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41,805,100 | comment | shadowfiend | 2024-10-11T00:56:23 | null | Appreciate the pointer! | null | null | 41,800,128 | 41,764,163 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,101 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T00:56:26 | null | null | null | null | 41,804,460 | 41,804,460 | null | null | true | null |
41,805,102 | comment | atmavatar | 2024-10-11T00:56:43 | null | Also overtime.<p>We have over a century of evidence that requiring employees work > 40h/week for long periods of time is a net loss in productivity compared to working fewer hours. That's why we have a standard 40 hours per workweek and a concept of overtime in the first place.<p>However, there's always going to be a large cohort of management that thinks <i>their</i> employees are different so they can squeeze out more hours, so we get BS like trying to convince employees they're part of a family they need to sacrifice for and (unfortunately successful) lobbying for legal overtime exemptions across certain jobs. | null | null | 41,803,571 | 41,802,378 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,103 | comment | dagmx | 2024-10-11T00:57:32 | null | You’re ignoring D3DMetal which is what is most commonly going to be used and equivalent to what Proton is doing to convert D3D to VK.<p>Most games are D3D. A very small minority are Vulkan from the get go. | null | null | 41,805,032 | 41,799,068 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,104 | comment | 1vuio0pswjnm7 | 2024-10-11T00:57:47 | null | Long ago when I last used it at home I used to run the Windows without explorer.exe. I believe I did it via editing a key or keys in the registry. Wonder if it still works today with more recent Windows versions. | null | null | 41,801,331 | 41,801,331 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,105 | comment | moandcompany | 2024-10-11T00:57:49 | null | The second order costs of automation should consider time spent diagnosing and repairing said automation, and consequences of automation failure.<p>For example, should an automation fail, will manual processes still work? Does execution of a manual correction, or repair, require the knowledge or skills of a particular person or persons that may not be available, etc, or can it be done by the normal persons that the automation is intended to serve/benefit?<p>In the Smart Home context, when the automation or other cleverness fails, will ____ still be operable normally by a regular person? | null | null | 41,802,079 | 41,765,594 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,106 | comment | dockerd | 2024-10-11T00:58:11 | null | On Android TV, I prefer Sparkle TV (<a href="https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=se.hedekonsult.sparkle&hl=en_IN">https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=se.hedekonsult...</a>) than Tivimate. | null | null | 41,798,377 | 41,794,577 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,107 | comment | aurareturn | 2024-10-11T00:58:42 | null | No, it’s the other way around. Intel has generally caught up in idle power draw but is still severely behind in performance per watt.<p><a href="https://www.notebookcheck.net/Intel-Lunar-Lake-CPU-analysis-The-Core-Ultra-7-258V-s-multi-core-performance-is-disappointing-but-its-everyday-efficiency-is-good.893405.0.html" rel="nofollow">https://www.notebookcheck.net/Intel-Lunar-Lake-CPU-analysis-...</a><p><a href="https://youtu.be/ymoiWv9BF7Q" rel="nofollow">https://youtu.be/ymoiWv9BF7Q</a> | null | null | 41,804,992 | 41,799,068 | null | [
41805766
] | null | null |
41,805,108 | story | chany2 | 2024-10-11T00:58:49 | null | null | null | 1 | null | 41,805,108 | null | null | null | true |
41,805,109 | story | andrei-akopian | 2024-10-11T00:58:52 | null | null | null | 1 | null | 41,805,109 | null | null | null | true |
41,805,110 | comment | InvaderFizz | 2024-10-11T00:59:01 | null | I spend most of my time in the path of hurricanes, we lose power 5-10x per year for between 1 to 8 hrs on average.<p>When we lose power the battery backup for the modem takes over(15hrs runtime), and we have other portable batteries to recharge our phones multiple times.<p>If things get really bad, we can pull out the camping solar panels and keep the phones charged. At that point, I expect the fiber will be down anyways and cell service is probably all that would be available.<p>Works quite well. I can usually still complete my work day on my laptop without issue. | null | null | 41,803,189 | 41,801,970 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,111 | comment | serjester | 2024-10-11T01:00:07 | null | TypedDicts are enormously helpful in defining args a function takes. You can’t do that with either dataclasses / pydantic without passing instantiated objects as args - which is really cumbersome. | null | null | 41,804,563 | 41,801,415 | null | [
41805730
] | null | null |
41,805,112 | comment | TrapLord_Rhodo | 2024-10-11T01:00:45 | null | now try ""moto" and "satoshi" | null | null | 41,803,788 | 41,802,823 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,113 | comment | taurath | 2024-10-11T01:00:50 | null | > If people and companies took the bigger picture in to account, they likely wouldn't do these things.<p>Its important to denote that this decision occurs at the moment they decide to take someone else's money and promise them a return on their investment. The loss of control and need to produce a return on that investment (or often, to "show growth" to get the next round of investment in a never-ending game of musical chairs) is what produces mandates like massive ads and enshittification.<p>Does Fandom need to own all wiki's? Do they need 300 employees? Do they need to own TVGuide, Metacritic, Giant Bomb, GameFAQs and a thousand different media publications? Hell no they don't, if their goal was to provide a useful service. | null | null | 41,800,677 | 41,797,719 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,114 | story | andrei-akopian | 2024-10-11T01:01:04 | null | null | null | 1 | null | 41,805,114 | null | null | null | true |
