id
int64
0
12.9M
type
large_stringclasses
5 values
by
large_stringlengths
2
15
time
timestamp[us]
title
large_stringlengths
0
198
text
large_stringlengths
0
99.1k
url
large_stringlengths
0
6.6k
score
int64
-1
5.77k
parent
int64
1
30.4M
top_level_parent
int64
0
30.4M
descendants
int64
-1
2.53k
kids
large list
deleted
bool
1 class
dead
bool
1 class
41,805,800
comment
krosaen
2024-10-11T03:38:40
null
This is coming in 2 years at the earliest?
null
null
41,805,706
41,805,706
null
[ 41805819 ]
null
null
41,805,801
comment
null
2024-10-11T03:38:43
null
null
null
null
41,805,675
41,805,446
null
null
true
null
41,805,802
story
mjmolo
2024-10-11T03:38:44
Show HN: Marketplace for Digital Products
null
https://filtergrade.com/
1
null
41,805,802
1
[ 41805803 ]
null
null
41,805,803
comment
mjmolo
2024-10-11T03:38:44
null
Hi Hacker News. My name is Mike and I&#x27;m the founder of FilterGrade. Over 10 years ago, I started FilterGrade as a small web shop for selling my own photo filters. Now we are a global marketplace helping creators sell their digital products.<p>We have a problem though!<p>We are a still a relatively small and bootstrapped business, and we are competing against BEHEMOTHS like Adobe, Shutterstock, Etsy, and many others.<p>How can we make our marketplace better? Would you sell your digital products on FilterGrade?
null
null
41,805,802
41,805,802
null
null
null
null
41,805,804
comment
porphyra
2024-10-11T03:38:46
null
They did post about the Robovan. While I agree regarding the tendency of media to use the word &quot;recall&quot; in a misleading fashion, I ctrl-f&#x27;ed and couldn&#x27;t find it in the Verge live blog page that was linked to.
null
null
41,805,763
41,805,706
null
null
null
null
41,805,805
comment
Spivak
2024-10-11T03:38:47
null
Well Squarespace is a household name because 90% of their operating budget is ads repeating their name over and over. But yes for an SMB the difference between $5&#x2F;mo and $30&#x2F;mo is nothing and Squarespace does have a nice onboarding process. But for an individual $5&#x2F;mo and $30&#x2F;mo is a completely different tier of service. The kinds of things people use personal sites for is not worth 1.5 Netflix subscriptions.
null
null
41,805,709
41,804,706
null
null
null
null
41,805,806
comment
mrangle
2024-10-11T03:38:49
null
Legal access and the viability of the human-staffed legal profession aren&#x27;t just about litigation. Moreover, your and everyone else&#x27;s respective ability to continue to counter lawsuits is severely limited by how much cash you and they have. Change is on the way, even if it mostly ends with radical defensive restructuring on the part of the law and legal profession.
null
null
41,751,004
41,750,470
null
null
null
null
41,805,807
comment
MeetingsBrowser
2024-10-11T03:38:52
null
This is not good logic.<p>If the government announced tomorrow they will pick 5 people a year at random to be executed for no reason, it would also be at the top of all the news, despite being many fewer deaths than vehicle related injuries.<p>It’s at the top of the news because it is easily preventable, yet some choose to let people die anyway.
null
null
41,805,488
41,804,460
null
null
null
null
41,805,808
comment
jjulius
2024-10-11T03:39:01
null
I mean, people have been gullible for <i>this</i> long already...
null
null
41,805,775
41,805,706
null
null
null
null
41,805,809
comment
strulovich
2024-10-11T03:39:06
null
Barring all the issues, if you did build a huge fleet of autonomous taxis - smaller, lighter cars with less moving pieces would save you a lot of money.<p>2 seater - smaller car<p>No wheels or stuff - saves money on the build and parts.
null
null
41,805,778
41,805,706
null
[ 41805908 ]
null
null
41,805,810
comment
avalys
2024-10-11T03:39:08
null
Hey Tesla, where&#x27;s the Roadster 2 you announced in 2017 and took $50,000 deposits for?<p>Oh, that&#x27;s right, it was a stunt to boost the stock price, not a real product you intended to sell. Just like this.
null
null
41,805,706
41,805,706
null
[ 41805844, 41805927 ]
null
null
41,805,811
comment
mch82
2024-10-11T03:39:14
null
It’s ridiculous how complicated it’s gotten to answer my parents’ questions about stuff like this. The old desktop metaphors are gone. Screens are difficult for older eyes to read. Every app has a cloud service. Really seems like huge step back in usability.
