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41,806,200
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ericd
2024-10-11T04:40:33
null
Dang, that&#x27;s not been my experience at all. I&#x27;ve had them come out 3x for tire repair (construction site alongside our commute), and they&#x27;ve always come out to to my house to fix the tire in my garage, same day, after a couple of back and forths via text. I&#x27;ve never had a better car maintenance experience.<p>That said, I don&#x27;t think they want to talk with you pre-purchase outside of one of their showrooms, and the showroom isn&#x27;t even a large part of their sales model. I imagine that if you&#x27;re trying to go against the flow, it&#x27;d be hard.
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iknowstuff
2024-10-11T04:40:43
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1) did u miss the robovan<p>2) these are supposed to be purchasable and they&#x27;re very fucking cool<p>3) the model x with its gull wing doors is as cool as first shown.
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Izkata
2024-10-11T04:40:45
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&gt; BiteCode_dev has provided a pretty good summary of a lot of the issues.<p>Around half of that list is things added later that were supposed to make the language easier to use.
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throwup238
2024-10-11T04:40:50
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It’s a late april fools joke. Tesla Bot? They’ve gone full ASIMO in a Cartman suit.
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yourabstraction
2024-10-11T04:40:54
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They&#x27;re going for lowest cost per mile. Most rides have 2 or less people, this will address that huge market in a very efficient way.
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41,805,778
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[ 41806292 ]
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ClassyJacket
2024-10-11T04:40:58
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It must already have one.
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41,806,206
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kragen
2024-10-11T04:41:07
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It seems a bit off target, though. It&#x27;s not entirely wrong; it&#x27;s true, for example, that Uxn doesn&#x27;t lend itself to writing an efficient implementation easily. It&#x27;s also true that the existing implementations are all on hardware that still requires a substantial amount of power, 2000 milliwatts or more, as well as being fairly inefficient in absolute terms.<p>On the other hand, on my laptop, the Left text editor running in Uxn (with SDL!) still uses less energy than Emacs does, despite the interpretation overhead. And you can run it on a GameBoy Advance, so it&#x27;s definitely a step in the right direction if you&#x27;re looking for a frugal write-once&#x2F;run-anywhere platform. It&#x27;s the first attempt at the problem that&#x27;s good enough to criticize, and it&#x27;s something you can download applications for today.<p>It&#x27;s easy to see ways to improve it, but to my knowledge the critiquing savage in question has not written a better system yet, although their critique is indeed informative.
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saturn8601
2024-10-11T04:41:07
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This is the company that released the CyberTruck. V1 will probably look mostly like what was presented. Every single prototype they have ever unveiled eventually ended up looking very similar to the production model.
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[ 41806409 ]
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huijzer
2024-10-11T04:41:11
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&gt; Despite having very few details in this presentation, the one detail that is clear is that existing Teslas won&#x27;t be taxiing anyone<p>That’s untrue. He said Model 3s and Ys will be starting taxiing next year in California and Texas.
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41,805,858
41,805,706
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[ 41806241, 41806214, 41806260 ]
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aprilthird2021
2024-10-11T04:41:17
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Erdogan didn&#x27;t come to power much earlier than 2016 though
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41,796,937
41,785,553
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llm_trw
2024-10-11T04:41:18
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You should perhaps use that system to reread my post. Maybe it can explain it to you top.
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amoss
2024-10-11T04:41:20
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I&#x27;m slightly confused after reading about page alignment. Why would a 16k page be less aligned than a 4k page causing assumptions about pointers within those pages to break? The 4k pages on x86 are aligned on 4k boundaries, are the 16k pages on M1 aligned on &lt;4k boundaries?
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[ 41806316 ]
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comment
AutoAPI
2024-10-11T04:41:41
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Thank you for the feedback. There are more demographic filters coming too, as well as additional lists like &quot;new movers&quot; or &quot;new homeowners&quot;
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agildehaus
2024-10-11T04:41:47
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Their cars currently produce an audible request to close the doors. In practice it doesn&#x27;t happen often, I&#x27;ve never seen it happen in person. They also have support just minutes away usually.<p>The Zeekr vehicle they&#x27;re testing now, and presumably the Hyundai they&#x27;re starting to develop, will have self-closing doors.
