’t be helped.<p>There was a study in UK that if a man calls the police for domestic violence, there’s 56% chances the police only interviews the woman, and 23% chances he’s threatened of arrest (with, I think, 3% or 10% he’s actually led to the police station, I don’t remember the specifics, but still higher than not calling the police).<p>In France, a sad sentence of the government hotline “Female violence info” mentions that 10% calls are from men. For a hotline with “female” on it. The report continues that, since it’s only 10%, it’s still generally violence against women.<p>So yeah. Let’s be honest. Men better not end up in need of help.
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antonkar
2024-10-10T21:08:28
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I&#x27;m afraid that after reading this guy, people will just give up, thinking there is nothing that works. And this is not the case at all, depression and many other problems are curable. Mine got cured, in addition to anxiety, anger management problem and suicidality. You can get help or start by reading a workbook yourself.<p>He links to a meta analysis* that says CBT does cure depression and does so consistently for many decades without any declines in effectiveness. Later for some reason, he says no single mental illness was ever cured.<p>It seems the main point of the article is to say that nothing except &quot;nudges&quot; ever worked in psychology - this is nonsense that he himself contradicts as I mentioned above.<p>Skip this sensationalist guy, use <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;scholar.google.com" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;scholar.google.com</a> to do your own research<p>* <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;research.vu.nl&#x2F;ws&#x2F;portalfiles&#x2F;portal&#x2F;26037670&#x2F;2017_Cristea_Psychol_Bull_effects_of_CBT_are_not_falling.pdf" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;research.vu.nl&#x2F;ws&#x2F;portalfiles&#x2F;portal&#x2F;26037670&#x2F;2017_C...</a>
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aupra
2024-10-10T21:08:28
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How do you intend to monetize it, if eventually?
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floydnoel
2024-10-10T21:08:32
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I&#x27;m aware of no better way to see your desired features land in open source than to build them yourself. That is the power of open source, nobody can stop you!
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2024-10-10T21:08:39
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Michelangelo11
2024-10-10T21:09:08
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&gt; I recently read The Secrets of Alchemy by Lawrence Principe, which I loved, especially because he tries to replicate ancient alchemical recipes in his own lab. And sometimes he succeeds! For instance, he attempts to make the “sulfur of antimony” by following the instructions in The Triumphal Chariot of Antimony (Der Triumph-Wagen Antimonii), written by an alchemist named Basil Valentine sometime around the year 1600. At first, all Principe gets is a “dirty gray lump”. Then he realizes the recipe calls for “Hungarian antimony,” so instead of using pure lab-grade antimony, he literally orders some raw Eastern European ore, and suddenly the reaction works! It turns out the Hungarian dirt is special because it contains a bit of silicon dioxide, something Basil Valentine couldn’t have known.<p>&gt; No wonder alchemists thought they were dealing with mysterious forces beyond the realm of human understanding. To them, that’s exactly what they were doing! If you don’t realize that your ore is lacking silicon dioxide—because you don’t even have the concept of silicon dioxide—then a reaction that worked one time might not work a second time, you’ll have no idea why that happened, and you’ll go nuts looking for explanations. Maybe Venus was in the wrong position? Maybe I didn’t approach my work with a pure enough heart? Or maybe my antimony was poisoned by a demon!<p>&gt; An alchemist working in the year 1600 would have been justified in thinking that the physical world was too hopelessly complex to ever be understood—random, even. One day you get the sulfur of antimony, the next day you get a dirty gray lump, nobody knows why, and nobody will ever know why. And yet everything they did turned out to be governed by laws—laws that were discovered by humans, laws that are now taught in high school chemistry. Things seem random until you understand ‘em.<p>Well, this example doesn&#x27;t just fail to support the argument, but undercuts it. Basil successfully identified the kind of antimony that would work, -despite- having no concept of sulfur dioxide. He did not write down something like &quot;not all kinds of antimony work for this recipe, so get a bunch of different kinds and try them all&quot; -- that, or a stronger version (&quot;sometimes the recipe fails, we don&#x27;t know why&quot;), would support the author&#x27;s point.<p>So we&#x27;re left with the author trying to argue that this alchemist thought the world was &quot;too hopelessly complex to ever be understood&quot; on the basis of ... the alchemist correctly identifying the ingredient that would make the recipe work.
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open-listings
2024-10-10T21:09:08
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stego-tech
2024-10-10T21:09:15
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We sorely need more of this. HTML was the first language I actually understood (although BASIC was my first ever), and left me feeling empowered to carve out my own survival on the internet. While layering CSS and Javascript aren&#x27;t bad decisions on their face, I do think they combine to create a steep barrier to entry for most newcomers as they&#x27;re believed to be &quot;Core&quot; to the language of HTML itself.<p>Kudos to the author(s) for the site. I&#x27;ll have to add it to my arsenal as a &quot;next step&quot; for folks who want something more custom than WP&#x2F;Ghost on PikaPods w&#x2F; a theme, or who just <i>really</i> want to be totally independent.