null
null
41,803,699
41,801,334
null
null
null
null
41,805,812
comment
mgrassotti
2024-10-11T03:39:15
null
That’s it? Yawn…
null
null
41,805,706
41,805,706
null
null
null
null
41,805,813
comment
seanw444
2024-10-11T03:39:20
null
Perhaps I misspoke. In a &quot;fallout scenario&quot;, I&#x27;m not using Monero. The Monero is for when society is still intact, but no longer trusts the state-sanctioned currency.<p>I don&#x27;t really know what to say to the bartering point. People want valuable and scarce things they don&#x27;t have in exchange for valuable and scarce things they do have. How that&#x27;s a myth to you is beyond me.
null
null
41,804,743
41,802,823
null
null
null
null
41,805,814
comment
lern_too_spel
2024-10-11T03:39:30
null
You can if you attend one of the next 10 annual Tesla robotaxi announcements.
null
null
41,805,754
41,805,706
null
null
null
null
41,805,815
comment
sirspacey
2024-10-11T03:39:31
null
Selling to devs used to be a special class of GTM.<p>Every one of these lessons is solid. Great order as well.
null
null
41,803,592
41,803,592
null
null
null
null
41,805,816
comment
eweise
2024-10-11T03:39:39
null
Its really not. For example, a map function tells you that there will be the exact number of outputs as inputs. A for loop doesn&#x27;t have any guarantees. You have to read each line inside the loop to understand what its doing. In practice, having to be so explicit causes many more issues. I&#x27;ve never experienced as many mishandled errors on java projects as I have in Go.
null
null
41,801,265
41,769,275
null
null
null
null
41,805,817
comment
dv_dt
2024-10-11T03:39:44
null
Especially because every autonomous taxi fleet to date seems to have runs where they end up blocking roads and emergency vehicles.
null
null
41,805,778
41,805,706
null
[ 41806387 ]
null
null
41,805,818
comment
null
2024-10-11T03:39:47
null
null
null
null
41,805,735
41,800,764
null
null
true
null
41,805,819
comment
tsimionescu
2024-10-11T03:39:59
null
Tesla Full self driving has been coming by the end of the year since at least 2018. Expect this to follow a similar timeline.
null
null
41,805,800
41,805,706
null
[ 41806255 ]
null
null
41,805,820
comment
fiddlerwoaroof
2024-10-11T03:40:09
null
I use it every day, but HN says it doesn’t work
null
null
41,805,775
41,805,706
null
[ 41805973, 41805899, 41805838, 41806288, 41805836, 41805969 ]
null
null
41,805,821
comment
karlgkk
2024-10-11T03:40:30
null
It&#x27;s a slick design, but unless it&#x27;s expected to be used in very limited scenarios, the lack of a control surface (or even how Tesla expects to build an OC) for edge cases is worrying.
null
null
41,805,754
41,805,706
null
[ 41806290 ]
null
null
41,805,822
comment
porphyra
2024-10-11T03:40:31
null
Do you not see those driverless Cybercabs driving around without a steering wheel? At least that&#x27;s a development that we haven&#x27;t seen in the past 10 years.
null
null
41,805,787
41,805,706
null
[ 41806361, 41806120 ]
null
null
41,805,823
comment
xtrapol8
2024-10-11T03:40:34
null
And it turns out to be America’s apatite for bullshit all along.<p>What would come of a political platform which outed the dream of America as a borrowed, bankrupt lie? One too big to fail, which lumbers on at the expense of the lives of others?<p>What might come of requiring three years of civil service before earning the right to vote?<p>What might our world look like if authority and responsibility was bestowed in equal measure, beginning with citizens themselves?
null
null
41,805,410
41,805,410
null
null
null
null
41,805,824
comment
mjmolo
2024-10-11T03:40:35
null
I practice drawing and sketching often. I haven&#x27;t really formally trained, but just by practicing daily for years it has helped refine my skills. Same with photography and video.
null
null
41,756,978
41,756,978
null
null
null
null
41,805,825
comment
__mharrison__
2024-10-11T03:40:48
null
I have a big comment around my usage of BetterDisplay in another thread.