41,805,115 | story | bilsbie | 2024-10-11T01:01:40 | High prices in emergencies aren't gouging, but bounties desperately needed goods | null | https://twitter.com/MTabarrok/status/1844360469039227100 | 2 | null | 41,805,115 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,805,116 | comment | shiroiushi | 2024-10-11T01:01:41 | null | Sure, but if you look at the stuff they say on that side, they too think that "democracy is in danger" and that only their savior can protect it. It just seems like a case of mass delusion to me, but I'm guessing that in their echo chambers they've come up with some kind of weird logic to explain this.<p>Maybe one of them here could explain it; after all, there are a fair number of these people lurking about on HN. | null | null | 41,805,082 | 41,804,460 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,117 | comment | pfych | 2024-10-11T01:01:45 | null | I feel like ClassicPress[^1] is a bit of a better approach to the whole "I just want basic Wordpress that works" - It seems like it's pretty stable and already has a community behind it.<p>[^1]: <a href="https://www.classicpress.net/" rel="nofollow">https://www.classicpress.net/</a> | null | null | 41,804,706 | 41,804,706 | null | [
41805322
] | null | null |
41,805,118 | comment | rogerkirkness | 2024-10-11T01:01:50 | null | Casablanca | null | null | 41,803,780 | 41,803,780 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,119 | comment | russelg | 2024-10-11T01:01:53 | null | A couple states in Australia have experimented with fee reductions for public transport.<p>In Western Australia, right now public transport is free for all students, and is free on Sundays for everyone. They also capped the cost of cross-zone travel to 2 zones, i.e. you'll never pay more than $5ish for a ride. Furthermore, unlike a lot of places, the airport train does not have any extra fare.<p>In Queensland, right now all public transport is capped at 50c. Not sure how long this will last, seems it's a bit of cost-of-living relief, and a bit of an election sweetener. | null | null | 41,801,963 | 41,797,719 | null | [
41805880
] | null | null |
41,805,120 | comment | throw0101c | 2024-10-11T01:02:00 | null | In the US at least, parties started sorting their policies on certain issues in the 1960s:<p>* <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_strategy" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_strategy</a><p>Ezra Klein goes into the (US) history of this in his book:<p>* <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Why_We%27re_Polarized" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Why_We%27re_Polarized</a><p>It also has a few chapters on how humans seem to have built-in tribe/clan mechanism (us/them, in/out-group). | null | null | 41,804,460 | 41,804,460 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,121 | story | mgh2 | 2024-10-11T01:02:22 | Apple Hosts Secretive Conferences to Teach Law Enforcement | null | https://www.macrumors.com/2024/10/10/apple-law-enforcement-conferences/ | 4 | null | 41,805,121 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,805,122 | comment | AlotOfReading | 2024-10-11T01:02:38 | null | The scene was around and doing interesting things long after 2005, like Floppus / Ben factoring the TI RSA signing keys in 2009 [0], Quigibo / Kevin writing Axe, and SirCmpwn / Drew with KnightOS. The TI-84+ wasn't even released until 2004, and that was probably the biggest hardware for the broader community. It was a fun time to be involved and get a C&D.<p>[0] <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texas_Instruments_signing_key_controversy" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texas_Instruments_signing_key_...</a> | null | null | 41,803,986 | 41,786,880 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,123 | comment | more_corn | 2024-10-11T01:02:48 | null | Google is particularly bad though. | null | null | 41,774,618 | 41,774,287 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,124 | comment | RevEng | 2024-10-11T01:03:13 | null | Also explains how his assistants end up having to put themselves at greater and greater risk. The more they help him, the more trouble they face, and the more they hope he is able to bail them out. | null | null | 41,799,005 | 41,798,027 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,125 | comment | halfcat | 2024-10-11T01:03:14 | null | Except for the pipeline operator | null | null | 41,805,012 | 41,787,041 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,126 | story | dxs | 2024-10-11T01:03:22 | null | null | null | 1 | null | 41,805,126 | null | null | null | true |
41,805,127 | story | o999 | 2024-10-11T01:03:26 | Derinkuyu Underground City | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Derinkuyu_underground_city | 1 | null | 41,805,127 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,805,128 | comment | more_corn | 2024-10-11T01:03:51 | null | I had the Google wallet people follow the sun route me around the world twice. I think they thought it was a game. | null | null | 41,774,454 | 41,774,287 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,129 | comment | taurath | 2024-10-11T01:03:51 | null | Just as an example - the stardew valley offical wiki is massive and complete, and nearly everyone uses that, but google still directs users to the fandom site for almost any specific search. Its one of the main things that has led me to think that using Google gives far less useful information than competitors. | null | null | 41,798,661 | 41,797,719 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,130 | story | lando2319 | 2024-10-11T01:04:09 | null | null | null | 1 | null | 41,805,130 | null | null | null | true |
