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comment
sangnoir
2024-10-11T07:36:33
null
They'd also have multi-camera high definition video and a LIDAR point cloud of the rider not closing the door and walking away.
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41,806,562
41,805,706
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linotype
2024-10-11T07:36:45
null
Abortion is now illegal in dozens of states.
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41,807,018
41,805,706
null
[ 41807252, 41809109, 41807250 ]
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41,807,202
comment
t0bia_s
2024-10-11T07:36:47
null
Why using curtains at home? Why closing doors when go to toilet? You must hiding something.
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41,802,730
41,801,331
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[ 41807271 ]
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41,807,203
comment
josephg
2024-10-11T07:37:02
null
Python’s problem is that there’s multiple 3rd party type checkers and they all disagree in subtle ways about what the spec says. It’s a mess.<p>Python is probably an all-round better language than JavaScript. But typescript absolutely embarrasses Python’s “gradual” type system with just how good it is in comparison.
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41,806,753
41,801,415
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[ 41807484, 41807216 ]
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comment
firefiend
2024-10-11T07:37:14
null
dealing with IDIOTS
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41,801,096
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bryanrasmussen
2024-10-11T07:37:35
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if you have 2000 small craters in an area from 100000 years ago, and then one big crater obliterates all that 1000 years ago - do you have relatively few craters?
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41,807,175
41,771,709
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[ 41807311 ]
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comment
t0bia_s
2024-10-11T07:38:09
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It is not able to run Adobe. Only reason why I still cannot switch to linux unfortunately.
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41,801,331
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tourmalinetaco
2024-10-11T07:39:01
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[flagged]
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41,806,042
41,804,460
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[ 41807361 ]
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true
41,807,208
comment
dangsux
2024-10-11T07:39:09
null
[dead]
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41,806,869
41,787,547
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true
41,807,209
comment
modeless
2024-10-11T07:39:20
null
It is far from good enough today, no doubt. But the rate of improvement is what matters, and from personal experience I believe it is quite high. I do wish Tesla would release some better statistics.
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41,807,194
41,805,706
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comment
maurits
2024-10-11T07:39:29
null
Any recommendations for a self hosted back-end that is images, photography only? Instagram seems to have taken over this space.
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41,805,391
41,805,391
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41,807,211
comment
feverzsj
2024-10-11T07:39:37
null
I remember some Discovery show called psychology a pseudoscience and fraud.
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41,780,328
41,780,328
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comment
lnauta
2024-10-11T07:39:38
null
Indeed, you could fill a book with it.<p>I wrote this just before bed, my estimation skill was already asleep.
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41,805,336
41,753,471
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41,807,213
story
todsacerdoti
2024-10-11T07:40:19
Deploying a Single-Binary Haskell Web App
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https://entropicthoughts.com/deploying-single-binary-haskell-web-app
5
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41,807,213
0
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41,807,214
comment
josephg
2024-10-11T07:40:24
null
Yep. And even when prototyping, I make a lot more dumb mistakes without a type checker watching my back.<p>It’s amazing how quickly a few interfaces &#x2F; typedefs repay the time you spent typing them in.
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41,806,436
41,801,415
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41,807,215
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t0bia_s
2024-10-11T07:40:44
null
If you&#x27;ll give me a proper alternative that can compete to Adobe and run natively on linux, sure. But there is none. Adobe dynamic link or After Effects do not have competition. Affinity don&#x27;t work on linux.
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41,801,887
41,801,331
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41,807,216
comment
scott_w
2024-10-11T07:40:53
null
I don’t see that as a problem since you’re not going to run multiple type checkers over your code, much like most C++ codebases pick a compiler and stick to it.
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41,807,203
41,801,415
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[ 41807326 ]
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41,807,217
comment
s6af7ygt
2024-10-11T07:40:54
null
I just hate the fact that Go is super simple and clear but people try to make it complex with this kind of stuff. :( Makes me sad.