null
null
41,802,377
41,800,602
null
null
null
null
41,805,826
story
djhu9
2024-10-11T03:40:50
Optimizing and Characterizing High-Throughput Low-Latency LLM Inference
null
https://blog.mlc.ai/2024/10/10/optimizing-and-characterizing-high-throughput-low-latency-llm-inference
1
null
41,805,826
0
null
null
null
41,805,827
comment
whamlastxmas
2024-10-11T03:41:01
null
I assume robo taxi will be significantly cheaper to manufacture. You can get away with much less range and creature comforts being quite a bit less. People care much less about comfortable for something they sit in for twenty minutes versus buy for $50k
null
null
41,805,778
41,805,706
null
[ 41805851, 41806056, 41805845 ]
null
null
41,805,828
comment
nikcub
2024-10-11T03:41:02
null
Here&#x27;s an idea - take the Robocab car design, strip out all the FSD&#x2F;autopilot stuff, put in a steering wheel and dash and sell it starting at the end of the year for ~$25k.<p>It would sell +++
null
null
41,805,706
41,805,706
null
[ 41806464, 41806075, 41805890 ]
null
null
41,805,829
comment
ungamedplayer
2024-10-11T03:41:03
null
Challenge response has a higher cost than challenging.<p>For example, would you debate with every flat earther you see? It&#x27;s simply not worth the time spent. Maybe they fall into the idiot category though.
null
null
41,805,667
41,804,460
null
null
null
null
41,805,830
comment
maguay
2024-10-11T03:41:04
null
The Robovan—as an actual van one could buy today—would sell. Especially in Asia, versus Toyota Alphards. Alas, seems it&#x27;s more likely to get used as point-to-point transit inside closed spaces (parks and convention centers and ... perhaps the Vegas Loop).
null
null
41,805,706
41,805,706
null
[ 41806074 ]
null
null
41,805,831
comment
purple-leafy
2024-10-11T03:41:10
null
Yes, but bit of a tangent to what you’re expecting.<p>I’m taking up graphics programming as my form of art. So the screen is my canvas. I love cold hard logic, mathematics, as my form of creating art. I like the order. I’m kind of like Sauron in that regard.<p>I’ve just started this journey, but it’s a natural one as I’m already a developer. Deep diving C to play around with bare metal graphics processes.<p>I want to make procedural art, shader art, voxel art. I think there is an amazing creativity that can be drawn from mathematics
null
null
41,756,978
41,756,978
null
null
null
null
41,805,832
comment
renewiltord
2024-10-11T03:41:12
null
Out of curiosity, why are the Ampere processors cloud-only? I can fit an Epyc based machine easily and have an integrator ship me something.<p>But top of the line ARM machines are really hard to get a hold of. We need an OpenAI for ARM ;)
null
null
41,803,324
41,803,324
null
[ 41805942 ]
null
null
41,805,833
comment
zaroth
2024-10-11T03:41:22
null
Looks like VW sold 250 of them (ever) for $125k a piece.<p>Tesla will apparently be selling it for $30k before the end of 2016.<p>I’m super curious about the induction charging rate! The robot they showed cleaning it was also pretty interesting.
null
null
41,805,773
41,805,706
null
null
null
null
41,805,834
comment
null
2024-10-11T03:41:36
null
null
null
null
41,805,706
41,805,706
null
null
true
null
41,805,835
comment
thomassmith65
2024-10-11T03:41:45
null
Note to whoever comes across this comment in future.<p>So I have now explored using HTMLElement as the Controller, its shallow DOM as a data source for its Model class, and its ShadowRoot as a subclass.<p>It is clear to me now that that design would be the most natural fit for MVC.<p>However... it is also impossible. For whatever infuriating reason, they designed custom element&#x27;s ShadowDOM class to <i>not</i> be subclass-able. You can neither give a ShadowDOM subclass a constructor, nor does HTMLElement reveal any mechanism to &#x27;attach&#x27; a ShadowDOM subclass.<p>Fantastic &#x2F;s
null
null
41,688,338
41,686,722
null
null
null
null
41,805,836
comment
cryptoegorophy
2024-10-11T03:41:50
null
Exactly. I wish people actually used it instead of reading biased news about it. Driving is so much stress free with it now.
null
null
41,805,820
41,805,706
null
[ 41805948, 41805986, 41805864, 41806221, 41806083 ]
null
null
41,805,837
comment
whamlastxmas
2024-10-11T03:42:08
null
It’s unfortunate comment sections for stuff like this can’t be genuine curious conversation
null
null
41,805,706
41,805,706
null
[ 41805977 ]
null
null
41,805,838
comment
karlgkk
2024-10-11T03:42:23
null
A single person&#x27;s evidence isn&#x27;t helpful. People doing testing at scale of Tesla&#x27;s solution (even the latest version), have found a few interventions happen an hour (or at least per day), especially on busy streets or in situations where weather isn&#x27;t complimentary.<p>It cannot be truly an autonomous robotaxi without VERY HIGH reliability. One intervention per hour is one too many.
null
null
41,805,820
41,805,706
null
[ 41805885 ]
null
null
41,805,839
comment
waawaawaa
2024-10-11T03:42:28
null
If I wanted to build a rag around a generative transformer, how does the retrieved vector plug into the transformer? Is it cross attention from an encoder or a prefix on the decoder, or sonething else? Does it plug in directly as the retrieved vector or is it somehow re-embedded?