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Flemitplo
2024-10-10T21:09:18
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ImPostingOnHN
2024-10-10T21:09:18
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I&#x27;d argue there is an even greater moral obligation to honor what your contracts say and don&#x27;t say, and thus keep your word. Doing what you say is pretty key to the concept of integrity, which outweighs Matt&#x27;s driving desire for more money.<p>The moral obligation to not screw over a million innocent users also outweighs Matt&#x27;s driving desire for more money.
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consteval
2024-10-10T21:09:18
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&gt; often rooted in distrust of the official narrative<p>I disagree from what I&#x27;ve seen.<p>I hear a lot of crazy conspiracies from Trump followers where I live. Including from my family.<p>On one hand they, they have a distrust for the establishment. But on the other they&#x27;re dangerously close to fascists. I mean, Trump is a monarch to them. They don&#x27;t trust the DOJ. Or the house. Or the senate. Or any of the agencies. But they trust Trump. If he says they&#x27;re eating cats and dogs, then that&#x27;s what they&#x27;re doing.<p>It&#x27;s very odd to be both in this &quot;anti-establishment&quot; headspace but also basically endorse and ask for a fascist government where one King makes all the rules. And you just trust him and have absolute loyalty.<p>That is to say, I don&#x27;t think &quot;distrust the gov&quot; is the end of the discussion. There&#x27;s more to it.
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saulpw
2024-10-10T21:09:51
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Midwits treat these as gospel. But when you automate something, you make it 10x more efficient, and this opens up the possibility of using the automation 10x more often. Adherents to xkcd&#x2F;1205 are like &quot;don&#x27;t waste your time automating the full build process, we only do a full build a few times at the end of a release.&quot;
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add-sub-mul-div
2024-10-10T21:09:55
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Last week I made a chicken tortilla soup from a recipe on a random site. The directions were to cook the chicken for a suspiciously short time and sure enough, following the instructions verbatim the chicken was still mostly raw. Fortunately it was obvious enough that no one would have eaten it without cooking it longer. But it was probably my first encounter with an AI recipe. It doesn&#x27;t seem like a mistake a person would make.<p>I made the mistake of forgetting to stick to sites with some level of reputation. Taking information directly from the search engine robs people of important context. Even if the site the recipe is taken from is cited, without going to the site you won&#x27;t be able to get that sense of whether the site&#x27;s look and feel is spammy or AI slop. And of course that applies to any other type of information too.
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benoau
2024-10-10T21:10:00
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You can tell from the &quot;seeders&quot; numbers on pirated games that piracy is in fact extremely niche. The fitgirl repack of &quot;Dragon Ball: Sparkling Zero&quot; has 3,400 seeders and 58,000 concurrent players on Steam.<p>I remember when Steam and GOG used to act like consumer refunds would be used to steal from them too, back when Steam had their illegal no-refund policy and GOG had a contrived obstacle course of excuses to refuse them.
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ChumpGPT
2024-10-10T21:10:01
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<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.is&#x2F;fZdm8" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.is&#x2F;fZdm8</a>
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pintxo
2024-10-10T21:10:02
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While european law is a lot more employee friendly, what I noticed is that companies are hardly willing to invest even some effort into stringently building their case, which they often could have done, from my laymen perspective.<p>Given that employment law is even more employer friendly for small companies, I would expect that a small company should not have much problem to argue about terminating an employee not working at all?
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SunlitCat
2024-10-10T21:10:07
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Okay! I have a question, more like an observation! (Sorry I am maybe not your target audience, but to get things started)<p>Many buzzwords used and after reading your project page, I requested the help of ChatGPT to make any sense out of it!<p>Is what Chatgpt tells me about your interesting project right?<p>This is what it has to say:<p>Chroma&#x27;s serverless system is designed to help developers build AI applications without managing servers. It allows you to efficiently store and retrieve data using vectors (for AI models) and text queries, all without needing to handle infrastructure. The system is scalable, cost-effective, and optimized for AI workloads, so developers can focus on their projects rather than backend management.
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bhl
2024-10-10T21:10:10
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Was looking into local DuckDB notebooks and found this: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.duckbook.ai&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.duckbook.ai&#x2F;</a>
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i007
2024-10-10T21:10:13
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&#x2F;&#x2F; Step 1: Convert JSON object to string const jsonObject = { name: &quot;John&quot;, age: 30 }; const jsonString = JSON.stringify(jsonObject);<p>&#x2F;&#x2F; Step 2: Convert the string to binary data const encoder = new TextEncoder(); const encodedJson = encoder.encode(jsonString);<p>&#x2F;&#x2F; Step 3: Create a SharedArrayBuffer and a Uint8Array view const sharedArrayBuffer = new SharedArrayBuffer(encodedJson.length); const sharedArray = new Uint8Array(sharedArrayBuffer);<p>&#x2F;&#x2F; Step 4: Store the encoded data in the SharedArrayBuffer sharedArray.set(encodedJson);<p>Now you can use Atomics, no?<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;developer.mozilla.org&#x2F;en-US&#x2F;docs&#x2F;Web&#x2F;JavaScript&#x2F;Reference&#x2F;Global_Objects&#x2F;Atomics" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;developer.mozilla.org&#x2F;en-US&#x2F;docs&#x2F;Web&#x2F;JavaScript&#x2F;Refe...</a>
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iainmerrick
2024-10-10T21:10:14
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I stand corrected! That’s great information, thanks. I didn’t know JVM bytecode had so many problems.