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41,801,521
41,769,275
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comment
acchow
2024-10-11T07:41:06
null
&quot;I&#x27;m willing to bet that the results of a majority of psychology studies are not reproducible&quot;<p>Indeed<p>&gt; Study replication rates were 23% for the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 48% for Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, and 38% for Psychological Science. Studies in the field of cognitive psychology had a higher replication rate (50%) than studies in the field of social psychology (25%).<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Replication_crisis" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Replication_crisis</a>
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41,807,146
41,780,328
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[ 41808540 ]
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41,807,219
comment
garyfirestorm
2024-10-11T07:41:27
null
Humans don’t have radar, or thermal cameras, or ultrasonic sensors, doesn’t mean planes and boats shouldn’t use those
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41,807,015
41,805,706
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comment
lotharcable
2024-10-11T07:41:33
null
It makes it easier to understand what is going on when you realize that Java did it first.<p>The &#x27;VM&#x27; in &quot;JVM&quot; is &quot;virtual machine&quot;.
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41,805,006
41,777,995
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41,807,221
comment
baq
2024-10-11T07:41:40
null
Awareness about fundamentals and networking with other similarly gifted people, hopefully.
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41,807,068
41,801,883
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41,807,222
comment
Doxin
2024-10-11T07:42:48
null
These days they make left-handed fountain pen ink. It dries much quicker to avoid smudging.
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41,796,463
41,758,870
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41,807,223
comment
lifthrasiir
2024-10-11T07:43:00
null
LINQ is a very dense syntactic sugar for some selected `IEnumerable` methods. It will surely look like chaining in typical uses and thus is useful, but different from an arbitrary chaining.
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41,800,248
41,769,275
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41,807,224
comment
gniv
2024-10-11T07:43:13
null
Think of pile-ups. No matter how good a driver you are there are situations where you cannot prevent crashing. But lidar can.
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41,807,015
41,805,706
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[ 41807354 ]
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41,807,225
story
keepamovin
2024-10-11T07:43:20
null
null
null
1
null
41,807,225
null
[ 41807534 ]
null
true
41,807,226
comment
jaaamesey
2024-10-11T07:43:28
null
Just played it, I&#x27;m a fan too (currently 30 puzzles in)
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41,806,854
41,766,126
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41,807,227
comment
zilicc
2024-10-11T07:43:40
null
[flagged]
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41,806,428
41,804,460
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true
41,807,228
story
mkapoor26
2024-10-11T07:43:47
I Got Tired of Boring Business and Tech News, So I Fixed It
null
https://boredscoop.substack.com/
2
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41,807,228
1
[ 41808475 ]
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41,807,229
comment
thaumasiotes
2024-10-11T07:44:00
null
While true, that&#x27;s a very recent change.
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41,807,051
41,793,597
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41,807,230
comment
KronisLV
2024-10-11T07:44:12
null
&gt; React still tries to be a library when it’s definitely a framework at this point.<p>There, someone said it. I’ve never seen a single project that uses React just as a library, it’s always at the core of the project and the code is built around its life cycle and abstractions.<p>I’ve seen Vue used as a library at times (to make just a part of a larger site dynamic) but in like 95% of cases it’s also used as a framework, even if you end up with other libraries that integrate with it (e.g. Vue Router, something for i18n and Pinia for stores) to make it seem as one unified whole.<p>Maybe the whole separation into libraries and frameworks in unhelpful on some level.
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41,803,327
41,803,327
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comment
dieselgate
2024-10-11T07:44:27
null
Thank you!
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41,807,111
41,764,903
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41,807,232
comment
pico_creator
2024-10-11T07:44:35
null
Im quite sure there is more than a 100 clusters even. Though that would be harder to prove.<p>So yea, it would be rough
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41,807,072
41,805,446
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41,807,233
story
neel_rawlani
2024-10-11T07:44:47
Show HN: Free Job Title Generator – Need to Define a Job? Generate One in 10s
Create professional, tailored job titles in seconds with our Free Job Title Generator. Perfect for recruiters looking to attract top talent with clear, relevant titles. Easy to use and customizable for any industry or role.
https://jobzumi.com/job-title-generator
1
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41,807,233
0
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comment
josephg
2024-10-11T07:45:20
null
I have no inside knowledge. But given the performance and scale chatgpt runs at (and the caliber of the team), I think it’s safe to assume a lot of their production code is written in C++ &#x2F; cuda.
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41,806,909
41,801,415
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comment
karel-3d
2024-10-11T07:45:47
null
The latency will kill you.<p>Both figuratively and literally.<p>Maybe something like Mexico would be better.