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throwup238
2024-10-11T04:42:10
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That’s the best evidence we have that existing Teslas won&#x27;t be taxiing anyone
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gorgoiler
2024-10-11T04:42:23
null
Here we have a problem:<p>If the “subscription” part of the “patch” data-structure is set to “None” it is impossible to tell if this means:<p>1&#x2F; leave the “subscription” unchanged; or<p>2&#x2F; set the “subscription” to None.<p>—<p>You could solve this by requiring that a subscription is either a value or some other sentinel value meaning “not subscribed”:<p><pre><code> from typing import Union class T: pass NotSubscribed = T() Subscription = Union[int, T] def f(s: Subscription): pass f(44) f(NotSubscribed) f(None) # wrong </code></pre> Is there a better way of doing this? (One that isn’t just “use Haskell” :)
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saurik
2024-10-11T04:42:49
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I am sure this is obvious and I am just not in the right ecosystem to appreciate the problem, but why do they have to include a Linux emulator to use Wine? Can&#x27;t I just run Wine?
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story
misonic
2024-10-11T04:43:06
A simple timeline using CSS Flexbox
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https://www.jonashietala.se/blog/2024/08/25/a_simple_timeline_using_css_flexbox/
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chronogram
2024-10-11T04:43:20
null
That sounds really difficult for you. It&#x27;s just a &quot;Download&quot; folder on my device, just like in most operating systems since the &#x27;00s.
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[ 41806452 ]
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comment
iknowstuff
2024-10-11T04:43:21
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[flagged]
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41,805,706
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41,806,220
comment
gorlilla
2024-10-11T04:43:23
null
They sound just like stepper motors to me. Especially when they&#x27;re operating to create a radius&#x2F;arc in a 2-D plane.
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comment
matsemann
2024-10-11T04:43:33
null
Saw a Tesla swerve into the bike lane yesterday while driver was on the phone.<p>Driver probably felt safe and that everything was in order. The cyclists not so much.<p>Point is it&#x27;s a matter of perspective. How many around you have to accommodate?
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m3kw9
2024-10-11T04:43:38
null
Current 1b model will do you no good, just rotate through all the free stuff and it would cover most of you usecases
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[ 41806262 ]
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comment
evbogue
2024-10-11T04:43:48
null
This is good to know. I had read somewhere (that was probably on the Internet) that every time I submitted a prompt at the Meta AI web site that I was vaporizing an entire bottle of water, so imagine how thrilled I was to be saving so much water by prompting AI at home! But alas, the water was already vaporized. The climate? Already changed.
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groby_b
2024-10-11T04:44:08
null
fwiw:I don&#x27;t think WYSIWYG is that useful here. It&#x27;ll by its nature appeal to a crowd that&#x27;s more technical than the average user. (You won&#x27;t replace Excel day 1)<p>There&#x27;s also the fact that if this is supposed to become more than a design exploration, it might be useful to focus on what this can do that spreadsheets can&#x27;t - a WYSIWYG editor for spreadsheets is just a spreadsheet.<p>And I definitely think there&#x27;s something good here, and that is not a spreadsheet or a colab notebook. It&#x27;s worth digging into what that might be.
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41,798,477
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41,806,225
comment
eesmith
2024-10-11T04:44:25
null
Next try 10 million digits instead of 10 thousand.<p>The Z-score cannot be interpreted so easily. It must be evaluated over all the different ways people have tried to test the digits for randomness.<p>&quot;Since the advent of computers, a large number of digits of π have been available on which to perform statistical analysis. Yasumasa Kanada has performed detailed statistical analyses on the decimal digits of π, and found them consistent with normality; for example, the frequencies of the ten digits 0 to 9 were subjected to statistical significance tests, and no evidence of a pattern was found.&quot; - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Pi" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Pi</a>
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41,805,941
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[ 41806269, 41806256 ]
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comment
kragen
2024-10-11T04:44:28
null
For now, but maintaining DOSBox and especially WINE continues to require substantial engineering effort, in part because the platforms they&#x27;re running on change. Implementing Uxn&#x2F;Varvara is many orders of magnitude easier than implementing Win32, as evidenced by the fact that many more people have done it despite the much smaller base of applications they can then run. It seems likely that many Win32 applications will execute incorrectly on versions of WINE that are current in 02124, unless they themselves are running on top of something like Uxn.<p>Probably not Uxn itself, though, because a 16-bit memory space is not a practical way to emulate Win32. Dmitry wouldn&#x27;t be dissuaded, I suppose.
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fasa99
2024-10-11T04:44:30
null
That works for the half of it, which blocks people from massing many accounts. Other part is flow control, limit posts to X per unit time e.g. every 5 minutes. That second part is key because we need to be operating under the assumption that said &quot;token account&quot; still has a clever programmer controlling it with selenium &#x2F; bot. But if we have $100 &#x2F; 100 posts&#x2F;day on social media for 1 year or similar, that&#x27;s now significantly limiting the power of any party to mass advertise. Of course those numbers would need to be tweaked, limits optimized, and then still one worries about state actors and deep pockets.