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Flemitplo
2024-10-10T21:10:28
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[dead]
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sitkack
2024-10-10T21:10:39
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Anything of value should be above the first floor.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.nytimes.com&#x2F;www.nytimes.com&#x2F;2012&#x2F;11&#x2F;01&#x2F;health&#x2F;nyus-lab-rats-and-mice-die-in-flooding.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.nytimes.com&#x2F;www.nytimes.com&#x2F;2012&#x2F;11&#x2F;01&#x2F;healt...</a>
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vanschelven
2024-10-10T21:11:03
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&gt; accidental<p>Admittedly this may not be the best choice of words... but it was a good trade-off of length&#x2F;clarity at the time for me.<p>The longer version is: an _ideal_ programming language (from the perspective of debugging, though not all other perspectives) would just allow a full reverse playback through time from the point-of-failure to an arbitrary point in the past. A (small) step towards that is the &quot;Breadcrumb&quot; as introduced by Sentry; a hint at what happened before an error occurred. I argue that, in the coding-style as discussed, and when exposing local variables in stacktraces, local variables actually serve as breadcrumbs, albeit not explicitly set using the breadcrumb-tooling.<p>&gt; along with a print statement<p>yeah but the point is that in this combination of coding style and tooling print statements become redundant<p>&gt; third-party addon called Bugsink<p>If by third-party you mean &quot;the data flows to a third party&quot; you&#x27;re mistaken, Bugsink is explicitly made to keep the data with you. If by &quot;third party&quot; you mean &quot;not written by either myself or the creators of my language of choice, you&#x27;re right.
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philip1209
2024-10-10T21:11:04
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For those interested in this, I highly recommend the book &quot;Ametora: How Japan Saved American Style&quot; by David Marx. It talks about how Japan appropriated American prep fashion, then exported it back to the USA.
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cheeseomlit
2024-10-10T21:11:11
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I appreciate the productive answer- You&#x27;re right, re-reading it now my tone was more argumentative than inquisitive- Itd be foolish to dismiss such a large body of work as &#x27;useless&#x27; and I hope it didn&#x27;t come off that way- Of course understanding human psychology is immensely useful for all sorts of reasons
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Iwan-Zotow
2024-10-10T21:11:11
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&gt; which is I believe is Xoroshiro ( at least in .net 6+ )<p>Xoshiro I believe is in .NET 6, close cousin<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;blogs.siliconorchid.com&#x2F;post&#x2F;coding-inspiration&#x2F;randomness-in-dotnet&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;blogs.siliconorchid.com&#x2F;post&#x2F;coding-inspiration&#x2F;rand...</a>
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datavirtue
2024-10-10T21:11:18
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It&#x27;s so efficient.
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neilv
2024-10-10T21:11:40
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&gt; <i>Do you also feel spoiled when you see an ad for a new burger because you’ve lost the mystery of what the toppings are?</i><p>Seeing the ad for the burger doesn&#x27;t spoil much of the value that is the point of the burger.<p>Analogous spoiling would be to make the actual burger taste not as good, or to make the actual burger be less nutritious.
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stevenAthompson
2024-10-10T21:11:43
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Adults are supposed to have friends outside of their homes who they do not work with and are not related to. The problem isn&#x27;t with WFH, it&#x27;s with society.
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doubled112
2024-10-10T21:11:53
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If I leave out the user data, that’s more disk space than some of my desktop Linux installs take with all of the apps included.
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denimnerd42
2024-10-10T21:11:53
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Denim in $150-300 japanese levis stye reproduction jeans is 50-100% heavier duty than department store jeans. 12-25oz per square yard vs 6-10 in department store. I get 3-5 years before I start getting holes. Holes can be darned or repaired anyways.
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jedberg
2024-10-10T21:12:16
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FWIW, in a lot of cases Amazon (and Google and Meta and all of those top tier companies requiring RTO) do in fact pay at least 30% more. And in the case of Google and Meta, they provide food and other things too.<p>People are really upset at Amazon because the office doesn&#x27;t provide anything more than what they can get at home (and in a lot of cases provides less). At least at the others you can get some extra stuff you can&#x27;t get at home.
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AlienRobot
2024-10-10T21:12:23
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Just chmod -w
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igouy
2024-10-10T21:12:24
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Also see <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;nicovank&#x2F;Energy-Languages">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;nicovank&#x2F;Energy-Languages</a>
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Flemitplo
2024-10-10T21:12:24
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[dead]
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alkonaut
2024-10-10T21:12:24
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I was only considering pure solo desk work like software development now. But anything with visible individual output should follow the same pattern for observability. Obviously in other lines of work it can be different. But if I wanted to not work (say, work 50% on my personal project during office hours) then I’d probably prefer trying that stunt in the office. Because in an office no one questions whether you work (people confuse ass-in-seat with work) while if I’m working from home I know I’m only measured on my output.