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41,807,195
41,805,706
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[ 41807259, 41807380 ]
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comment
DishyDev
2024-10-11T07:46:31
null
The thing I don&#x27;t like about day rates is where I&#x27;ve seen large consultancies pile in large inexperienced teams propped up by one or two seniors to do the actual job that needs doing.<p>With pay per day deals sometimes success for the consultancy is how many people they can get on a project, and less experienced people give higher profit margins. Being successful doesn&#x27;t pay better than running late, and few clients have the knowledge or oversight to not get ripped off.<p>I know reality is far murkier than that and fixed price comes with different problems.
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41,764,903
41,764,903
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41,807,237
comment
kugelblitz
2024-10-11T07:46:34
null
I use Symfony (PHP based framework) and it works fine. I&#x27;ve been able to get into Django (Python), Laravel (PHP), Java (Spring) and even Grails (Groovy) because they either had similar concepts or even similar syntax (I mostly do web development, so this is a very biased take).<p>Being a freelancer, I need to focus on what&#x27;s marketable. Sure, Elixir will get me into a niche, but I will have way less projects to choose from. And when I start a project for a company, if I start with Elixir, I will also have a smaller pool of devs to recruit from. It&#x27;s a chicken-and-egg problem.<p>Nowadays, if I start a project, I would try to build on monolith and full framework with a PaaS.<p>Unfortunately, most projects want to start out &quot;the right way&quot;, which means separate backend (e.g. Java), separate frontend (React), rented server (e.g. Hetzner server) and custom deployment (some pipeline an outside agency built when they first started the project).<p>I&#x27;d rather spend 400 USD on tools each month, but then only need 1-2 full stack devs instead of 6-8 people (1 sys admin, 1-2 deployment, 2 backend, 2 frontend) and with all the overhead that comes with it.
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41,792,304
41,792,304
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41,807,238
comment
kmlx
2024-10-11T07:46:37
null
No special tariffs in the UK also.
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41,806,664
41,805,706
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null
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41,807,239
comment
Kabukks
2024-10-11T07:47:11
null
Sorry, but that doesn&#x27;t work in real world applications. Multiple requests are fired simultaneously all the time. E. g. browsers starting with multiple tabs, smartphone apps starting and firing multiple requests etc.
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41,805,524
41,801,883
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41,807,240
comment
kdemetter
2024-10-11T07:47:33
null
I love Elixir, and I&#x27;ve been learning it because I see the potential. But, it is a steep learning curve, and it&#x27;s quite a different paradigm than most developers are used to.<p>Which means it would be very difficult to get it adopted in say a company, because it would require lots of money to retrain people and it&#x27;s harder to find people for it.<p>I think it might also have a marketing problem, in that it uses the Erlang VM which is pretty old. That&#x27;s actually evidence of it&#x27;s strength, but it&#x27;s less sexy than doing something completely new
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41,792,304
41,792,304
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comment
ffsm8
2024-10-11T07:47:35
null
Google drive uses the same storage quota for other services like Gmail and Photos, these aren&#x27;t visible from the drive directory structure
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null
41,803,774
41,801,334
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null
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41,807,242
comment
baq
2024-10-11T07:47:49
null
He’s right, though. <i>I understand the risk of this session never expiring</i> is the same as <i>No sane person should ever request a token which never expires</i>. Your fat tail of risk dominates the whole distribution of outcomes.
null
null
41,806,527
41,801,883
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null
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41,807,243
comment
kdemetter
2024-10-11T07:48:22
null
I love Elixir, and I&#x27;ve been learning it because I see the potential. But, it is a steep learning curve, and it&#x27;s quite a different paradigm than most developers are used to.<p>Which means it would be very difficult to get it adopted in say a company, because it would require lots of money to retrain people and it&#x27;s harder to find people for it.<p>I think it might also have a marketing problem, in that it uses the Erlang VM which is pretty old. That&#x27;s actually evidence of it&#x27;s strength, but it&#x27;s less sexy than doing something completely new.<p>However, I think it&#x27;s a great language to just try out yourself. Even if you won&#x27;t be able to use it professionally, you&#x27;ll still learning something you can use in your job as well.
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null
41,792,304
41,792,304
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null
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41,807,244
comment
oersted
2024-10-11T07:48:22
null
Is the coloration augmented in some way here as is common in astronomy photographs? Like they do with the reds and blues of Pluto, or translating different spectra to visible colors for nebula and such. Or are those &quot;bruises&quot; on the moon &quot;what it actually looks like&quot; with better-quality imaging?