41,805,131 | comment | AmericanChopper | 2024-10-11T01:04:10 | null | I’m not a big fan of the “my opinion is fact” or “your opinion is wrong” headlines. They can be mildly funny in the right context, but it’s been done so much that they’re just a bit boring now. I’m especially bored of seeing this convention in conference presentation titles. | null | null | 41,804,231 | 41,801,415 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,132 | comment | permo-w | 2024-10-11T01:04:39 | null | the way this is phrased reminds me so much of IOI from Ready Player One | null | null | 41,802,542 | 41,797,719 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,133 | comment | nullc | 2024-10-11T01:04:48 | null | I dunno about that? do you use more than one gpu intensive task at a time? | null | null | 41,799,088 | 41,796,030 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,134 | comment | squidgedcricket | 2024-10-11T01:04:50 | null | EV is relevant because all of the bricked Fisker cars are EVs. Nothing stopping something similar from happening to modern ICE vehicles.<p>TFA doesn't say that all Fisker cars are bricked - It says that they become unusable do to minor maintenance issues that can't resolved without Fisker servers being online.<p>I wish I could buy an electric car with no radio transmitters and no ways to install software other than JTAG ports. I think that'll be possible in the relatively near future through EV conversions of legacy vehicles, though that route may have crash safety concerns. | null | null | 41,804,591 | 41,802,219 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,135 | comment | creer | 2024-10-11T01:05:01 | null | Unfortunately not new at all. What's new is the richness of the presentation work, for sure. And the self promotion on HN. And the publication of the code should make this far, far more useful than the equivalent of the past which never did... Oh wait, no, the code isn't there - only the link. | null | null | 41,804,303 | 41,770,389 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,136 | comment | nullc | 2024-10-11T01:05:02 | null | No, flatpack is very much not a security sandbox. | null | null | 41,797,912 | 41,796,030 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,137 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T01:05:13 | null | null | null | null | 41,804,093 | 41,801,415 | null | null | true | null |
41,805,138 | comment | AndrewKemendo | 2024-10-11T01:05:30 | null | I’ve always been curious where, in your experience, is the demand for this material coming from?<p>Is it insidious and just totally under the surface everywhere or is it more localized? | null | null | 41,795,383 | 41,794,342 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,139 | comment | darkteflon | 2024-10-11T01:05:40 | null | Really like Pydantic - assuming you’re happy to step outside the standard library. It does have a few sharp edges, but out of the box it includes all the stuff you eventually end up needing anyway. attrs is the other big Python parsing / validation library. I know nothing about it other than it’s also popular and that it distinguishes itself philosophically from Pydantic in a number of ways.<p>Don’t forget to use ‘ConfigDict(frozen=True)’ absolutely everywhere! | null | null | 41,804,563 | 41,801,415 | null | [
41805910,
41805294
] | null | null |
41,805,140 | comment | endofreach | 2024-10-11T01:05:41 | null | 96.3% confidence score that this post was written by/edited with ChatGPT 4-o. | null | null | 41,794,396 | 41,794,150 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,141 | comment | grishka | 2024-10-11T01:05:43 | null | So it's more complicated than I thought it was. Now I'm curious about our Russian trains, especially in subways. They've never made any interesting sounds, it seems. The older (Soviet-era) ones don't make any noticeable sounds at all. The newer ones just make a high-pitched whine that varies in volume (but not frequency I think) when they accelerate or brake. | null | null | 41,757,808 | 41,757,808 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,142 | comment | RevEng | 2024-10-11T01:06:05 | null | I don't have links, but look at Detroit during the crash of 2008. There were a lot of photos at the time of entire neighborhoods abandoned by people whose mortgages were underwater. | null | null | 41,799,594 | 41,798,027 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,143 | comment | jkestner | 2024-10-11T01:06:06 | null | That’d be a hell of a magnet program. | null | null | 41,798,259 | 41,798,259 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,144 | story | dxs | 2024-10-11T01:06:15 | How Agile Are You Really? | null | https://rethinkingsoftware.substack.com/p/how-agile-are-you-really | 2 | null | 41,805,144 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,805,145 | comment | JadeNB | 2024-10-11T01:06:37 | null | > It's fallacious to assume that your own usage patterns are common. Hell, with as much evidence as you (none) ….<p>I don't assume that my usage pattern is common. (My usage pattern is to drop to `bc`.) I assume that Calculator usage isn't common, but, recognizing that that <i>is</i> an assumption and that the only way to get evidence is to ask, I asked:<p>> Maybe you've occasionally used the calculator in Spotlight, but have you ever opened the app?<p>And you answered, so now together we have double the evidence that I alone did before. :-) | null | null | 41,801,726 | 41,758,371 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,146 | comment | firen777 | 2024-10-11T01:06:58 | null | Considering the hacker's motive: <a href="https://x.com/Sn_darkmeta/status/1844358501952618976" rel="nofollow">https://x.com/Sn_darkmeta/status/1844358501952618976</a><p>Is it safe to assume the hacker want to erase the evidence?<p>Forcing the service offline also means they want to prevent people from archiving evidence in the next how-ever-long hours. Combining with the spoken language they used in that video, are they planning some online disinformation campaign?<p>----<p>Edit: some more info about this group: <a href="https://old.reddit.com/r/technology/comments/1g0kupb/hacktivists_claim_responsibility_for_taking_down/lr9kbmo/" rel="nofollow">https://old.reddit.com/r/technology/comments/1g0kupb/hacktiv...