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bell-cot
2024-10-10T21:12:26
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A too-common problem with such articles: There&#x27;s no indication whether the new &amp; earth-friendly food product would cost $5&#x2F;pound, or $500&#x2F;oz. The former might be a serious, at-scale substitute. The latter can only be performative activism for the 0.01%.
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1oooqooq
2024-10-10T21:12:34
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so, turn into Bob? from bobs burger?
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lastdong
2024-10-10T21:12:39
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Portugal, like Spain and Argentina, faced significant historical challenges in the 20th century. Portugal&#x27;s fascist regime, which lasted until 1974, limited investment in infrastructure and economic development. Spain, under Franco&#x27;s dictatorship, also faced political and economic constraints. Argentina, too, experienced political instability and economic turmoil, particularly during the 1970s military dictatorship.<p>Also were mentioned Malaysia, Turkey, and Iran, which have their own unique historical contexts that I&#x27;m not as familiar with.
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rurp
2024-10-10T21:12:58
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This is a perfect example of why the market doesn&#x27;t always produce the kind of product that consumers would prefer. Despite this sort of server integration being a terrible design for customers, investors absolutely <i>love</i> a platform like this for lock-in and rent extraction.<p>A company needs funding before it can even start making a hardware project on the scale of a car, and it is vastly easier to obtain funding for a project like this than for one that would not screw over customers. Free markets are usually great, but they can have terribly misaligned incentives at times.
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DonHopkins
2024-10-10T21:13:03
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Sexist assholes who become performatively confused and impatient and pretend they can&#x27;t understand you and stop listening are just signaling that they are sexist assholes.
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nmacias
2024-10-10T21:13:04
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most audio and video schemes support streaming, in the case of MP3 we are talking about frame-based compression<p>I guess to restate my curiosity: are things like Animation Pose Compression in Unity or equivalents in other engines remotely as good as audio techniques with hardware support? The main work on this seems to be here and I didn&#x27;t see any references to audio codecs in the issue history fwiw. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;nfrechette&#x2F;acl">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;nfrechette&#x2F;acl</a>
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sandwichsphinx
2024-10-10T21:13:08
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&gt; I browse &#x2F;new exclusively<p>I do the same because I&#x27;m usually looking for things others would miss. Reading something unpopular typically has a higher value because of information asymmetry.
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kennu
2024-10-10T21:13:22
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In my view, the big promise of server-side WASM is to have an evergreen platform that doesn&#x27;t need regular updates to the application. Just like HTML web pages work &quot;forever&quot; in browsers, WASM-based applications could work forever on the server-side.<p>Currently it is a huge PITA to have to update and redeploy your AWS Lambda apps whenever a Node.js or Python version is deprecated. Of course, usually the old code &quot;just works&quot; in the new runtime version, but I don&#x27;t want to have to worry about it every few years. I think applications should work forever if you want them to, and WASM combined with serverless like Lambda will provide the right kind of platform for that.
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westurner
2024-10-10T21:13:39
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robdar
2024-10-10T21:13:39
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I suggested this on a thread in &#x2F;r&#x2F;cpp a few years ago, and was downvoted heavily, and chewed out for the reason that coding for ease of debugging was apparently akin to baby killing.
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41,754,386
41,754,386
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41,803,646
story
juniperplant
2024-10-10T21:13:39
Repositories and Data Access Layers Can Have as Many Methods as You Find Helpful
null
https://www.bennadel.com/blog/3754-repositories-and-data-access-layers-can-have-as-many-methods-as-you-find-helpful.htm
1
null
41,803,646
0
null
null
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comment
chubot
2024-10-10T21:13:43
null
fly.io is &quot;serverless&quot;, but there are HTTP servers inside your Docker container, so I don&#x27;t agree -- in that case it refers to the lack of pinning to a physical machine<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;fly.io&#x2F;blog&#x2F;the-serverless-server&#x2F;">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;fly.io&#x2F;blog&#x2F;the-serverless-server&#x2F;</a><p>Pretty sure Lambda has an option for that too -- you are responsible for the HTTP server, which is proxied, yet it is still called serverless<p>---<p>On the second point, I wrote a blog post about that - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.oilshell.org&#x2F;blog&#x2F;2024&#x2F;06&#x2F;cgi.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.oilshell.org&#x2F;blog&#x2F;2024&#x2F;06&#x2F;cgi.html</a><p>It would make for a much more interesting conversation if you cite some definitions&#x2F;sources, as others have done here, rather than merely insisting that everyone thinks of the terms as you think of them
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41,801,040
41,795,561
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41,803,648
comment
jedberg
2024-10-10T21:13:54
null
I think you&#x27;re not accounting for momentum. Amazon can act irrationally for <i>decades</i> before they get out-competed.