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comment
hinkley
2024-10-11T04:44:33
null
In the broader category of cognition, I think we understand a bit better how people rationalize their decisions. How many things we do almost entirely on pure reflex and then manufacture a story that explains it without sounding crazy or just saying “I don’t know.”
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askl
2024-10-11T04:44:37
null
They don&#x27;t even have HDMI ports so they are pretty useless, but I&#x27;d buy one at $2 as a desk ornament.
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[ 41806407 ]
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41,806,230
comment
z3ncyberpunk
2024-10-11T04:44:43
null
The fiber optics that were paid to be delivered to every home and never delivered upon and the money pocketed? Yeah.
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41,790,667
41,784,287
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comment
NikkiA
2024-10-11T04:44:57
null
The Mercury Arc rectifiers that powered the earliest electric locomotives were prettier to observe though:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=whF80m6oQZ8" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=whF80m6oQZ8</a>
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41,806,232
comment
kijin
2024-10-11T04:44:59
null
This is a big problem with the &quot;blogging CMS&quot; market.<p>A technical person who just wants a blog can easily set up a SSG, or even write their own CRUD app, in just a couple of hours. So they don&#x27;t really need a WordPress alternative.<p>A non-technical person, on the other hand, will want (if not need) at least a few plugins and themes to set up a blog. Anything that can&#x27;t be auto-installed on GoDaddy or requires manual file editing and&#x2F;or shell commands is right out. Most of the alternatives are sorely missing in this department.
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jaarse
2024-10-11T04:45:03
null
When did you last have them come out? They used to be awesome, but cut the mobile fleet in my area as part of the cost saving measures this past July.
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bugbuddy
2024-10-11T04:45:08
null
There is one big exception in the list of all nations. I don’t know what to make of it. Irony?
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41,805,896
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kragen
2024-10-11T04:45:16
null
Awesome, thanks for the link! I didn&#x27;t remember that aspect of the 4004 project.<p>This would be a pretty amazing project. I wonder if you could get existing Uxn&#x2F;Varvara applications like the Left text editor or Orca to run fast enough to be usable. Presumably for Orca you&#x27;d want to hook up external sound hardware rather than trying to bitbang the sound on the 8008, and I guess the same is even more true of a framebuffer.<p>If you were bitbanging RAM access at 7kbps it might be hard to get it to run instructions fast enough to be usable, though.
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41,806,124
41,777,995
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[ 41806465 ]
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41,806,236
comment
Izkata
2024-10-11T04:45:18
null
5 ways, the arrow functions have two different syntaxes:<p><pre><code> () =&gt; { return 1; } () =&gt; 1</code></pre>
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41,805,728
41,787,041
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RamVasuthevan
2024-10-11T04:45:19
null
Patio11 has similar advice to charge by the week <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;training.kalzumeus.com&#x2F;newsletters&#x2F;archive&#x2F;consulting_1" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;training.kalzumeus.com&#x2F;newsletters&#x2F;archive&#x2F;consultin...</a>
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yourabstraction
2024-10-11T04:45:20
null
Yes, I think you&#x27;re spot on. They showed a video of a robot arm cleaning the car&#x27;s inside, and it appears the vertical opening doors make that kind of access easier. The car will also have wireless charging, which makes that easier to automate as well.
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comment
bruce511
2024-10-11T04:45:33
null
The <i>cause</i> of an accident is not random. There are lots of causes and we have lots if regulations around that.<p>The <i>victim</i> if an accident is the random I&#x27;m referring to. There&#x27;s no reason an F-150 driver hits one pedestrian over another.<p>Naturally there are lots more regulations we could add - but that progresses slowly, and with regard to the parties involved (manufacturers, owners, cities etc.)<p>By contrast anti-abortion legislation has been enacted quickly, without much (if any) consultation with the electorate or medical fraternity. This has resulted in poorly thought out laws in some cases.
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tbruckner
2024-10-11T04:45:44
null
And Elon is a guy that knows how to tend to flocks of sheep(le)
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41,805,706
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[ 41806304 ]
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41,806,241
comment
lannisterstark
2024-10-11T04:45:47
null
&gt;He said<p>he says a lot of things. Where&#x27;s my Roadster?
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[ 41806276 ]
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story
whereistimbo
2024-10-11T04:46:00
null
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1
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41,806,242
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41,806,243
comment
wmf
2024-10-11T04:46:01
null
Yeah, I did this same kind of math all the time back during the early ASIC mining days except it was accelerated; you had to break even in 9 months or never due to the exponentially growing difficulty.