null
null
41,803,154
41,803,154
null
null
null
null
41,805,840
comment
etchalon
2024-10-11T03:42:30
null
The best kind of correct.
null
null
41,805,788
41,805,706
null
null
null
null
41,805,841
comment
cryptoegorophy
2024-10-11T03:42:36
null
First reason - doors won’t close themselves.
null
null
41,805,778
41,805,706
null
[ 41805859 ]
null
null
41,805,842
story
maoro
2024-10-11T03:42:38
null
null
null
1
null
41,805,842
null
null
null
true
41,805,843
comment
mvdtnz
2024-10-11T03:42:42
null
Bold to assume it will go into production.
null
null
41,805,754
41,805,706
null
null
null
null
41,805,844
comment
null
2024-10-11T03:42:46
null
null
null
null
41,805,810
41,805,706
null
null
true
null
41,805,845
comment
wilsonnb3
2024-10-11T03:42:56
null
Yeah I would be interested in seeing how the costs shake out.<p>There is logic in this design being cheaper to manufacture but I would think that it would be a long while before you &quot;broke even&quot;, so to speak, compared to using a design that you already know exactly how to make.
null
null
41,805,827
41,805,706
null
null
null
null
41,805,846
comment
etchalon
2024-10-11T03:43:06
null
I see Lucy has brought a new football to the yard.
null
null
41,805,706
41,805,706
null
null
null
null
41,805,847
comment
wvenable
2024-10-11T03:43:06
null
&gt; The first time I ever used C# was probably version 5? Maybe? We&#x27;re on version 12 now and there&#x27;s so much stuff in there that sometimes modern C# code from experts looks unreadable to me.<p>That&#x27;s funny given many of the changes were made to make C# look more like JavaScript!<p>C# 6 introduced expression-bodied members for simplified syntax (like JavaScript), null-conditional operators, and string interpolation. C# 7 brought pattern matching, tuples, deconstruction, and local functions. C# 8 introduced nullable reference types for better null safety, async streams, and a more concise switch expression syntax. C# 9 to C# 12 added records, init-only properties, with expressions, and raw string literals, global using directives, top-level statements, list patterns, and primary constructors.<p>In C#, if you need a string list you can do:<p><pre><code> List&lt;string&gt; items = []; &#x2F;&#x2F; Not as concise as JS but type safe. </code></pre> As for TypeScript, nobody is supposed to use most of it -- unless you&#x27;re authoring a library. You benefit from it&#x27;s features because somebody else is using them.<p>Languages draw inspiration from each other -- taking the good parts and incorporating them in. C# is a vastly better, easier, and safer language than it used to be and so is JavaScript.
null
null
41,802,034
41,787,041
null
null
null
null
41,805,848
comment
Onavo
2024-10-11T03:43:12
null
What&#x27;s the size of your M2 Max memory?
null
null
41,805,610
41,804,829
null
null
null
null
41,805,849
comment
Swizec
2024-10-11T03:43:24
null
&gt; But if one the people in that discussion is trans, and the other person doesn&#x27;t believe that trans people are real ...<p>Why tho? Just because we might disagree on the details of gender doesn&#x27;t mean we can&#x27;t discuss NIMBYism. I don&#x27;t see what gender has to do with housing.<p>It&#x27;s possible I&#x27;m the weirdo here because the American obsession with identity never quite clicked for me. We once did a &quot;What are your identities&quot; team building exercise and the question felt so nonsensical that I couldn&#x27;t complete the exercise.<p>(for the record I am pro-trans, at worst indifferent and think it&#x27;s none of my business)
null
null
41,805,687
41,804,460
null
[ 41806053 ]
null
null
41,805,850
comment
coin
2024-10-11T03:43:26
null
For lots of people, unnecessary for loops makes the code less readable. When using filter and map, all the looping is abstracted out so the reader can concentrate on what&#x27;s being filtered and transferred. The loops and their temporary variables just clutters up the code.
null
null
41,804,499
41,769,275
null
null
null
null
41,805,851
comment
jjulius
2024-10-11T03:43:27
null
Creature comforts, fine, they can go, but a shorter range? I thought the idea was for me to be able to have my car galavanting around the city all day being a taxi for people to help me make money. Forgive my ignorance, but how is a shorter range going to help with that?