null
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41,803,074
41,802,378
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null
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41,803,649
story
newaccount74
2024-10-10T21:13:56
Digital River / MyCommerce has not payed ISVs for 3 months
null
https://old.reddit.com/r/SaaS/comments/1fybe1l/thinking_about_using_mycommerce_for_my_startup/lr5iipk/
1
null
41,803,649
0
null
null
null
41,803,650
story
LamaOfRuin
2024-10-10T21:13:57
Forking Is Beautiful
null
https://wordpress.org/news/2024/10/spoon/
25
null
41,803,650
19
[ 41803882, 41803810, 41804162, 41803967, 41803982, 41803690, 41804056, 41804103, 41803671, 41803866, 41803984 ]
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null
41,803,651
comment
mbreese
2024-10-10T21:14:00
null
I often call into meetings where I am also presenting twice. Once on my phone and once from my computer. I use my computer for sharing, audio, video, etc. I use my phone to see what the other people see. Shared screens are always difficult to predict. If you have a 4K screen, it will almost always get downsampled somehow for meetings… it can be too slow otherwise.<p>In my experience, the problem isn’t that the font is too small on your device, but rather that you’re sharing too much screen. Even if I’m sharing a terminal window (common for me), instead of changing the font, I try to make the window smaller. This has the same effect and is much easier to control. On the viewing device, the video you send it always scaled (either for a different resolution or viewport size), so it helps to limit the size of the screen&#x2F;window that you’re sharing.<p>Telling viewers to zoom in if they can’t read anything sounds like you’re blaming them for the problem. If you have a different device connected, you might be in a better position to find a solution on your end.
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null
41,802,446
41,800,602
null
[ 41804030, 41803805 ]
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41,803,652
comment
mattmanser
2024-10-10T21:14:00
null
Google search has totally craptastic&#x27;d out.<p>Same with Amazon, it&#x27;s now just sponsored spam. I just don&#x27;t get why they think it&#x27;s a good idea.
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41,802,674
41,797,719
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41,803,653
comment
jmull
2024-10-10T21:14:07
null
I&#x27;m a fan of this.<p>Not just for debugging either. Giving something a name gets you to think about what a good name would be, which gets you thinking about the nature of the thing, which clarifies your thinking about the thing, and leads you to better code.<p>When I&#x27;ve struggled to figure out what the right name for something is, I sometimes realize it&#x27;s hard because the thing doesn&#x27;t really make sense. E.g., I might find I want to name two different things the same, which leads me to understand I was confused about the abstractions I was juggling.<p>But it&#x27;s also always nice to have a place to drop a break point or to automatically see relevant values in debuggers and other tools.
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41,754,386
41,754,386
null
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41,803,654
story
westurner
2024-10-10T21:14:14
Topological gauge theory of vortices in type-III superconductors
null
https://journals.aps.org/prb/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevB.110.094506
1
null
41,803,654
2
[ 41803662 ]
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null
41,803,655
comment
cyrnel
2024-10-10T21:14:30
null
It&#x27;s more a testament to the devs. I kept up with the RuneScape wiki Discord server for a bit and there were flamegraphs flying left and right. You can see some of there recent performance improvements here: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;meta.weirdgloop.org&#x2F;w&#x2F;Forum:Board_Meeting_-_2024-06-15" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;meta.weirdgloop.org&#x2F;w&#x2F;Forum:Board_Meeting_-_2024-06-...</a><p>I think the theory is people edit more if pages load lightning fast. I can attest to that, especially if you use tools for partially-automated mass edits like <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;wikimedia-gadgets&#x2F;JWB">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;wikimedia-gadgets&#x2F;JWB</a>
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41,798,734
41,797,719
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41,803,656
comment
consteval
2024-10-10T21:14:35
null
She&#x27;s also not the only one, she&#x27;s just low hanging fruit. This same point can be made about Trump, and as you know, he has a lot of dedicated followers who are smart, functioning adults. Not Gen Z.
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41,802,898
41,801,271
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41,803,657
comment
jimbosis
2024-10-10T21:14:35
null
I plan to dig in deeper, but this looks like a great introduction to building websites.<p>I teach a one semester high school Web Design class and currently use a mixture of lessons from these two for learning the basics of making pages by hand with HTML and CSS:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;internetingishard.netlify.app&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;internetingishard.netlify.app&#x2F;</a><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.washington.edu&#x2F;accesscomputing&#x2F;webd2&#x2F;student&#x2F;index.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.washington.edu&#x2F;accesscomputing&#x2F;webd2&#x2F;student&#x2F;ind...</a><p>This looks very promising and could supplant or at the very least supplement those.
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41,801,334
41,801,334
null
[ 41803844 ]
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41,803,658
story
squircle
2024-10-10T21:14:49
Turn Up the Juice: Flywheel Raises Hopes for Energy Storage Breakthrough (2013)
null
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/new-flywheel-design/
1
null
41,803,658
0
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null
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comment
nunez
2024-10-10T21:14:52
null
Wow. Windows Explorer is literally spyware now. it&#x27;s incredible to see how far Windows has slid down the tubes, and I say this as someone who LOVED Windows.