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null
41,771,709
41,771,709
null
[ 41807335, 41807428 ]
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41,807,245
comment
TheAlchemist
2024-10-11T07:48:41
null
It&#x27;s important to remember when this event was announced. It was announced in April, when stock was plunging following a Reuters report that a cheap Model 2 was cancelled.<p>Musk called them liars and announced on the spot the event that we witnessed today (which was postponed from the initial 8&#x2F;8 date...).<p>That&#x27;s what fraud looks like folks.
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41,805,706
41,805,706
null
[ 41807251 ]
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41,807,246
comment
ben_w
2024-10-11T07:48:41
null
Wasn&#x27;t it also released at a significantly higher price than announced?<p>&quot;&quot;&quot;In 2019, Musk claimed that the Cybertruck would be available in late 2021, starting at $39,900. The date was later pushed to 2022, and eventually it was pushed to late 2023, with a starting price of $60,990.&quot;&quot;&quot; - according to the Wikipedia page.<p>I&#x27;d definitely count that as bait and switch from the price change alone.
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41,807,180
41,805,706
null
[ 41807437, 41807314 ]
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comment
oblio
2024-10-11T07:49:02
null
You know what screams &quot;democratizate transportation&quot;?<p>99% single occupancy vehicles (well, that&#x27;s democratic, I&#x27;ll grant them that) controlled by a corporation known for a million abuses and basically no oversight, everything managed by faceless software.<p>Let me tell you an Uber story.<p>I&#x27;ve been an Uber customer across multiple countries for many years, and one day, I had a layover in London. So I tried to book an Uber in London, but it failed a few times for technical reasons (so their problem).<p>After a bunch of attempts, I received a notification my account was banned.<p>I contacted support, they gave me the runaround for 30 minutes or more, in the end their response was the standard BigCorp canned answer for fraud: &quot;we can&#x27;t tell you why your actions are suspicious&quot; (with the subtext: if you&#x27;re an innocent victim of our scans, tough luck, but we can&#x27;t tell you because statistically if we tell you what you did wrong, real fraudsters will learn and defraud us even more).<p>So now I can&#x27;t use Uber in the UK (I imagine if I try to circumvent the ban with another account, I risk that getting banned, too, and who knows what else, as I have to put my credit card in their app).<p>Now imagine if you want to plan your life around stuff like Tesla Robotaxi and they ban you. What&#x27;s your recourse?<p>With your own motorbike&#x2F;car, you need to commit serious crimes to lose your license forever. With public transportation, as long as you pay the ticket, nobody can ban you for life. And I don&#x27;t think anyone can take away your bike&#x2F;ebike&#x2F;scooter&#x2F;escooter :-)
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41,805,706
null
[ 41808377, 41807286, 41807438 ]
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41,807,248
comment
svantana
2024-10-11T07:49:06
null
That same argument can be used for all companies to fire all their employees. They are all human after all. Just implement all the needed features in hardware and software, done.
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41,807,015
41,805,706
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41,807,249
comment
demurgos
2024-10-11T07:49:30
null
ESM is the closest to a major version for JS. It forces strict mode, which includes many non-backwards compatible changes [0]. Most notably, it removes the `with` statement. Other examples of removals are octal literals or assignments to undeclared variables.<p>[0]: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;developer.mozilla.org&#x2F;en-US&#x2F;docs&#x2F;Web&#x2F;JavaScript&#x2F;Reference&#x2F;Strict_mode" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;developer.mozilla.org&#x2F;en-US&#x2F;docs&#x2F;Web&#x2F;JavaScript&#x2F;Refe...</a>
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41,804,057
41,787,041
null
[ 41808168 ]
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41,807,250
comment
drewcoo
2024-10-11T07:49:44
null
13 states<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.plannedparenthoodaction.org&#x2F;abortion-access-tool&#x2F;US" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.plannedparenthoodaction.org&#x2F;abortion-access-tool...</a>
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41,807,201
41,805,706
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comment
oblio
2024-10-11T07:49:53
null
Was there an event, too? Any videos?