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comment
rushabh
2024-10-11T04:46:26
null
Frappe Builder:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;frappe.io&#x2F;builder" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;frappe.io&#x2F;builder</a><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;frappe&#x2F;builder">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;frappe&#x2F;builder</a><p>Visual website designing + publishing, built on Frappe Framework
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jcgl
2024-10-11T04:46:35
null
Which languages are developing? This is something I’ve been wishing for.
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comment
godelski
2024-10-11T04:46:42
null
In a way yes, but I&#x27;m saying their proposal of how to handle the situation is too strong: don&#x27;t do experiments<p><pre><code> &gt;&gt;&gt; there needs to be a long period ... where people aren&#x27;t doing experiments and are just observing and describing. </code></pre> I strongly disagree with this because observation isn&#x27;t enough. You have to experiment.<p>Yes, it&#x27;s fuzzy. But embrace the fuzziness. Acknowledge it. The truth is that observation isn&#x27;t enough. You can NEVER discover truth from observation alone. Science doesn&#x27;t work without interaction. There&#x27;s three classes of casual structure: correlation, intervention, and counterfactual. We know the memes about the first, but the other two require participation. You&#x27;ll get lucky and have some &quot;natural experiments&quot; but this is extremely limited. What I&#x27;m saying is that we can work with these issues without tying our hands behind our backs and shooting ourselves in the foot. Stuff being hard is no reason to handicap ourselves. I&#x27;m arguing that only makes it more difficult lol<p>I think one of the major issues is that we (scientists) fear that my openly discussing limitations and admitting that we don&#x27;t have high (statistical) confidence will result in people not taking us seriously. And in many ways this is a reasonable response. I&#x27;m sure many scientists, myself included, have annoyingly found that an honest limitations section ends up just being ammunition for reviewers to reject the work. A criticism my advisor has given me is that I&#x27;m &quot;too honest&quot;. Maybe he&#x27;s right, but idk, I think that thinking is wrong. Because science is about ruling things out, not proving results (you can effectively achieve the latter by doing the former but you can&#x27;t directly do the latter). And the younger the field is (e.g. my field of ML is VERY young), the noisier the results are.<p>Personally, I&#x27;d rather live in a world where we&#x27;re overly open about limitations than not. We&#x27;re adults and can recognize that&#x27;s the reality, right? Because papers are communication from one expert to others? (And not to the general public, though they can see) Because as I see it, the openness is just letting others know what areas should be explored.<p>Don&#x27;t fear the noise, embrace it. It&#x27;s always there, you can&#x27;t get rid of it, so trying to hide it only makes more.
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gregjor
2024-10-11T04:46:50
null
I apologize for misunderstanding what the service does.<p>I don&#x27;t agree about escalating the arms race. To get a fighting chance against ATS systems you need to go around those systems, not try to trick them or get some small percentage of resumes through them. Like I wrote already, applying for jobs with online applications and sending in resumes in response to online posts -- whether tailored by AI or not -- describes a terrible strategy for getting a job. You can optimize a bad strategy and try to outsmart the ATS systems, or try a better strategy.
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lcnPylGDnU4H9OF
2024-10-11T04:46:57
null
&gt; that I wasn&#x27;t previously aware of<p>Presuming you visit this site often, doesn’t this indicate to you that their case is perhaps overstated? From what I understand, the activity they’re talking about on HN is just comments, often in a [dead]ed thread, so they’re things one can simply choose not to engage with.<p>HN is a relatively diverse community; for every example of a hate comment there are dozens of more constructive comments, including those calling out the hater. There’s no special protection given to trash commenters. They’re often banned, sometimes even publicly called out.<p>Related, these comments caused me to discover Kiwi Farms. If you want to see a place that sounds like what is described in marcan’s letter, check that place out. That is absolutely a trash forum for trash people. Blocking HN traffic isn’t going to protect them from that sort. Indeed, thick skin and the willingness to put down their phone will protect them from that sort.
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saturn8601
2024-10-11T04:47:01
null
I&#x27;ve heard in the past that the OEMs don&#x27;t want to be relegated to being just some whitebox manufacturer so many of them have been very cold (in receptiveness) to working with Waymo. Probably explains the terrible selection of vehicles they have used, Chrysler Pacifica minivan, Jaguar i-Pace, the ionic 5 was surprising since I suspected the others were just OEMs offloading their turds onto Waymo and telling them to take a hike. Maybe Hyundai is getting something good in exchange.
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bugbuddy
2024-10-11T04:47:04
null
I spit out my tea when I read your last sentence. You should consider standup comedy.
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xyst
2024-10-11T04:47:18
null
Great, just what we need. More TSLA “full self driving” cars on the road. Hope this is delayed by a decade. Tired of car centric transportation.