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story
HowTekno
2024-10-10T21:14:58
null
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null
1
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41,803,661
comment
HowTekno
2024-10-10T21:14:58
null
We&#x27;re diving into three standout Meshtastic devices from Seeed Studio: the SenseCAP Card Tracker T1000-E, Wio Tracker 1110 Dev Kit, and XIAO ESP32S3. We’ll explore their features, pricing, and usability to help you figure out which one might be the best fit for your IoT tracking projects
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41,803,660
41,803,660
null
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41,803,662
comment
westurner
2024-10-10T21:15:03
null
&quot;Topological gauge theory of vortices in type-III superconductors&quot; (2024) <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;journals.aps.org&#x2F;prb&#x2F;abstract&#x2F;10.1103&#x2F;PhysRevB.110.094506" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;journals.aps.org&#x2F;prb&#x2F;abstract&#x2F;10.1103&#x2F;PhysRevB.110.0...</a> :<p>&gt; Abstract: <i>Usual superconductors fall into two categories, type I, expelling magnetic fields, and type II, into which magnetic fields exceeding a lower critical field H_c⁢1 penetrate in a form of vortices characterized by two scales, the size of the normal core, \Xi, and the London penetration depth \Lambda. Here we demonstrate that a type-III superconductivity, realized in granular media in any dimension, hosts vortex physics in which vortices have no cores, are logarithmically confined, and carry only a gauge scale \Lambda. Accordingly, in type-III superconductors H_c⁢1=0 at zero temperature and the Ginzburg-Landau theory must be replaced by a topological gauge theory. Type-III superconductivity is destroyed not by Cooper pair breaking but by vortex proliferation generalizing the Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless mechanism to any dimension.</i>
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41,803,654
41,803,654
null
[ 41803692 ]
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41,803,663
comment
1oooqooq
2024-10-10T21:15:11
null
anything with an amd pro cpu, and ram slots. then buy the slow crappy true ecc sodim marketed to NAS boxes sold at obscene premium.
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41,792,570
41,792,570
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41,803,664
comment
ssalka
2024-10-10T21:15:14
null
^This. Closing an entire application with the possibility of losing important state? No, we don&#x27;t want a button that does that (though a button combination is OK because that&#x27;s less likely to be accidentally triggered). Closing an ephemeral popup that is distracting from the main page? Absolutely, `Esc` that.
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41,800,742
41,793,597
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41,803,665
comment
ganoushoreilly
2024-10-10T21:15:16
null
But even that Engine has its own drama &#x2F; issues surrounding it with devs being locked out of access etc..
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null
41,803,165
41,802,800
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[ 41803750 ]
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41,803,666
comment
ErikBjare
2024-10-10T21:15:17
null
Wasn&#x27;t this Instagram early on too? I think many social networks start off like this, but then either grow out of it and&#x2F;or &quot;sell out&quot;.
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41,784,179
41,767,648
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41,803,667
comment
thephyber
2024-10-10T21:15:24
null
From my reading, the “ProtonMail is a honey trap” meme seems to be a popular rumor. Seems like there might be some smoke, but I haven’t seen any fire.<p>Interesting breakdown[1] of one of the claims that E2E encryption on ProtonMail is broken.<p>I’m assuming that Proton storage is a product from the same team as ProtonMail.<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;lemmygrad.ml&#x2F;post&#x2F;4177" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;lemmygrad.ml&#x2F;post&#x2F;4177</a>
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null
41,803,275
41,798,359
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41,803,668
comment
1oooqooq
2024-10-10T21:15:34
null
travel with bad network.
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null
41,802,049
41,792,570
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null
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null
41,803,669
comment
pie420
2024-10-10T21:15:48
null
what did obama do that was considered nobel bait? he had no idea they were about to give it to him. And really, him getting the nobel is probably more for signifying the end of racism since america finally elected a black president, but we all know how that turned out.
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41,801,185
41,799,170
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41,803,670
comment
BadHumans
2024-10-10T21:15:51
null
I don&#x27;t understand this analogy because every tool touted as a photoshop replacement supports PSD.
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null
41,803,238
41,801,331
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[ 41803930 ]
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41,803,671
comment
squircle
2024-10-10T21:16:01
null
Funny.
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41,803,650
41,803,650
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41,803,672
comment
forgot-im-old
2024-10-10T21:16:13
null
The strategic significance:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;redd.it&#x2F;1fy10k1" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;redd.it&#x2F;1fy10k1</a>
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null
41,800,620
41,800,620
null
null
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41,803,673
comment
pie420
2024-10-10T21:16:28
null
name a more prestigious&#x2F;better guide (marketing tool) for restaurants?
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null
41,801,085
41,799,170
null
null
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null
41,803,674
comment
xp84
2024-10-10T21:16:31
null
Hot take, I guess, but can you actually say the slop that came out of dreamweaver is any worse than the React-based slop that most people generate now?<p>25 years ago it was font tags and table layouts, now it’s a styled components div soup generated by 2-3 orders of magnitude more code, in a sprawling NPM dependency tree that takes several minutes to install on modern hardware.<p>It’s all crap once you get away from the simplest prototype and single-person project.