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null
41,807,245
41,805,706
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[ 41807264 ]
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41,807,252
comment
ben_w
2024-10-11T07:49:59
null
Wasn&#x27;t that due to the supreme court deciding it wasn&#x27;t up to the federal government?
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41,807,201
41,805,706
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[ 41807261 ]
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41,807,253
story
aubanel
2024-10-11T07:50:07
null
null
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1
null
41,807,253
null
null
null
true
41,807,254
comment
geenkeuse
2024-10-11T07:50:09
null
Your header - Hurdles instead of Hudles.<p>I read through it and it sounds more technical, for something that&#x27;s supposed to be relatively simple in it&#x27;s use.<p>You have to simplify your landing. The technicalities can be on another page.<p>Caveat - I am a hungry, broke and apparently unemployable middle-aged Server Engineer.
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41,805,770
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comment
haspok
2024-10-11T07:50:09
null
In the case of the Cybertruck, it was never a question whether it is even possible to do such a thing, because they had all the technology, the only question was if they were stupid enough to build it.<p>Just as in the case of the &quot;Hyperloop&quot;: in theory, it is perfectly possible, but anyone who got as far to build a few meters of it (or something resembling it) quickly realized the practicality problems, and what would happen if you scaled those problems to a few hundred kilometers...<p>On the other hand, autonomous driving is not a solved problem, not even in theory. One could argue that it would require some sort of a generic AI, which we don&#x27;t have, and nobody knows if we will in the future. So selling anything based on that is simply fraud, in my opinion.
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41,807,180
41,805,706
null
[ 41807276 ]
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comment
josephg
2024-10-11T07:50:57
null
&gt; It’s Python. Does L1 matter at all?<p>In many ways it matters more <i>because</i> it’s Python.<p>I’ve met a lot of teams throughout my career who struggle daily with a badly performing Python codebase. You can write a no-frills web service in c#, go, rust or JavaScript. And, so long as you don’t do anything stupid, it’s usually plenty fast enough from day 1 to handle your users. But in my experience, the same isn’t true of Python. I’m sure Python web services can be made to run ok, but because it’s slow by default, I bet a lot more time is spent optimising Python programs around the world than optimising JavaScript.
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41,801,415
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comment
Havoc
2024-10-11T07:51:23
null
There is also the small matter of a new gen coming out…<p>Not convinced anything has burst yet. Or will for that matter. The hype may be bubble like but clearly we will need a lot of compute.
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41,805,446
41,805,446
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41,807,258
comment
millipede
2024-10-11T07:51:37
null
Saying this as probably the biggest Java fanboy I know: they are pretty bad. Gradle is pretty much the worst build system Ive used. IntelliJ might as well be folded into the JDK, because I don&#x27;t think it&#x27;s possible to be productive in Java without it.
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41,804,114
41,787,041
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41,807,259
comment
varjag
2024-10-11T07:51:39
null
Latency? That&#x27;s when Starlink comes into play!
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41,807,235
41,805,706
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41,807,260
comment
fragmede
2024-10-11T07:51:41
null
feasible? I want the thing to drive <i>better</i> than me, especially in the rain, fog, and the dark!
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41,807,015
41,805,706
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41,807,261
comment
linotype
2024-10-11T07:51:51
null
Who nominates the justices to the US Supreme Court?
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null
41,807,252
41,805,706
null
[ 41807329 ]
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null
41,807,262
comment
Elizabeth0147
2024-10-11T07:51:59
null
[dead]
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null
41,772,532
41,772,532
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null
null
true
41,807,263
comment
jesterman
2024-10-11T07:52:05
null
Yeah I’m surprised as well. Just searched it up here after seeing the news somewhere else…
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41,806,340
41,801,655
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41,807,264
comment
TheAlchemist
2024-10-11T07:52:14
null
There are plenty yes. Here is a Reuters article:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.reuters.com&#x2F;technology&#x2F;teslas-musk-unveil-robotaxis-amid-fanfare-skepticism-2024-10-10&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.reuters.com&#x2F;technology&#x2F;teslas-musk-unveil-robota...</a>
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41,807,251
41,805,706
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41,807,265
comment
therein
2024-10-11T07:52:30
null
Why are most of the craters relatively the same depth? Wouldn&#x27;t we expect at least some to have done massive damage?