</a><p>----<p>This group claims to be pro palestinian and it's entirely based on Russia.<p>[<a href="https://therecord.media/middle-east-financial-institution-6-day-ddos-attack](https://therecord.media/middle-east-financial-institution-6-day-ddos-attack)" rel="nofollow">https://therecord.media/middle-east-financial-institution-6-...</a><p>>SN\_BLACKMETA has operated its Telegram channel since November 2023, boasting of DDoS incidents and cyberattacks on infrastructure in Israel, the Palestinian Territories and elsewhere. While all of the group’s messages focus on the Palestinian Territories and perceived opponents to Palestine, many of its posts are written in Russian.<p>>The group’s account on X also shows that it was created by someone in Staraya, a town in Novgorod Oblast, Russia. The account’s initial language was also set to Russian.<p>>The researchers added that analysis of timestamps and activity patterns showed possible evidence that the actors within the group are operating in a timezone “close to Moscow Standard Time (MSK, UTC+3) or other Middle Eastern or Eastern European time zones (UTC+2 to UTC+4).”<p>~~Attacks include pro palestine sites and groups, so~~ take that "pro palestine" with a grain of salt.<p>EDIT: edited for clarity on what is actually in the article and not in outside anonymous sources. If you want to read more, [there's a clearer report on one of their attacks and their usual targets.](<a href="https://www.radware.com/security/threat-advisories-and-attack-reports/six-day-web-ddos-attack-campaign/" rel="nofollow">https://www.radware.com/security/threat-advisories-and-attac...</a>) | null | null | 41,792,500 | 41,792,500 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,805,147 | comment | moribvndvs | 2024-10-11T01:07:05 | null | Every life owes a debt that can only be paid in death, and suffering, pain, and a whole slew of other things go along with that. If you’re lucky, you get a minimal amount of the bad stuff before you pay your dues. Even if we could somehow observe or atone hard enough to equalize every tragedy, we’d effectively freeze time handling the endless torrent of loss, grief, injustice, and so forth. Let go or be dragged.<p>I think it’s actually a remarkable and wondrous thing that it’s possible to get along with life– even thrive- after tragedy strikes, which if you live long and full enough becomes unavoidable and in fact frequent. Toxic or fucked up relationships aside, the best service you can do for someone you left behind is live a full life with gratitude and without callousness.<p>All we have in the world is the living; abandoning it for the dead is its own sort of absurdity. | null | null | 41,797,084 | 41,797,084 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,148 | comment | Jtsummers | 2024-10-11T01:07:07 | null | I was going to mention that one as well. I was exploring using CLIPS (or something like it) for a system at work and after digging through the free documentation I picked it up. It was an enjoyable read.<p><a href="https://www.clipsrules.net/" rel="nofollow">https://www.clipsrules.net/</a> | null | null | 41,804,159 | 41,800,764 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,149 | comment | mistermann | 2024-10-11T01:07:16 | null | Look how less ambitious this new characterization of your initial claim is.<p>> and know they'll have access to the data anyway<p>Here we agree. | null | null | 41,803,721 | 41,801,331 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,150 | comment | nullc | 2024-10-11T01:07:38 | null | > Satoshi connected to IRC from a residential IP address in Los Angeles in 2009.<p>Maybe, that claim is pretty speculative and shouldn't be repeated as established fact.<p>I agree with the rest of your points, though there were a lot of proxies other than tor. In particular, there were well known forums you could post on to get private proxies -- often used for kinda shady astroturfing and similar. So excluding tor alone isn't sufficient. Tor wouldn't have been as useful for Satoshi's bitcoin usage because he couldn't run a node over it that accepted inbound connections. | null | null | 41,800,376 | 41,783,609 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,151 | story | mayneack | 2024-10-11T01:08:06 | Spotify's CHRO on the return-to-office debate, layoffs and HR's changing role | null | https://www.raconteur.net/talent-culture/spotify-chro-office-return-layoffs-hr-role | 2 | null | 41,805,151 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,805,152 | comment | dullcrisp | 2024-10-11T01:08:21 | null | At least you didn’t laugh at the other ones I guess | null | null | 41,804,520 | 41,762,709 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,153 | comment | karlzt | 2024-10-11T01:08:36 | null | There's nothing on that link. | null | null | 41,804,647 | 41,801,970 | null | [
41805241
] | null | null |
41,805,154 | comment | xk_id | 2024-10-11T01:08:37 | null | > No, the end is to destroy national identities and cultures<p>I was referring to the official position of the EU, which is verifiable in their public documents; I don’t care about far-right propaganda. People of course are free to care more about “cultural identity” (whatever it means in the 21st century), than about war. But it doesn’t change the fact that the EU has been successful in creating the longest period of continuous peace in the history of the continent. And this is what it intended from the beginning. | null | null | 41,804,066 | 41,799,016 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,155 | comment | permo-w | 2024-10-11T01:08:43 | null | does fandom prevent their wikis from mass-linking to the new wiki at the top of their pages? | null | null | 41,797,719 | 41,797,719 | null | [
41805330
] | null | null |