null
null
41,805,827
41,805,706
null
[ 41805920, 41806027 ]
null
null
41,805,852
comment
prisenco
2024-10-11T03:43:33
null
As far as I&#x27;ve noticed, it&#x27;s not older people who have the issue but younger. The average 22 year old today has been using mobile devices as their primary device for 10+ years. This is especially noticeable amongst poorer families, where a $20 a month low end financed android phone is much more of an option than a $300 computer.
null
null
41,805,483
41,801,334
null
[ 41805994 ]
null
null
41,805,853
story
uncle-pushui
2024-10-11T03:43:33
null
null
null
1
null
41,805,853
null
[ 41805854 ]
null
true
41,805,854
comment
uncle-pushui
2024-10-11T03:43:33
null
[dead]
null
null
41,805,853
41,805,853
null
null
null
true
41,805,855
comment
null
2024-10-11T03:43:34
null
null
null
null
41,802,800
41,802,800
null
null
true
null
41,805,856
comment
MeetingsBrowser
2024-10-11T03:43:46
null
&gt; They believe fetuses are humans and that killing them is akin to murder,<p>Unlike the woman carrying the fetus.<p>In my state, abortion is illegal even if not aborting may cause the mother to die.<p>This is pro life.
null
null
41,805,643
41,804,460
null
[ 41805955, 41805985 ]
null
null
41,805,857
comment
lmm
2024-10-11T03:44:02
null
&gt; there are plenty of Windows-only games that aren&#x27;t subject to those practices. Free games, itch.io games, GOG games, etc. There&#x27;s a big world out there!<p>Those games are generally not AAA by definition, and often either already have a Linux build released, run acceptably under traditional emulation, or both.
null
null
41,804,717
41,799,068
null
null
null
null
41,805,858
comment
danpalmer
2024-10-11T03:44:03
null
The big promise of the Robotaxi was that every Tesla would be one, that your Tesla would earn you money while you weren&#x27;t using it. This was obviously unlikely to ever happen, but has been the promise right up to this event, and something Musk has been very vocal about.<p>Despite having very few details in this presentation, the one detail that is clear is that existing Teslas won&#x27;t be taxiing anyone, and Tesla will be the operator reaping the benefits. That&#x27;s a significant under-delivery, especially for the average Tesla retail investor who believes in the mission and is driving their stock price.
null
null
41,805,706
41,805,706
null
[ 41806013, 41806208, 41806402, 41805978 ]
null
null
41,805,859
comment
wilsonnb3
2024-10-11T03:44:03
null
That is true, although they could add that to a model 3. I wonder how Waymo deals with it.
null
null
41,805,841
41,805,706
null
[ 41805871, 41805875, 41805893 ]
null
null
41,805,860
comment
cryptoegorophy
2024-10-11T03:44:13
null
Seems like the bar tender one was teleoperated
null
null
41,805,756
41,805,706
null
null
null
null
41,805,861
comment
JodieBenitez
2024-10-11T03:44:31
null
I&#x27;m probably old, but we used to learn DOS prompt basics (and folders and files and stuff) in what would be the equivalent of junior high school in the US. And not in special courses, it was &quot;normal&quot;. Heck, I was even introduced to Microsoft Basic at school while in the equivalent of 4th grade on these funny Thomson MO5 computers.<p>But that&#x27;s not what they are taught now. They are taught to use social media and cloud services, which is completely useless since they figured this out themselves already.<p>The education system here just keeps them early in a consumer mind state. It has absolutely no ambition and is just a race to the bottom.
null
null
41,803,991
41,801,334
null
null
null
null
41,805,862
comment
tsimionescu
2024-10-11T03:44:33
null
A bus can transport 100+ people while taking up about the same road space as two or maybe three of these. Those could transport 4 or maybe 6 people. I don&#x27;t think more needs to be said about the chances of this replacing actual public transport.
null
null
41,805,760
41,805,515
null
[ 41805936 ]
null
null
41,805,863
comment
7jjjjjjj
2024-10-11T03:44:39
null
Silly me, here I thought the whole point of politics was to <i>solve</i> problems, when really it&#x27;s just to endlessly whine about them at teatime.
null
null
41,805,502
41,804,460
null
null
null
null
41,805,864
comment
bagels
2024-10-11T03:44:43
null
I used it. It was novel, but it made a lot of mistakes. I didn&#x27;t subscribe.