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TheRealPomax
2024-10-11T04:47:20
null
This is fantastic.
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gradschoolfail
2024-10-11T04:47:36
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Forsooth, That was a gem!! That is, i still dont know whether youd be happy to steer clear from invoking violence when discoursing economic approaches to moral issues…<p>Mongoose vs (king) cobra, thats a pairing from asia i could be curious about..<p>[I note another horseshoe-like effect where foxes mporp lions, realtime, get themselves confused..]<p>Anabasis is _the_ counterexample i’d like to have remembered.. fully vulpine Commanding Officer<p>(I mentioned assassinationtargetstateofmind because… inferred internal states tend to be insanely effective when identifying .. familiars?)
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41,796,726
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hysan
2024-10-11T04:47:39
null
&gt; if you don&#x27;t want or need streaming, then Next.js might not be the right choice for your app.<p>I&#x27;m glad to see this stated so clearly. It&#x27;s important for frameworks to be upfront about the use cases being served and the trade-offs that are being made. I think a lot of the negativity that I see on the web is because Next.js was the right choice [for them] in the past, but once it moved towards streaming as the primary paradigm, those same people probably are feeling left in the dust. I think it would be good for the Next.js team to reiterate this and&#x2F;or make it more clear in the docs so that new devs can make informed decisions when evaluating Next.js for their next project.
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drewrv
2024-10-11T04:47:41
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I actually think we’ll get break even fusion energy before mass adoption of robotaxis in a variety of locales.
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41,805,706
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seccode
2024-10-11T04:48:08
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I don&#x27;t have the resources to try this unfortunately. I highly encourage somebody to try. But with more digits you may have to change the model.
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41,805,941
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[ 41806448 ]
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comment
librasteve
2024-10-11T04:48:14
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none of these look attractive to me … what about a clean fork of WordPress?
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41,805,391
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comment
scruple
2024-10-11T04:48:24
null
I don&#x27;t know. I thought the news out of Turkey today was... interesting, at least from a historical perspective. I don&#x27;t think it&#x27;s just us in the US.
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41,801,427
41,801,271
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comment
bmicraft
2024-10-11T04:48:24
null
Well, those VVVF frequency converters were specifically tuned to have their &quot;steps&quot; on full notes&#x2F;chords. It doesn&#x27;t sound like that by accident.
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41,803,549
41,757,808
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comment
maximinus_thrax
2024-10-11T04:48:31
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Musk said a lot of things which turned out to be bullshit. For someone who&#x27;s been following Musk since forever, &#x27;next year&#x27;™ or &#x27;one year away&#x27;™ are some of the markings of incoming USDA prime bullshit designed to fool investors.<p>On a tangent, I find it hilarious that all the Musk related streams are always hijacked by crypto scammers. It&#x27;s some circumstantial evidence that the circles in a venn diagram of the types of people falling for crypto scams and the people falling for Musk snake oil has a lot of overlap.
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41,805,706
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comment
lolinder
2024-10-11T04:48:31
null
Not only is it a luxury, it&#x27;s sheer arrogance to pretend it exists at all.<p>None of us get through life without complicated trade-offs, and in most cases when you disagree with ~50% of a country&#x27;s population it&#x27;s because you have different values of what <i>good</i> thing matters most.
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evbogue
2024-10-11T04:48:34
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I will admit that Llama3.1 70B does make my old Thinkpad pretty cranky. But winter is coming, so if I can change the climate of my bedroom while I&#x27;m waiting that&#x27;s always a bonus this time of year.
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comment
wmf
2024-10-11T04:48:43
null
I don&#x27;t expect them to hit the used market before 2026-2027. Data centers will start replacing H100 with R100 at that time.
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41,805,446
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comment
jlahijani
2024-10-11T04:48:45
null
+999 for ProcessWire. It&#x27;s my CMS of choice for 10 years straight and is actually a pretty good platform for web applications as well (with some limitations compared to something like Rails or Laravel since configuration is stored in the database).<p>I made this 36-part video series comparing WordPress to ProcessWire which I recorded on-and-off between 2014-2018 and released it that year. Although that was a while ago, it&#x27;s still mostly accurate since both systems are mature and haven&#x27;t changed drastically in that time (this is before Gutenberg): <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;playlist?list=PLOrdUWNK38ibz8U_5Vq4zSPZfvFKzUuiT" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;playlist?list=PLOrdUWNK38ibz8U_5Vq4z...</a><p>Also worth a read: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;processwire.com&#x2F;about&#x2F;wordpress-vs-processwire&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;processwire.com&#x2F;about&#x2F;wordpress-vs-processwire&#x2F;</a><p>For the JS devs, ProcessWire has a similar approach to Payload CMS from what I&#x27;ve seen (although ProcessWire dates back to 2003 and open-sourced in ~2010&#x2F;11).<p>Best CMS ever. :)
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41,805,391
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tomjen3
2024-10-11T04:48:49
null
Its solid advice if that is your problem and if you are migrating from a standard wordpress. I ran into another problem - I wanted a static site[0].<p>I tried some of the static hosting engines, including Jekyll, but they always seemed to want to force my site into a blog format. Yeah with some work they could partially be twisted into what I wanted, but only partially.<p>Do you know of a static website builder that builds websites, and not blogs?<p>[0]: The difference to me is that my content should never have a date associated with it, and the landing page should be a landing page, not a list of recent pages.