41,805,156 | story | hn_acker | 2024-10-11T01:09:10 | Election Security: When to Worry, When to Not | null | https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2024/10/election-security-when-worry-when-not | 1 | null | 41,805,156 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,805,157 | comment | JadeNB | 2024-10-11T01:09:17 | null | > That's my point. The mathematical operations are not hard (even the "fancy" ones like the trig functions). Formatting a number to be displayed is also not hard (again, those $100 calculators do it just fine).<p>Right, and that's <i>my</i> point: if all you want is a rock-solid computational platform, then you can use, for example, `bc`. (That's what I do.) I assume that Apple assumes that their users want something fancier than that, and it's <i>there</i>, with the fanciness of a shiny user interface on a less-exercised code path, that the bugs will inevitably come. | null | null | 41,798,480 | 41,758,371 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,158 | comment | nineplay | 2024-10-11T01:09:18 | null | I hardly know what to make of this. If I was a wealthy woman in a blue state than it is wrong of me to give a damn about what happens to poor women in red states? That is a unique POV.<p>I can't imagine how a hypothetical Polish person got into this. I cannot cast a vote in Poland so their politics are outside of my control.<p>> they weight the fetus’ life more than ....<p>They weight the fetus's life more than its mothers life.<p>> The overturn of Roe v Wade was primarily about letting the states decide.<p>I'm paraphrasing something I read somewhere else, but I don't think it could be put better<p>- Why leave it up to the federal government and not the state?
- Why leave it up to the state and not the counties?
- Why leave it up to the counties and not the cities?
- Why leave it up to the cities and not the neighborhood?
- Why not just leave it up to the women herself?<p>I think it nicely reduces it down to the absurdity of the whole. Why exactly is it up to my neighbors whether or not I can get an abortion? | null | null | 41,805,088 | 41,804,460 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,805,159 | comment | uSoldering | 2024-10-11T01:09:23 | null | If this worked well you would imagine a demo consisting of more than a single through-hole component. | null | null | 41,787,644 | 41,787,644 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,160 | comment | tptacek | 2024-10-11T01:09:43 | null | Because not having to trust the provider is the entire premise of these services, and without that premise, you might as well just store things in GDrive. | null | null | 41,805,041 | 41,798,359 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,161 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T01:10:15 | null | null | null | null | 41,804,706 | 41,804,706 | null | null | true | null |
41,805,162 | comment | j0hnyl | 2024-10-11T01:10:20 | null | The thing about crypto pump and dump schemes is that usually the folks issuing the tokens are the ones doing the pumping and dumping. | null | null | 41,802,823 | 41,802,823 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,163 | comment | pests | 2024-10-11T01:10:27 | null | In my view it gets iffy in some situations.<p>If they set up that crackhouse in a neighborhood with no crack, where no one knows where to get crack and there are no users...<p>Then the person walking in wouldn't have been doing so if they didn't set up the trap in the first place.<p>Giving it as an option.. allows a crime to be committed that otherwise wouldn't. | null | null | 41,804,434 | 41,802,823 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,164 | comment | tptacek | 2024-10-11T01:10:28 | null | If they aren't multitenant systems it doesn't make sense to compare them to the targets of this paper. | null | null | 41,804,682 | 41,798,359 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,805,165 | story | aanet | 2024-10-11T01:10:31 | null | null | null | 1 | null | 41,805,165 | null | [
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] | null | true |
41,805,166 | comment | aanet | 2024-10-11T01:10:31 | null | From the article:
"Chowning soon started teaching conventional music classes at Stanford, but spent evenings in the lab exploring what he called “spatial illusions”: the impression, for instance, that a whisper is nearby or an explosion distant. Spatialisation appeals to our primal impulses, he says. “Is the predator close or far? It sends a signal right to the amygdala: freeze, fight or flee. It’s very compelling.”<p>He also developed a method of programming hyperspeed vibrato-like motion between two electronic notes. At a high frequency, the wobbly pitch merged into one thick tone. To his surprise, tweaking the inputs changed its timbre: one moment a gong-like drone, the next a reedy whistle.<p>Chowning had discovered digital frequency modulation, later called FM synthesis. He modestly describes it as a “a gift from nature” " | null | null | 41,805,165 | 41,805,165 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,167 | comment | dochne | 2024-10-11T01:10:32 | null | It must be horrible working for Automattic at the moment having to deal with this seemingly never ending farce. | null | null | 41,805,059 | 41,804,706 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,805,168 | comment | tptacek | 2024-10-11T01:10:53 | null | It's not an article, it's an academic paper, and Dropbox isn't one of the targets. | null | null | 41,804,622 | 41,798,359 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,805,169 | comment | motohagiography | 2024-10-11T01:10:57 | null | "mimetic violence," explains it. an ironic result of the success of the melting pot, whereby in a culture where people were sufficiently different and their identities distant, one's success didn't come at the expense of another's. there is no resolution to that today. the conflict is so fierce because the stakes are so small, and it's because we've been told we are the same, homogenous and undifferentiated, with nothing left but a power struggle.<p>we don't discuss politics because there isn't much left to discuss.