null
null
41,805,836
41,805,706
null
null
null
null
41,805,865
comment
ffujdefvjg
2024-10-11T03:44:49
null
Ignorance wouldn&#x27;t prevent you from concentrating on a 14-line poem, or from understanding the immediate plot details of a book and how they fit into the plot more broadly.<p>Things like this are foundational for learning. If you can&#x27;t do them, you can&#x27;t learn very well. Even if you do learn to do these things in college, you&#x27;re literally learning as an adult what previous generations learned in elementary-, middle- and highschool. This is retarded development. People like that will never be able to achieve at the same level.<p>Here&#x27;s the article if you&#x27;re interested:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.theatlantic.com&#x2F;magazine&#x2F;archive&#x2F;2024&#x2F;11&#x2F;the-elite-college-students-who-cant-read-books&#x2F;679945&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.theatlantic.com&#x2F;magazine&#x2F;archive&#x2F;2024&#x2F;11&#x2F;the-eli...</a><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.is&#x2F;TJ18n" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.is&#x2F;TJ18n</a>
null
null
41,802,894
41,801,271
null
null
null
null
41,805,866
comment
tourmalinetaco
2024-10-11T03:45:05
null
There is no party that will make “every waking moment a nightmare&quot; for the LGBTQIAP+. That’s the same thing we heard in 2016, and nothing came of it then. And in fact between 2020 and 2024 there is definitely an argument that can be made that even under the “preferred” party things got worse. Ironically, that exact rhetoric has led to multiple terror attacks on innocent people.
null
null
41,804,928
41,804,460
null
[ 41806428, 41806065, 41805915, 41805921 ]
null
null
41,805,867
comment
DirkH
2024-10-11T03:45:40
null
I think Americans have lost hope as well. I think in America it isn&#x27;t hope for a better tomorrow that is driving politics anymore, it is fear for a worse tomorrow.<p>I don&#x27;t know how things are in India, but I imagine people have lost hope that politics will actually impact their lives in ways they wish, but they probably aren&#x27;t as fear-driven as Americans (yet). And this explains why you can discuss politics with someone you disagree with - because you aren&#x27;t scared of what the party of someone with opposing views will do (yet).
null
null
41,804,949
41,804,460
null
[ 41806004, 41806197 ]
null
null
41,805,868
comment
throawayonthe
2024-10-11T03:45:43
null
[dead]
null
null
41,803,915
41,799,068
null
null
null
true
41,805,869
comment
wvenable
2024-10-11T03:46:07
null
Complexity isn&#x27;t bad. If you have a simple language and you have to something complicated then you still have complexity, it&#x27;s just expressed differently and uniquely in every code base.<p>Java doesn&#x27;t have unsigned integer types because that is &quot;simpler&quot; but that doesn&#x27;t remove the need to deal with unsigned integers in file formats and network protocols. But now you have to do a convoluted mess of code to deal with that. I&#x27;ll take a complex language that solves real problems over a &quot;simple&quot; language any day.
null
null
41,805,379
41,787,041
null
null
null
null
41,805,870
comment
lmm
2024-10-11T03:46:18
null
That&#x27;s exactly why I switched out of CS and did a degree in something that was harder to teach myself (mathematics).<p>I&#x27;m a programmer now, but I don&#x27;t think finishing the CS course would&#x27;ve helped much with that.
null
null
41,804,823
41,801,334
null
null
null
null
41,805,871
comment
bagels
2024-10-11T03:46:21
null
You close the door yourself, and open it yourself. I was horrified to discover this.
null
null
41,805,859
41,805,706
null
[ 41805953 ]
null
null
41,805,872
comment
timetraveller26
2024-10-11T03:46:28
null
what about woodworking?
null
null
41,805,391
41,805,391
null
null
null
null
41,805,873
story
pseudolus
2024-10-11T03:46:31
null
null
null
1
null
41,805,873
null
null
null
true
41,805,874
comment
kuhsaft
2024-10-11T03:46:59
null
Nope. Doesn&#x27;t nag you to use their VPN or anything.
null
null
41,784,566
41,757,178
null
null
null
null
41,805,875
comment
pcbro141
2024-10-11T03:47:05
null
You just close the door when you exit the Waymo lol.
null
null
41,805,859
41,805,706
null
[ 41806011 ]
null
null
41,805,876
comment
zeroonetwothree
2024-10-11T03:47:09
null
Betteridge’s law of headlines
null
null
41,804,460
41,804,460
null
null
null
null
41,805,877
comment
btilly
2024-10-11T03:47:18
null
No. It&#x27;s that when people who prefer type systems go to use a popular dynamic language, they try to drag in features that they like from other languages.<p>Very honestly, optional type systems tend to be the worst of all worlds. Because people who don&#x27;t care, don&#x27;t need to use it, you don&#x27;t get safety. But people who enjoy ceremony can inflict verbosity on others. While missing the most important reason to do it.