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null
41,807,175
41,771,709
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null
41,807,266
comment
Elizabeth0147
2024-10-11T07:52:34
null
[dead]
null
null
41,802,823
41,802,823
null
null
null
true
41,807,267
comment
godelski
2024-10-11T07:52:51
null
<p><pre><code> &gt; No, people did not know natural selection before Darwin </code></pre> <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Natural_selection" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Natural_selection</a><p>Read the history. The topics discussed were are not reminiscent of evolution because hindsight, they are similar because they are similar. Darwin himself references many of these. People knew of artificial selection because they did it. You don&#x27;t breed animals and plants without some basic knowledge here.<p>I&#x27;m not saying Darwin&#x27;s work wasn&#x27;t important. It&#x27;s critical. But this does not warrant dishonoring and forgetting all those who did work that led to that point. Their work wasn&#x27;t as ground breaking and influential, but they still helped set the stage. Darwin&#x27;s work didn&#x27;t appear out of a vacuum.<p>Science doesn&#x27;t happen in leaps and bounds.<p><pre><code> &gt; By dismissing the theory of natural selection as something that was &quot;obvious&quot; pre-Darwin you are dismissing his life&#x27;s work. </code></pre> This is a grave misinterpreting of what I mean. You have made mountains out of the pebbles I described. It can both be true that scatterings of the ideas exist, with only circumstantial evidence for them, while also monumental work be accomplished to legitimize those ideas and fill in so many holes.<p>Your basis of what the average person believes is also irrelevant. Even still many reject evolution and so many more did even just a decade or two ago. It was national debate not even a century ago.
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null
41,806,463
41,780,328
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null
41,807,268
comment
ruthmarx
2024-10-11T07:53:03
null
I&#x27;m a fan of Wagtail, built on Django.<p>Much more setup to get configured, but it&#x27;s far more customizable and stable once you do.
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null
41,805,391
41,805,391
null
[ 41807346 ]
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41,807,269
comment
brylie
2024-10-11T07:53:03
null
Cross-posting here:<p>I can highly recommend Wagtail CMS:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;wagtail.org&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;wagtail.org&#x2F;</a><p>It’s based on Python&#x2F;Django and has an excellent developer and user experience. They pay a lot of attention to detail, including a block-based content editor, similar to Gutenberg, and first class accessibility support.
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41,805,391
41,805,391
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null
41,807,270
comment
whensean
2024-10-11T07:53:14
null
They demonstrate this robot that is manipulated by someone behind the scenes. Is this really possible?
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41,805,706
41,805,706
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41,807,271
comment
fragmede
2024-10-11T07:53:23
null
I use toilet paper when I go to the toilet, and not the curtains, but to each their own.
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null
41,807,202
41,801,331
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41,807,272
comment
narrator
2024-10-11T07:53:32
null
Reading any HN thread connected to Musk is so annoying because all the political obsessives come out and crapflood the thread with rants about &quot;manbabies.&quot;
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null
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41,807,273
comment
hiddencost
2024-10-11T07:53:40
null
Waymo is doing 100k paid trips a week in 4 cities.
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null
41,806,702
41,805,706
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[ 41807613 ]
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41,807,274
comment
vessenes
2024-10-11T07:53:46
null
It does; in this case, though, a 25b f16 model will fit. The paper mentions an A100 80G is sufficient but a 40 is not; M2 Max has up to 192G. That said, MoEs are popular in lower memory devices because you can swap out the experts layers -- their expert layers are like 3-4b parameters, so if you are willing to have a sort of pause on generation where you load up the desired expert, you could do it in a lot less RAM. They pitch the main benefit here as faster generation, it&#x27;s a lot less matmul to do per token generated.
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41,806,293
41,804,829
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41,807,275
comment
daft_pink
2024-10-11T07:54:01
null
Vilification of ideas is the reason why people can’t discuss politics in the United States.<p>Reality is that if you have normal common religious beliefs in this country, people on the left will quickly paint you as some sort of evil intolerant person, when most religious people are nice decent people.<p>Just because they disagree with your lifestyle doesn&#x27;t make them evil. Why people can’t tolerate basic disagreement is beyond me.
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41,804,460
41,804,460
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41,807,276
comment
reissbaker
2024-10-11T07:54:17
null
What do you mean by &quot;stupid enough to build it?&quot; It&#x27;s the best-selling electric truck in terms of shipped units, by a large margin (approximately equal to every other EV truck manufacturer combined, including Ford&#x27;s electric F-150).