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41,805,391
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[ 41806389, 41806294 ]
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comment
toomuchtodo
2024-10-11T04:48:51
null
Tesla market cap is based on AI&#x2F;robotaxi&#x2F;FSD. Without that, they’re just playing catchup to BYD (who quietly, yet aggressively, executes at scale; they offer EVs today between $10k-$20k and already employ more workers than Toyota [for scale]).<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cnn.com&#x2F;2024&#x2F;04&#x2F;03&#x2F;cars&#x2F;china-tesla-byd-competition-hnk-intl-dg&#x2F;index.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cnn.com&#x2F;2024&#x2F;04&#x2F;03&#x2F;cars&#x2F;china-tesla-byd-competit...</a><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cnbc.com&#x2F;2024&#x2F;07&#x2F;03&#x2F;chinas-byd-is-set-to-beat-tesla-in-2024-battery-ev-sales.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cnbc.com&#x2F;2024&#x2F;07&#x2F;03&#x2F;chinas-byd-is-set-to-beat-te...</a><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.counterpointresearch.com&#x2F;insights&#x2F;bev-sales-10-million-2024-hybrid-growth-surpass-bevs-ice-decline&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.counterpointresearch.com&#x2F;insights&#x2F;bev-sales-10-m...</a>
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stahtops
2024-10-11T04:48:54
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strawman
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41,804,460
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[ 41806451 ]
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comment
magicalhippo
2024-10-11T04:49:05
null
Wasn&#x27;t a setting when I canceled, I contacted support to verify.<p>Wasn&#x27;t and act of impulse either, it annoyed the heck out of me for at least half a year before I had enough.<p>Haven&#x27;t had a good reason to come back.
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41,801,300
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comment
seccode
2024-10-11T04:49:38
null
I don&#x27;t think you&#x27;re correct that the z-score is not being interpreted correctly. I haven&#x27;t been able to find research demonstrating any non-randomness in pi, so without that we have nothing to compare it to.
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41,806,225
41,805,941
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[ 41806397 ]
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41,806,270
comment
saturn8601
2024-10-11T04:49:41
null
Has he like <i>ever</i> met his promised price? If we go by almost every single other car he has released, The 30k robotaxi will be available for like 1 week on a stripped down tier (maybe like 25kwH battery?) or available <i>off menu</i> for like 6 months until it disappears and no one dares speak of it again.
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null
41,806,075
41,805,706
null
[ 41806344 ]
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comment
Zondartul
2024-10-11T04:49:52
null
To be fair, once someone has physical access to the machine, them having full access is just a matter of time and effort. So at that point it&#x27;s security-through-too-much-effort-to-bother.
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41,801,883
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comment
Marsymars
2024-10-11T04:49:58
null
Aren&#x27;t most recalls software updates now?<p>e.g. &quot;Toyota is recalling over 42,000 Corolla Cross Hybrid SUVs from the 2023 and 2024 model years to fix a software error that may cause drivers to lose power braking assistance if they brake while turning a corner.&quot;<p>I don&#x27;t know that it makes sense for the distinction between &quot;recall&quot; and &quot;not a recall&quot; to be whether the software update can happen OTA or not.
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41,805,894
41,805,706
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comment
Yeul
2024-10-11T04:50:19
null
Germany is reintroducing border controls to stop immigration from OUTSIDE Europe. They aren&#x27;t doing it to keep out the Dutch or Austrians.<p>Nobody is against freedom of movement of EU citizens.
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41,804,066
41,799,016
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41,806,274
comment
stephenr
2024-10-11T04:50:26
null
&gt; there are plenty of posts right here on hacker news about the internals of that decision<p>There sure are:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=18697824">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=18697824</a><p>&gt; This is already happening. I very recently worked on the Edge team, and one of the reasons we decided to end EdgeHTML was because Google kept making changes to its sites that broke other browsers, and we couldn&#x27;t keep up.<p>&gt; Now while I&#x27;m not sure I&#x27;m convinced that YouTube was changed intentionally to slow Edge, many of my co-workers are quite convinced - and they&#x27;re the ones who looked into it personally.