null
null
41,805,604
41,801,415
null
[ 41806404, 41806328 ]
null
null
41,805,878
comment
null
2024-10-11T03:47:31
null
null
null
null
41,805,706
41,805,706
null
null
true
null
41,805,879
comment
fargle
2024-10-11T03:47:35
null
it&#x27;s almost like, some kind of a <i>disaster</i> happened. i do hope they will be ok (i&#x27;m imagining severely blistered fingers in the check writing division)
null
null
41,803,444
41,803,444
null
null
null
null
41,805,880
comment
russelg
2024-10-11T03:47:49
null
My point with this comment is that ridership increased with both initiatives. Build it and they will come, as they say.
null
null
41,805,119
41,797,719
null
null
null
null
41,805,881
comment
sqeaky
2024-10-11T03:48:02
null
&gt; Equally binding a view of mental health to religion seems a stretch. Perhaps you have experienced that, but I suspect that connection is not universal.<p>I am saying that in the US the stigma against taking mental health seriously is structural. Consider the amount of voters who think demonic possession is real (tens of millions of people) don&#x27;t vote to fund mental health services. There are millions of our fellow Americans who are real people and think mental illness is punishment from god or think homosexuality or transexuality is a choice and a sin. We shouldn&#x27;t start on abortion, but every argument against choice has its roots in religion.<p>These people have made a huge impact on healthcare and baked in tons of little decisions into healthcare that impact all of everytime we interact with the healthcare system. Live in a state where depression meds aren&#x27;t covered, or maybe only some are? Might be them?<p>Clearly I am discussing in the US context, as such buddhism isn&#x27;t a practical and a corner-case. You can pretend I am not referring to it (even though reincarnation is clearly problematic for people attached to this life based on evidence).
null
null
41,805,433
41,786,768
null
[ 41806280 ]
null
null
41,805,882
comment
MarkMarine
2024-10-11T03:48:09
null
Just my two cents, I don’t think that PMs or Product people don’t have a place… I really value them. I want to have collaborative discussions where I can bat the idea of what is best for the product, the long term health of the software, and the customer around… and I don’t want to do it into the mirror by myself.<p>But I’ve got no time, not one single second for the style of PM that ungreased is advocating for. Where the PM thinks I’m some monkey they feed tickets to, pull the lever and get code from. Early in my career I’d just leave for the next better thing, now I’ll actively make sure you’re not in my org killing the culture.<p>PMs are crap at architecture, crap at maintaining code, crap at fighting tech debt, crap at all the meta things that make software last… Honestly expectedly so. Y’all should argue for your side and have us as a counter weight… what ungreased is describing is irreparable. That’s why I said get out, but only if ungreased is actually good. Otherwise stay there. Keep making your shit devs miserable until they leave.
null
null
41,805,067
41,797,009
null
null
null
null
41,805,883
story
jonbaer
2024-10-11T03:48:22
Jupyter Foundation
null
https://jupyterfoundation.org/
2
null
41,805,883
0
null
null
null
41,805,884
comment
vivzkestrel
2024-10-11T03:48:24
null
&quot;Start typing already&quot;
null
null
41,804,430
41,801,334
null
null
null
null
41,805,885
comment
porphyra
2024-10-11T03:48:27
null
Cruise had driverless robotaxis on the streets while they had 2.5 to 5 miles per intervention. [1]<p>I think FSD 12.5 is way beyond that --- I drove over 20 miles yesterday with zero interventions. Also, having ridden Waymo in San Francisco many times, I find that the FSD is actually slightly smoother and handles stuff like going around obstacles and blockages more naturally, although, as you are no doubt aware, there are still some rough edges in rare cases.<p>Once Tesla has reasonable remote human assistance infrastructure in place to help out with the extreme edge cases, and the software improves at the current rate, I don&#x27;t see why they couldn&#x27;t roll out a robotaxi service.<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nytimes.com&#x2F;2023&#x2F;11&#x2F;03&#x2F;technology&#x2F;cruise-general-motors-self-driving-cars.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nytimes.com&#x2F;2023&#x2F;11&#x2F;03&#x2F;technology&#x2F;cruise-general...</a>
null
null
41,805,838
41,805,706
null
[ 41806067 ]
null
null
41,805,886
comment
catlikesshrimp
2024-10-11T03:48:35
null
Care to share what the joke was? I hope it wasn&#x27;t dark humor.
null
null
41,802,832
41,801,300
null
[ 41806284 ]
null
null
41,805,887
comment
julienmarie
2024-10-11T03:48:37
null
Special mention to Processwire. Worked with it a few years ago and really loved it at the time. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;processwire.com&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;processwire.com&#x2F;</a><p>Craft is great but a bit slow in my tests. They have a really powerful e-commerce offer though and is really flexible.