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null
41,807,255
41,805,706
null
[ 41807389 ]
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null
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comment
whensean
2024-10-11T07:54:21
null
They showcase this robot that is manipulated by someone behind the scenes. Is this really possible? It seems like a scam.
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null
41,805,706
41,805,706
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41,807,278
comment
oblio
2024-10-11T07:54:36
null
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.arenaev.com&#x2F;mercedesbenz_drive_pilot_now_works_at_speed_up_to_95_km_h-news-3951.php" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.arenaev.com&#x2F;mercedesbenz_drive_pilot_now_works_a...</a>
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null
41,806,544
41,805,706
null
[ 41807336 ]
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41,807,279
comment
red_admiral
2024-10-11T07:54:45
null
Correlation is not causation. But I hope someone is looking into this just in case.
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null
41,806,645
41,806,645
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[ 41807468 ]
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41,807,280
comment
null
2024-10-11T07:55:13
null
null
null
null
41,775,666
41,774,871
null
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true
null
41,807,281
comment
ben_w
2024-10-11T07:55:15
null
I don&#x27;t know if you&#x27;ve tried this recently, but take a photo of something on your phone and put it into an AI.<p>There may even be an AI built into your photo library app.
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null
41,807,043
41,805,706
null
[ 41807920 ]
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41,807,282
comment
kcaseg
2024-10-11T07:55:19
null
Nice!I would reconsider the AI icon, I know it is a free app, but I am sure there are other free alternatives for that. Not because AI is inherently bad or anything, I just somehow associate it with low quality&#x2F;scammy stuff and my brain would probably filter it out when scrolling through the app store.
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null
41,806,852
41,806,852
null
[ 41807455, 41808554 ]
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null
41,807,283
comment
relistan
2024-10-11T07:55:33
null
If they allocated, people would complain about that. If they don’t, people complain about mutation. :shrug:<p>Personally, the article’s implementation seems fine to me. The iter is a private field of a throwaway struct created on the fly in order to support chaining. If anyone is then relying on the (private) contents of that struct, I think that’s user error. I can’t see personally why you’d do that.
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41,802,383
41,769,275
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41,807,284
story
baratsemet
2024-10-11T07:55:48
I built a cross-platform desktop app using Golang, for bulk image processing.
null
https://github.com/barats/resizem
1
null
41,807,284
1
[ 41807285 ]
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null
41,807,285
comment
baratsemet
2024-10-11T07:55:48
null
Resizem is an app designed for bulk image process. It is particularly useful for users who need to resize, convert, and manage large numbers of image files at once.<p>Collaboration is needed for language translation, if you find this app useful, or are interested in open source.
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41,807,284
41,807,284
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41,807,286
comment
jillesvangurp
2024-10-11T07:56:11
null
Are normal taxis any different? Most of them only have one or two passengers. Typically in the backseat which gets kind of crowded with more people. You can get bigger taxis of course. But I&#x27;m talking about the common sedan model with the driver in the front. An unused front seat on the right. And the one or two passengers in the back. Exactly the same thing. Except there&#x27;s no need for the driver.<p>I don&#x27;t get the moral outrage here. It&#x27;s taxi with one person less (the driver). Also available as a model 3 and y. And the robovan thing. So they do actually cover a range of vehicles with different amounts of passengers.
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null
41,807,247
41,805,706
null
[ 41807306, 41809012 ]
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null
41,807,287
comment
allard_eric
2024-10-11T07:56:16
null
Amazing work! The AI integration into Google Sheets with a simple formula is a game-changer, and completing it in 24 hours is impressive. The fact that 80% of the coding was just prompting AI highlights how fast development is changing. Excited to see where AISheeter goes!
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null
41,786,584
41,786,584
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null
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null
41,807,288
comment
bob1029
2024-10-11T07:56:21
null
I like to imagine semiconductor manufacturing is the most extreme case of automation we have today.<p>One shift supervisor can oversee thousands of wafers per hour. Humans aren&#x27;t even in the factory anymore due to defect rates. Many employees are asleep at home with tool alarms and&#x2F;or statistical triggers over metrology data that will page them out of slumber if something goes wrong.<p>It feels like something exponential starts to happen once you get into automation rates exceeding 99%. There isn&#x27;t a single tool in a modern fab that isn&#x27;t on the automated material handling system. They build dedicated bridges just for these robots to travel between the fab buildings.