I take some responsibility for it because I thought being tolerant of (and silent about) views i disagreed with was part of a social contract around respect for boundaries and reciprocity, but that worldview isn't equipped to deal with people who are actuated by malice and malevolence. Now, I listen to some people talk politics, but mainly I'm just finding some enjoyment in what we will look back on as "the good old days," appreciating some peace where i can find it, and hoping it all goes another way before we're all drawn-in to the terrible work being set out for us. | null | null | 41,804,460 | 41,804,460 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,170 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T01:11:19 | null | null | null | null | 41,804,706 | 41,804,706 | null | null | true | null |
41,805,171 | story | teleforce | 2024-10-11T01:11:20 | AMD launches AI chip to rival Nvidia's Blackwell | null | https://www.cnbc.com/2024/10/10/amd-launches-mi325x-ai-chip-to-rival-nvidias-blackwell-.html | 3 | null | 41,805,171 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,805,172 | comment | a4000 | 2024-10-11T01:11:22 | null | Actually it turns out the scammers just use targeted marketing data like any other business to find out who to target with their scams.<p><a href="https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-10-04/scammers-using-system-for-ads-to-con-australians/104426750" rel="nofollow">https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-10-04/scammers-using-system...</a><p>No need to have a person on the inside when they can just buy data on people who have ordered something recently and then target them with a scam text about their order. | null | null | 41,796,538 | 41,796,181 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,173 | comment | whoisjoe | 2024-10-11T01:11:23 | null | [dead] | null | null | 41,804,706 | 41,804,706 | null | null | null | true |
41,805,174 | comment | mistermann | 2024-10-11T01:11:24 | null | I think the disagreement is over whether the decision to ship the product was influenced. It is not hard to have a perfectly acceptable business reason, <i>but also</i> have secondary motive(s), and not many people need to be involved.<p>Plus it is not necessarily knowable. | null | null | 41,804,880 | 41,801,331 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,175 | comment | karlzt | 2024-10-11T01:11:31 | null | >> Sell-by diary dates<p><i>dairy</i> | null | null | 41,800,474 | 41,765,006 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,176 | comment | kragen | 2024-10-11T01:11:46 | null | Yeah, I agree with all of that.<p>I had a new idea as I woke up today about the layout problem of reconciling a character-cell grid with proportional text, but I don't have it fully understood yet. Basically the idea is that, if you know that a given span of text contains no internal horizontal alignment constraints—for example, a line of a paragraph, or a table-header column title—you can lay it out with internal proportional spacing.<p>If you run xterm with a proportional font, for example as<p><pre><code> xterm -fn '-*-helvetica-*-r-*-*-18-*-*-*-*-*-*-*'
</code></pre>
you can get a sort of crude approximation of this behavior; each string it receives from the process in the pty as a single operation gets drawn as a single string and therefore has reasonable horizontal spacing internally, but characters drawn one at a time get placed one by one at their properly horizontally-aligned location. So if you type "ls -al", the six characters show up far apart because they appear one by one; if you then type ^U^Y to erase and redraw them, they appear together as a single string.<p>(I kind of hate Helvetica, but because it's <i>so</i> proportional, it's the font that demonstrates this xterm behavior most clearly.)<p>xterm is doing this by accident, and so it does things like fail to erase characters that should be erased, use a far-too-wide width for each character column, and not tab to a requested column even when processing actual tab characters (like in ls -Ca output). But you could, I think, improve the behavior substantially with a few small changes.<p>First, you'd need some kind of <i>explicit</i> indication of which spans contained no internal alignment restrictions, instead of just using the stochastic clue of which characters showed up in a single read() call, which I think is what it's doing.<p>Second, you could allow each column of the character-cell grid to contract to contain only the characters it needs to contain, rather than giving them fixed locations; using a narrower-than-one-en width for the space character (as your -.3ch kind of does) would probably help with that.<p>Third, you could probably stretch and squish the actual letterforms themselves—TeX doesn't do this (though it does adjust interletter spacing), and hot lead can't, but medieval scribes did it constantly, and such "microtypography" is coming back into vogue. The place I see it most conspicuously is in the Android Heliboard autocorrection buttons displaying candidate words, though in a fairly crude and rebarbatively exaggerated form.<p>Fourth, certain glyphs (such as box-drawing characters) definitely have to be stretched to fill out the entire requested space.<p>I'm not sure this is a good idea, but it might work acceptably.<p>I look forward to seeing what you come up with! | null | null | 41,797,690 | 41,678,248 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,177 | comment | Kinrany | 2024-10-11T01:12:09 | null | There should be a unified theory that all auth can be stacked on top of. Like, a theory of secure communication, that deals with the problem of adding security/reliability/etc. properties to a communication channel. | null | null | 41,804,696 | 41,801,883 | null | [