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41,759,350
41,757,711
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41,803,675
comment
nashashmi
2024-10-10T21:16:36
null
Windows has a similar tool. But it’s two steps.<p>1. Set up a new virtual monitor (see <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;itsmikethetech&#x2F;Virtual-Display-Driver">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;itsmikethetech&#x2F;Virtual-Display-Driver</a>)<p>2. See virtual monitor using google chrome desktop.
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41,800,602
41,800,602
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null
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null
41,803,676
story
sebnun
2024-10-10T21:16:45
The Future of the Web is on the Edge (2022)
null
https://deno.com/blog/the-future-of-web-is-on-the-edge
1
null
41,803,676
0
null
null
null
41,803,677
comment
gambiting
2024-10-10T21:16:48
null
I drive across Europe few times a year and covering 800 miles in one day is difficult to do in almost every BEV, maybe with the exception of Teslas. Also I had to deal with chargers in Germany a few times and it&#x27;s been a pain every time(the classic - charger requires an account, the account only accepts german-registered payment card).<p>But I&#x27;m also perfectly happy to admit that it&#x27;s fine and doable just requires adjustment of expectations, and even the charging network thing I&#x27;m sure has solutions if you plan beforehand.
null
null
41,803,335
41,757,808
null
[ 41803716, 41803744 ]
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41,803,678
comment
tonetegeatinst
2024-10-10T21:17:09
null
Is its internet fun bucks why are they taxing it?<p>Imagine next, taxing people who do protein folding of use the SETI project....because those points earned have a value to them.
null
null
41,803,594
41,802,823
null
[ 41803740 ]
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null
41,803,679
comment
thephyber
2024-10-10T21:17:12
null
Right, but I’m pointing out that everybody is using a belt and nobody suspenders.
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null
41,746,052
41,736,903
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null
null
null
41,803,680
comment
TrapLord_Rhodo
2024-10-10T21:17:15
null
Is this a thing?...<p>I never thought about it before... but after reading the &quot;The Shadow Factory&quot; I totally understand they could do that...<p>It&#x27;s halvings are correlated to right before a presidential elections which seems suspicious.<p>But why? Is it a giant honeypot that got out of hand?
null
null
41,803,328
41,802,823
null
[ 41803788, 41803795 ]
null
null
41,803,681
comment
datavirtue
2024-10-10T21:17:19
null
Sounds like Mullenwag is screwing the pooch.
null
null
41,803,264
41,803,264
null
[ 41803960 ]
null
null
41,803,682
comment
randomNumber7
2024-10-10T21:17:24
null
From my impression of Germany I can tell you they would do the same suicide without the eu.
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null
41,803,487
41,799,016
null
null
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null
41,803,683
story
rntn
2024-10-10T21:17:25
Agents are the future AI companies promise – and desperately need
null
https://www.theverge.com/2024/10/10/24266333/ai-agents-assistants-openai-google-deepmind-bots
1
null
41,803,683
0
null
null
null
41,803,684
comment
ChrisMarshallNY
2024-10-10T21:17:27
null
I used to live in Maryland, and saw Kudzu do some impressive work. <i>Acres</i> of land are covered by one patch.<p>I now live in New York, and it&#x27;s starting to show up here.<p>Fun times ahead...
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41,780,229
41,780,229
null
[ 41803718 ]
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41,803,685
comment
eterm
2024-10-10T21:17:30
null
Thanks for that correction, I hadn&#x27;t appreciated the subtle difference there.
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null
41,803,625
41,798,475
null
null
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null
41,803,686
comment
VHRanger
2024-10-10T21:17:37
null
&gt; Is this potentially a part of why Apple doesn&#x27;t want to support Vulkan? Because they don&#x27;t want to implement common Vulkan features in hardware, which leads to less than ideal performance?<p>Yes, it&#x27;s a big reason.<p>I tried to port the yuzu switch emulator to macos a few years ago, and you end up having to write compute shaders that emulate the geometry shaders to make that work.<p>Even fairly modern games like Mario Odyssey use geometry shaders.<p>Needless to say, I was not enough of a wizard to make this happen!
null
null
41,803,351
41,799,068
null
[ 41804084 ]
null
null
41,803,687
comment
almostgotcaught
2024-10-10T21:17:52
null
&gt; Yes, NVidia has support for .NET on the CUDA ecosystem via partners, the only one that matters on GPGPU.<p>Ironic because &quot;via partners&quot; is equivalent to &quot;doesn&#x27;t matter&quot;.