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41,784,287
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comment
porphyra
2024-10-11T04:50:48
null
The demo is open to the eventgoers and lets you choose your destination. It&#x27;s quite polished and a lot more advanced than &quot;hardcoding to drive in a loop&quot;.
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41,805,706
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comment
bagels
2024-10-11T04:50:59
null
He also said the Roadster would fly with SpaceX thrusters. I think that was peak Musk.
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41,806,241
41,805,706
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[ 41806356, 41806335 ]
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41,806,277
comment
te_chris
2024-10-11T04:50:59
null
Crockford hates TypeScript and loves og JS. He thinks the push to turn JS into c# is misguided and a waste of the original small talk-y beauty of The Good Parts - src he said as much to me at a lunch I went to where he was also attending.
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41,803,216
41,787,041
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[ 41806301 ]
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41,806,278
comment
scruple
2024-10-11T04:51:42
null
Befriend any professor at any school who teaches reading, writing, or anything adjacent.<p>I have a friend who teaches journalism at a small, private liberal arts school in the midwest. He&#x27;s been teaching for over 40 years. He says that, beggining in the late 2010s he noticed incoming students began to really struggle. Then, pre-pandemic he would recommend that they use the on-campus reading and writing labs to get help, lean on TAs, use office hours, etc. Post-pandemic, he says he now recommends that they drop his course because they aren&#x27;t prepared at all, even with all of the help the campus provides. He says that this went from a small % of his course enrollment to being &gt; 50% in the span of a decade.<p>Small N but I&#x27;ve gone into overdrive to teach my own (very young) children how to read and interpret literature.
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41,801,796
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comment
nateglims
2024-10-11T04:51:48
null
That&#x27;s a huge amount of capex to spend for a low marginal cost though.
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41,805,706
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[ 41806471 ]
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comment
bruce511
2024-10-11T04:52:17
null
Narrowing the context from &quot;religion&quot; to US Christianity certainly changes the scope of your comment.<p>Certainly the US Christian approach to mental health US not reflective of non US Christians and certainly not other religions.<p>My experience of US Christians is that most operate in good faith, and are as open to good mental health as any other group. Some proportion, a particularly vocal portion, have weird views about lots of things.
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41,805,881
41,786,768
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comment
justahuman74
2024-10-11T04:52:20
null
&gt; For all the desperate founders rushing to train their models to convince their investors for their next $100 million round.<p>I would say Meta has (though not a startup) justified the expenditure.<p>By freely releasing llama they undercut every a huge swath of competition who can get funded during the hype. Then when the hype dies they can pick up what the real size of the market is, with much better margins than if there were a competitive market. Watch as one day they stop releasing free versions and start rent seeking on N+1
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comment
bravetraveler
2024-10-11T04:52:25
null
Factor in the price hike last quarter or the one about to happen, then.
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41,801,300
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41,806,283
comment
iknowstuff
2024-10-11T04:52:28
null
it obviously has one. techcrunch&#x2F;verge bloggers heard inductive charging and leaped into assuming thats the only way to charge lol
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41,805,706
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comment
cjbgkagh
2024-10-11T04:52:29
null
It wasn&#x27;t a joke, she asked for help in the form of how do I do X without using Y. I just went &#x27;ha - yeah everyone has trouble with Y when they first see it. It&#x27;s a bit tricky, let me show you how it&#x27;s done using Y and then how it&#x27;s done without using Y&#x27;. I correctly assumed she was avoiding the use of Y due to her unfamiliarity with it. She was a band new intern and I had many years of experience. She had been regularly coming to me for help which I had been doing after hours on my own time. She did not understand the seriousness of the hr thing and expected me to continue mentoring her like nothing had happened.
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41,805,886
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comment
miki123211
2024-10-11T04:52:47
null
Email + magic link is a lot better for most use cases.<p>It&#x27;s a lot simpler to implement (just one flow instead of signin &#x2F; signup &#x2F; forgot), less catastrophic when your data is breached, piggybacks on the significant amount of work that already goes into securing email, gives you 90% of the benefits of 2FA &#x2F; FIDO &#x2F; Web Authn &#x2F; whatever for free with 0 implementation cost, makes account sharing harder (good for business), and is easy to extend&#x2F;replace with oAuth for specific domains.