41805972
] | null | null |
41,805,178 | comment | permo-w | 2024-10-11T01:12:22 | null | a relative of mine worked for a company who were explicitly paying Google for higher "organic" search results | null | null | 41,799,104 | 41,797,719 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,179 | comment | pwarner | 2024-10-11T01:12:50 | null | Folks in Santa Rosa used to have bumper stickers on their electric cars: "My car is powered by magma" or something like that. | null | null | 41,802,939 | 41,802,939 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,180 | comment | sqeaky | 2024-10-11T01:12:54 | null | As you say we do need better advocacy and more transparency in difficult situations.<p>I have trust issues bringing religion into life and death decisions (or any decision). Either you are bringing in believers, people who can't tell fantasy from reality. Or, you are bringing in liars.<p>Add onto this the still present stigma of therapy and mental health services that is largely religious in basis and avoiding the whole religion thing is just better.<p>edit - downvote if you want, but we have no evidence god, and certainly not evidence of your god. We do have evidence of liars and theives. | null | null | 41,804,278 | 41,786,768 | null | [
41805433,
41805359
] | null | null |
41,805,181 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T01:13:11 | null | null | null | null | 41,804,706 | 41,804,706 | null | null | true | null |
41,805,182 | comment | bhouston | 2024-10-11T01:13:12 | null | If you are going to trash a specific person in every single comment you make ( <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/threads?id=meltdownMatt">https://news.ycombinator.com/threads?id=meltdownMatt</a> ), please do it using your own account, otherwise I think you are an involved party, like someone associated with WPEngine. | null | null | 41,804,589 | 41,803,264 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,805,183 | story | arkadiyt | 2024-10-11T01:13:23 | Fidelity says data breach exposed personal data of 77,000 customers | null | https://techcrunch.com/2024/10/10/fidelity-says-data-breach-exposed-personal-data-of-77000-customers/ | 2 | null | 41,805,183 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,805,184 | comment | mopsi | 2024-10-11T01:13:25 | null | > I think the geopolitical view offers a lens through which to see Russia's actions as reasonable (if still excessive, even horrible).<p>No, they are not reasonable at all. They are the result of total concentration of power into the hands of a single person, allowing their irrational prejudices and paranoias shape the actions of millions of people. History has seen this time and time again, notably with Hitler and his sick obsession with Jews. Why did Hitler murder millions of Jews? What's the reasonable argument? Is there any at all? Or was it just plain hatred, utterly banal in its simplicity?<p>> What is not clear from your comment is what you think should be done now? Has Russia lost its "legitimacy"? How can the situation in Ukraine be resolved adequately? Is US as the referee the only hope?<p>Total military defeat. Russians need to see Putin, Shoigu and Gerasimov sentenced and imprisoned like Milosevic, Karadzic and Mladic; Ukrainian flag flying over Sevastopol; and their press openly discussing the truth. After that, they need constant international pressure, for decades, until they develop into a modern society. The mistake of Europe and the US in the 1990s was not "encircling" and "humiliating" and "not respecting" Russia, but the opposite - Russia was left on its own, and nothing was done as it gradually grew into a poisonous tree. Where the EU and US were more active, set demands and expected progress - like in Central and Eastern Europe - countries developed into free, prosperous, stable and good places to live.<p>Russia as it is in 2024 has passed the point of no return. MPs like Gurulyov are saying on television that everyone except a few million retirees must be exterminated in Ukraine, and no-one in the TV studio even dares to say a word to oppose it. Proclaiming how many millions of people must be killed has become socially acceptable, while arguing for human rights and basic decency is met with contempt, hostility and ridicule, and punished with prison sentences. What will make people like these stop, if not a total demoralizing defeat and expulsion to the outskirts of the society? | null | null | 41,804,586 | 41,765,734 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,185 | comment | tptacek | 2024-10-11T01:13:36 | null | Tresorit had a game-over vulnerability: public keys aren't meaningfully authenticated (the server can forge keys; the CA the paper discusses is <i>operated by the service</i>) and any attempt to share a directory allows the server to share that directory with itself. | null | null | 41,803,220 | 41,798,359 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,186 | comment | somat | 2024-10-11T01:13:37 | null | With regard to the shaders, I actually started steam instead of going off memory, it is any windows game, so proton is involved, and the message is "processing vulkan shaders", This take a long time to finish(5 minutes for simple game "CW4", Long enough I always skip for larger game "satifactory") I just checked and opposed to my memory it does appear to cache them correctly, that is, only run the process one time. I cleared the cache at one point as nothing was progressing(too many skips, corrupted cache?), I just deleted everything under "steamapps/shadercache" and this appeared to help.