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null
41,802,280
41,791,773
null
null
null
null
41,803,688
comment
neonsunset
2024-10-10T21:17:53
null
Unfortunately, the baseline allocation cost is hard to avoid due to IEnumerable&lt;T&gt; being an interface which all LINQ methods return save for scalar values, and IEnumerable&lt;T&gt; itself returning an interface-typed IEnumerator&lt;T&gt;. Even with escape analysis, the iterator implementation selection logic is quite complex, which ends up being opaque to compiler so at most it can get rid of the IEnumerable&lt;T&gt; allocation but not the enumerator itself, and only when inlining allows so.<p>There are community libraries that implement similar API surface with structs that can be completely allocation-free and frequently dispatched statically.<p>Moreover, with the advent of `T where T : allows ref struct` you can finally write proper LINQ-like abstraction for Span&lt;T&gt;s, even if it&#x27;s a bit less pretty. I have been playing with a small toy prototype[0] recently and it looks like this:<p><pre><code> &#x2F;&#x2F; Efectively C&#x27;s array constant var numbers = (ReadOnlySpan&lt;int&gt;)[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]; var iter = numbers .Where((int n) =&gt; n % 2 == 0) .Select((int n) =&gt; n * 2); &#x2F;&#x2F; Inspired by Zig :) using var vec = NVec&lt;int, Global&gt;.Collect(iter); </code></pre> The argument types for lambdas need to be provided to work around C# lacking full Hindler-Milner type inference, but this iterator expression is fully statically dispatched and monomorphized save for the lambdas themselves. Luckily, JIT can profile the exact method types passed to Funcs and perform further guarded devirtualization, putting this code painfully close to the way Rust&#x27;s iterators are compiled.<p>At the end of the day, .NET&#x27;s GC implementations can sustain 4-10x allocation throughput when compared to Go one (it&#x27;s not strictly better - just different tradeoffs), with further tuning options available, so one allocation here and there is not the end of the world, and not all LINQ methods allocate in the first place, and many of them allocate very little thanks to optimizations made in that area in all recent releases.<p>[0]: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;neon-sunset&#x2F;project-anvil&#x2F;blob&#x2F;master&#x2F;Sources&#x2F;Playground&#x2F;Program.cs">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;neon-sunset&#x2F;project-anvil&#x2F;blob&#x2F;master&#x2F;Sou...</a>
null
null
41,803,542
41,769,275
null
null
null
null
41,803,689
comment
egberts1
2024-10-10T21:18:03
null
Stomach puncture is far more survivable than a liver tear; far far more likely to survive.
null
null
41,794,769
41,758,870
null
null
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null
41,803,690
comment
paulclark
2024-10-10T21:18:31
null
Feels a bit tongue in cheek given current events, but good on Matt for sticking to values here.
null
null
41,803,650
41,803,650
null
[ 41804018, 41803959, 41804022, 41803952 ]
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null
41,803,691
comment
girvo
2024-10-10T21:18:38
null
In fact, Javascript is so complex that one of the seminal books on it was specifically &quot;The Good Parts&quot;, cutting down the scope of it to just the parts of the language that were considered decent and useful.
null
null
41,803,003
41,787,041
null
[ 41804057 ]
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null
41,803,692
comment
westurner
2024-10-10T21:18:49
null
Berezinskii–Kosterlitz–Thouless (BKT) transition: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Berezinskii%E2%80%93Kosterlitz%E2%80%93Thouless_transition" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Berezinskii%E2%80%93Kosterlitz...</a>
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41,803,662
41,803,654
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null
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null
41,803,693
comment
consteval
2024-10-10T21:18:49
null
The left also tends to use higher education in their political positions. Which is why the right now seems to really have a bone to pick with higher education.<p>What people should be asking is, why does science have a supposedly left-leaning bias? Why does education have a left-leaning bias? It feels like there&#x27;s some obvious conclusions the republican can draw there, but they see those conclusions and draw something else instead.
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null
41,801,700
41,801,271
null
null
null
null
41,803,694
comment
gertop
2024-10-10T21:18:50
null
Marcan and asahi Lina are the same person.
null
null
41,803,383
41,799,068
null
[ 41803792, 41803751 ]
null
null
41,803,695
comment
pepve
2024-10-10T21:18:51
null
I use `xrandr --setmonitor` to create a fake monitor that only covers part of my screen. And I have some window manager setup to easily move my windows there (with awesomewm).
null
null
41,801,507
41,800,602
null
[ 41803714 ]
null
null
41,803,696
comment
null
2024-10-10T21:18:57
null
null
null
null
41,794,684
41,758,870
null
null
true
null
41,803,697
story
gavinhoward
2024-10-10T21:18:58
Three Questions of Language Design
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https://chrisdone.com/posts/three-questions-of-lang-design/
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2024-10-10T21:19:03
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MathMonkeyMan
2024-10-10T21:19:05
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My dad was asking me a question about backing something up onto Google Drive, or saving space on some cloud storage account, or something.<p>He was using the mental model of files and folders -- that files exist and refer to stored bytes, and that there can be one or several copies of a file. There can be links to a file that take very little space relative to the file.<p>I had to tell him that I have no idea what sort of storage model these services expose, if any, and that the concept of a file system backed by a storage device is not the analogy that applications expose to their users these days.<p>He eventually understood, but I could feel his frustration -- that the mental model he had was really just chosen by a past moment in application design, and that what replaced it is nebulous and disempowering.
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