null
null
41,805,391
41,805,391
null
[ 41806264, 41806147 ]
null
null
41,805,888
comment
null
2024-10-11T03:48:45
null
null
null
null
41,805,706
41,805,706
null
null
true
null
41,805,889
comment
innocentoldguy
2024-10-11T03:48:58
null
It looks like others have address the first 90% of your post, so I&#x27;ll refrain from commenting on that. I am curious about your timer code, though, because the timer shouldn&#x27;t be firing at all unless the task associated with it has completed successfully. You shouldn&#x27;t run into an issue where a timer is re-queueing the same task in Elixir.
null
null
41,795,417
41,792,304
null
null
null
null
41,805,890
comment
amluto
2024-10-11T03:49:00
null
It would need a NACS port. Otherwise it would be a rather expensive brick.
null
null
41,805,828
41,805,706
null
[ 41806283, 41806179, 41806205, 41806038 ]
null
null
41,805,891
comment
bagels
2024-10-11T03:49:03
null
How so?
null
null
41,805,790
41,805,706
null
null
null
null
41,805,892
comment
coin
2024-10-11T03:49:09
null
Go programming style is like programming in 2005 before functional programming because widespread (Google Guava, Clojure). If you showed functional programming to programmers in 2005 many of them would find it difficult to read.
null
null
41,800,567
41,769,275
null
null
null
null
41,805,893
comment
porphyra
2024-10-11T03:49:11
null
The Waymo car has a speaker that tells you to close the door lol.
null
null
41,805,859
41,805,706
null
null
null
null
41,805,894
comment
zaroth
2024-10-11T03:49:19
null
You can argue semantics, but it’s not an implementation detail that doesn’t matter, it’s fundamentally misrepresenting the truth.<p>A “recall” that does actually involve bringing the car in for service, a.k.a. recalling the car, is not accurately described as a “recall”. Words mean something.<p>The NHTSA is being idiotic (unsurprisingly) in not distinguishing between a software update and a recall, because legacy auto doesn’t have the software chops to successfully replicate Tesla’s approach.<p>News agencies that lean into that idiocy in a slanted attempt to denigrate Tesla are only denigrating themselves. It is not good coverage, and it is willfully misleading their own readers.<p>Call it a mandatory update if you want. But nothing was recalled, so insisting on calling it a recall is like insisting on calling cars “horseless carriages”.
null
null
41,805,788
41,805,706
null
[ 41806022, 41806272 ]
null
null
41,805,895
comment
oneshtein
2024-10-11T03:49:32
null
Yep, high dependency on Western help is a problem, which must be solved first.
null
null
41,803,237
41,769,971
null
null
null
null
41,805,896
comment
ctrlGsysop
2024-10-11T03:49:35
null
A good in depth mkt analysis. While it’s not crypto, many of the key points are rinse and repeat of mining - things like insatiable demand and projected ROI. Markets and tech solve high costs all the time. Great point made about the $4&#x2F;hr number that was most likely a top bullet in a 1000 pitch decks citing NVIDIA. Bagholders could just be all the nations buying all the billionaire’s stories.
null
null
41,805,446
41,805,446
null
[ 41806234, 41806243 ]
null
null
41,805,897
comment
slimsag
2024-10-11T03:49:40
null
MoltenVK doesn&#x27;t support geometry shaders for ~3 years now[0]<p>[0] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;KhronosGroup&#x2F;MoltenVK&#x2F;issues&#x2F;1524">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;KhronosGroup&#x2F;MoltenVK&#x2F;issues&#x2F;1524</a>
null
null
41,805,360
41,799,068
null
null
null
null
41,805,898
comment
justin66
2024-10-11T03:49:43
null
&gt; Thousands of people actually pay to go and listen to this self-aggrandising nonsense. It&#x27;s very odd.<p>I’m pretty sure they’re free. They are nevertheless odd.
null
null
41,805,531
41,804,460
null
null
null
null
41,805,899
comment
crustaceansoup
2024-10-11T03:50:12
null
It&#x27;s an SAE Level 2 system, they haven&#x27;t indicated that&#x27;s ever changing on current cars. They&#x27;re even calling it &quot;Full Self-Driving (Supervised) (also referred to as Autosteer on City Streets)&quot; now [1]<p>A lot of companies have Level 2 systems. That&#x27;s still a far cry from full automation.<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.tesla.com&#x2F;ownersmanual&#x2F;modely&#x2F;en_us&#x2F;GUID-2CB60804-9CEA-4F4B-8B04-09B991368DC5.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.tesla.com&#x2F;ownersmanual&#x2F;modely&#x2F;en_us&#x2F;GUID-2CB6080...</a>
null
null
41,805,820
41,805,706
null
[ 41806023 ]
null
null