<p>You are probably correct about the nas, it is full of wd reds, that is, the very slow supposedly reliable drives. I was prioritizing cheap bulk space when I built it, hoping the infamous zfs cache would save me. On your not quite advise I will probably add a ssd pool and see how that affects the whole system.<p>The nas is a 5 year old home built clone of a IX systems truenas box. 32gb memory.<p>Thank you very much for your kind words on the subject. It is more than I deserve for my screwball system. | null | null | 41,804,661 | 41,801,331 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,187 | comment | richerram | 2024-10-11T01:13:38 | null | Update 2: I went to look at the code and although I have never done anything with Go I was pleased with how easy it is to read plus your code was pretty well structured.<p>I realized the removal of diacritics was happening at the function RemoveDiacritics inside lib/textProcessing.go on line 26 and modified the definition(?) to not modify special characters, compiled again and voila! It worked great.<p>After that I used Calibre to convert a couple .pdfs to .txt and with a pretty simple python script got rid of page footnotes/headers/page_numbers and I just ended up with pretty decent Audiobooks.<p>Thanks again for the great tool! | null | null | 41,801,459 | 41,762,586 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,188 | story | acmerfight | 2024-10-11T01:13:46 | The Push Train | null | http://pushtrain.club | 1 | null | 41,805,188 | 0 | [
41805189
] | null | null |
41,805,189 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T01:13:46 | null | null | null | null | 41,805,188 | 41,805,188 | null | null | true | null |
41,805,190 | comment | arp242 | 2024-10-11T01:13:52 | null | Completely false.<p>For many reasons, among others: <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Security_incidents_involving_Barack_Obama" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Security_incidents_involving_B...</a> | null | null | 41,801,736 | 41,801,271 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,191 | comment | jszymborski | 2024-10-11T01:13:57 | null | I suppose I meant for the specific use case where you store and sync the encrypted file systems with cloud providers like e.g. Dropbox or pCloud.<p>But perhaps I've misunderstood you. | null | null | 41,805,164 | 41,798,359 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,192 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T01:14:05 | null | null | null | null | 41,804,706 | 41,804,706 | null | null | true | null |
41,805,193 | comment | tptacek | 2024-10-11T01:14:07 | null | Tarsnap is a backup service, not an encrypted drive. | null | null | 41,804,131 | 41,798,359 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,194 | comment | AndrewKemendo | 2024-10-11T01:15:03 | null | I cooked a vegan meal nightly for 11 years when I was married, and we had many “pure” vegan friends. I’m exceptionally aware of the vegan lifestyle.<p>I don’t know a single “pure” no honey, no casein, no red-40 etc…vegan that isn’t supplementing with iron, manganese, magnesium or something else to manange a nutrient deficiency.<p>Further, there’s no sustainability or consistency in vegan macronutrient profiles. That is to say, unless you’re an Indian ascete you’re not going to get enough macro and micro from lentils, beans, etc… without significant difficulty. Further nutrient uptake rates are exceptionally well known to be in the low percentages for plant proteins versus exceptionally high for red meant from large herbivores.<p>All that said, I’m not debating whether you can survive on a vegan diet, I acknowledged that you can.<p>As to the other points I’m not going to go line by line however I will say that there’s a lot of misinformation about cattle/bison farming and carbon impact.<p>I’d suggest looking at the Carbon Cowboys work and the sustainability of nomadic cattle herder tribes as effectively the most sustainable societies in humanity. | null | null | 41,803,254 | 41,796,914 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,195 | story | hn_acker | 2024-10-11T01:15:18 | A Hometown Newspaper Fossil Fuel Interests Kill Solar in One Ohio County | null | https://www.propublica.org/article/ohio-mount-vernon-frasier-solar-fossil-fuel-metric-media | 3 | null | 41,805,195 | 1 | [
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] | null | null |
41,805,196 | comment | hn_acker | 2024-10-11T01:15:18 | null | The original title of the article is:<p>> Fossil Fuel Interests Are Working to Kill Solar in One Ohio County. The Hometown Newspaper Is Helping. | null | null | 41,805,195 | 41,805,195 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,197 | comment | defrost | 2024-10-11T01:15:29 | null | > So, something happened in 2012 that increased Thyroid cancer on Fukushima .. How would you explain that?<p>The obvious answer would be that radioactive iodine-131 entered the food chain and that strontium-90 also was being ingested by dairy cattle and was being concentrated (biologically magnified) in cow’s milk.<p>As demonstrated in Australia by Hedley Marston.<p>This seems unrelated to what was being discussed .. the direct attribution of deaths amoung the excavated cohort to nuclear causes. | null | null | 41,785,913 | 41,765,580 | null | null | null | null |
41,805,198 | comment | diddyparty565 | 2024-10-11T01:15:34 | null | [flagged] | null | null | 41,802,879 | 41,800,602 | null | null | null | true |
41,805,199 | comment | whimsicalism | 2024-10-11T01:15:36 | null | yeah but it’s a bigger pain | null | null | 41,804,967 | 41,799,068 | null | null | null | null |
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