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null
41,800,036
41,800,036
null
[ 41808968 ]
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41,807,289
comment
ruthmarx
2024-10-11T07:56:40
null
&gt; Is it too much to ask to keep politics out of software recommendations and social media version announcement updates?<p>Frankly, yes. Things have become so bad that the more people taking a stand and showing they don&#x27;t support a party that has no issue with racism, sexism, misogyny and various other kinds of bigotry, the better. Sitting on the sidelines shouldn&#x27;t be an option for most ethical people based in the US, IMO.
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null
41,806,416
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null
41,807,290
comment
TurboHaskal
2024-10-11T07:56:42
null
Life without REPLs.
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null
41,798,649
41,769,275
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null
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null
41,807,291
comment
noelwelsh
2024-10-11T07:56:50
null
Two things here:<p>1. You need to understand how to express concepts in a form the type system can understand. Each type system will have patterns it understands, and patterns it does not.<p>2. Go isn&#x27;t a great example. It has a Java-circa-2000 type system. Modern type systems are much more expressive.
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null
41,806,753
41,801,415
null
[ 41807609 ]
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null
41,807,292
comment
jainvivek
2024-10-11T07:57:16
null
As lifetime deal was sold with promise of all future upgrades, asking that question might seem confusing to them.
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null
41,802,474
41,801,363
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[ 41809945 ]
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null
41,807,293
comment
fragmede
2024-10-11T07:57:29
null
You&#x27;re going to have to be more specific with your necessary specs, there are $100 360° hobbyist LIDAR sensors on Amazon.
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null
41,807,184
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null
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story
skibz
2024-10-11T07:57:35
null
null
null
1
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null
[ 41807526, 41807364 ]
null
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41,807,295
comment
vanjajaja1
2024-10-11T07:57:37
null
yep, iirc on the huberman podcast on testosterone it even said that the competition that&#x27;s decided by society has an impact on t-levels. societies that make prosocial &#x2F; win-win games for men obv end up better off
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null
41,788,149
41,780,569
null
null
null
null
41,807,296
story
cen4
2024-10-11T07:57:38
Lululemons Global Wellbeing Report 2024 on "Wellbeing Burnout" [pdf]
null
https://corporate.lululemon.com/~/media/Files/L/Lululemon/our-impact/lululemon-2024-global-wellbeing-report.pdf
1
null
41,807,296
1
[ 41807492, 41807531 ]
null
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comment
SuperV1234
2024-10-11T07:57:43
null
Reminds me of my own `majsdown`: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;vittorioromeo&#x2F;majsdown">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;vittorioromeo&#x2F;majsdown</a><p>Cool stuff!
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null
41,798,477
41,798,477
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null
null
null
41,807,298
comment
hggigg
2024-10-11T07:57:51
null
Not much. And at least their hardware and software works.
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null
41,802,605
41,801,331
null
null
null
null
41,807,299
comment
kevingadd
2024-10-11T07:57:56
null
The emphasis on syntax sugar has a very useful side effect, which is that new language features can be used on old runtimes. To this day some of the newer C# features are usable when targeting the ancient .NET Framework 4.x, like &#x27;ref returns&#x27;. This would not be possible if every new language feature was paired with runtime-level changes. (Many new language features do come with changes to the runtime and BCL). I support a bunch of people who use NET4x to this day and I&#x27;m able to write modern C# for that target thanks to the language and compiler being designed this way.<p>A lot of stuff is also designed to be independent of library changes - IIRC for example if you use nullability, the compiler will emit the Nullable attribute&#x27;s definition into your .dll as a hidden class, so that your library will work even on older versions of the runtime with older base class libraries. Doing this complicates the compiler (and adds a tiny, tiny amount of bloat to your dll) but means that more people can adopt a new feature without having to think about upgrading their SDK or runtime.<p>My personal opinion is that if a change can be done adequately entirely at the compiler level without runtime&#x2F;library changes, it should be done there. It allows the people working on the language, libraries and runtime to iterate independently and fix problems without having to coordinate across 3 teams.
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null
41,806,531
41,787,041
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null