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41,802,754
41,801,883
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41,806,286
comment
conradev
2024-10-11T04:52:54
null
Huh? Hyundai has Tesla-tier automated factories that churn out EVs, and they’re building plants around the world. I don’t think they care who buys their cars.<p>Tesla sold a bunch of cars to Hertz which turned out to be terrible for Hertz, but great for Tesla.
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41,805,706
null
[ 41806414 ]
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41,806,287
comment
todotask
2024-10-11T04:52:59
null
You&#x27;re going to encounter various limitations with the CMS that it was designed for. I&#x27;ll say this once: if we need a complete rebuild in 2025 and beyond, the Astro web framework could be the core engine due to its unopinionated nature and support for many UI components, including the latest addition, VanJS. It&#x27;s seem like a well designed to keep things as simple as possible and still open to community feedback.<p>Of course, you could host it on Netlify, Cloudflare, and Vercel using adapters from Astro. Although it&#x27;s not a traditional CMS, it&#x27;s capable of serving as the core engine that should serve well for 99% of use cases out there.
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41,805,391
41,805,391
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comment
dheera
2024-10-11T04:53:07
null
Mine still makes a lot of grave mistakes on local roads, stops for overly long at stop signs (long enough to confuse other drivers), and has very poor merging behavior, especially when there are trucks around. It works fine 99% of the time.
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41,805,820
41,805,706
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41,806,289
comment
hinkley
2024-10-11T04:53:14
null
I suspect that after 400 years of the scientific method, that we may be reaching the limits of single variable experiments in a number of fields. Statistical methods can find those patterns, and as we advance in those areas I expect us to advance in messy sciences like psychology. We’ll be able to more reliably look at people or other chaotic systems and see how three inputs work together to create a single effect.
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41,802,869
41,780,328
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41,806,290
comment
Marsymars
2024-10-11T04:53:23
null
I expect that the general handling of edge cases for any control-free robotaxi is that you call for emergency services, or an Uber, depending on severity.
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null
41,805,821
41,805,706
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null
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41,806,291
comment
anshulbhide
2024-10-11T04:53:32
null
This reminds me of the boom and bust oil cycle as outlined in The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money &amp; Power by Daniel Yergin.
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41,805,446
41,805,446
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41,806,292
comment
nateglims
2024-10-11T04:53:42
null
Why is that market not served by a 4 person self driving car?
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null
41,806,204
41,805,706
null
[ 41806406, 41806385 ]
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41,806,293
comment
SubiculumCode
2024-10-11T04:53:49
null
How do you figure out the required memory? The MoE aspect complicates it.
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null
41,805,610
41,804,829
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41,806,294
comment
hombre_fatal
2024-10-11T04:53:58
null
Build your website like you would normally and then crawl it to build a static html site.<p>Years ago I used some npm library that was like a fancy `wget -r` for this purpose. I was generating a static site from an express server I made.
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41,805,391
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41,806,295
comment
gervwyk
2024-10-11T04:54:03
null
Good article. An additional problem I find with this, is on bigger projects, it is time consuming and frustrating when a client try to micro-track what was done per day. Not the recording of what was done, more the non-technical explanation of what it means and why its required. I’m thinking to also charge for such reporting requests and communication, but that feels weird.
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41,764,903
41,764,903
null
[ 41806425 ]
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41,806,296
comment
contrapunctus
2024-10-11T04:54:29
null
While the article might be from 1995, the library is still maintained. There have been releases each year since 2019, including one last month. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;ap5.com&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;ap5.com&#x2F;</a>
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41,805,702
41,805,702
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41,806,297
comment
rebeccaskinner
2024-10-11T04:54:39
null
My (probably somewhat incorrect) understanding of most European governments was that you might end up in a situation where you vote in the curb setbacks party and then afterwards they decide to form a coalition with the kill cancer kids party because they see it as the most expedient means to get a majority that can increase curb setbacks. Now you have a real problem because maybe you really do care about curb setbacks but not to the point of wanting kids killed.<p>My understanding is that’s more or less what recently happened in France.<p>It might make it easier to talk to your neighbor, who can more plausibly say “don’t look at me, I just voted for curb setbacks”, but it does come with some substantial downsides too, and in the end you still have broad multi-interest umbrella coalitions.
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41,806,135
41,804,460
null
[ 41806420 ]
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41,806,298
comment
marcosscriven
2024-10-11T04:55:33
null
What do you do about images?
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41,805,391
null
[ 41806472, 41806343 ]
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41,806,299
comment
Aeolun
2024-10-11T04:55:48
null
Isn’t OpenAI profitable if they stop training right at this moment? Just because they’re immediately reinvesting all that cash doesn’t mean they’re not profitable.
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null
41,806,103
41,805,446
null
[ 41806373 ]
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