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41,808,100
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lupusreal
2024-10-11T10:17:20
null
Even if it's true that those bottles shed plastic and you can taste that plastic, that's not a source for the claim that the bottles are one of the foremost sources of the microplastic in our bodies.
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mykowebhn
2024-10-11T10:17:25
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Oh man, thanks for this! (Something I should&#x27;ve done myself!)<p>Really interesting. Yeah, the crater patterns that I saw seemed a little too complex to be explained simply.<p>Also, my naive self would&#x27;ve assumed that the spatial distribution of meteor impacts would be uniform, but apparently this doesn&#x27;t appear to be the case.
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panick21_
2024-10-11T10:17:32
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Many reasons. Model 3 is to big. The Model 3 is missing many features needed, like inductive charging, automatic doors. And has lots of things not needed, like a steering wheel column. Model 3 is build on a much older architecture, even the upgraded versions. Model 3 still uses traditional car wiring.<p>With all the changes you would have to do to M3, its basically a new car.<p>This Robotaxi will have all the drive-by-wire architecture of the Cybertruck. The new electronics architecture and Ethernet bus. And things like wireless charging.
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KK7NIL
2024-10-11T10:17:34
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Depleted uranium ammunition is not a type of nuclear weapon since its method of dealing damage is kinetic, not a nuclear reaction.<p>Ironically enough you calling these &quot;nuclear weapons&quot; only serves to confuse people and soften the nuclear taboo.
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wasteduniverse
2024-10-11T10:17:34
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[dead]
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wruza
2024-10-11T10:17:44
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I do not. I have three mail boxes, for trashy, job-y and personal things. And a couple of technical (apple id, etc).<p>Gmail is really good at filtering spam, so I probably looked into it and found a letter that I waited for only one time in last few years. My inboxes are either empty or may get first non-spam marketing emails that I unsubscribe from immediately. Unread count zero.<p>Idk why people fortify their email that much and investigate who does what. Have no issues nor hesitation with leaving my work email at any local org.
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Anon84
2024-10-11T10:17:45
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41,808,107
comment
lispm
2024-10-11T10:17:52
null
Or even better have the assertion offer a way to repair the problem:<p><pre><code> CL-USER 1 &gt; (defun calculate-something (big small) (assert (&gt;= big small) (big small) ; these can be reset &quot;Big ~a must be bigger than small ~a&quot; big small) (sqrt (- big small))) calculate-something </code></pre> The error handling will now offer me to repair it, if necessary:<p><pre><code> CL-USER 2 &gt; (calculate-something 4 7) Error: Big 4 must be bigger than small 7 1 (continue) Retry assertion with new values for BIG, SMALL. 2 (abort) Return to debug level 0. 3 Restart top-level loop. Type :b for backtrace or :c &lt;option number&gt; to proceed. Type :bug-form &quot;&lt;subject&gt;&quot; for a bug report template or :? for other options. CL-USER 3 : 1 &gt; :c 1 The old value of BIG is 4. Do you want to supply a new value? yes Enter a form to be evaluated: 17 The old value of SMALL is 7. Do you want to supply a new value? yes Enter a form to be evaluated: 5 3.4641016 </code></pre> The last number is the return value
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Serafime
2024-10-11T10:17:56
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41,808,108
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[ 41808112 ]
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41,808,109
comment
Dalewyn
2024-10-11T10:18:05
null
I agree. I&#x27;ve been to the Hiroshima Peace Park or whatever it&#x27;s called in English numerous times, but I can&#x27;t say I&#x27;ve been anymore moved by it than any other demonstration of human brutality.<p>I can&#x27;t register a difference between a nuclear bomb and, say, a GBU-12 Paveway conventional bomb. They both destroy and kill brutally, the magnitude is irrelevant and it would be great if we never have to use either of them.
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[ 41808164 ]
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kulesh
2024-10-11T10:18:08
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Also, one of the companies I&#x27;m working with hopes to get all sorts of strict certifications and gov contracts, it simply cannot hire talent from Russia, North Korea, Syria, Iran and alike. Yes, the position is fully remote, but there&#x27;s one hard requirement.
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belter
2024-10-11T10:18:12
null
All Inners should stay away!
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41,806,320
41,760,971
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[ 41808276 ]
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Serafime
2024-10-11T10:18:19
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[flagged]
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41,808,108
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41,808,113
story
todsacerdoti
2024-10-11T10:18:23
Adapting Plan 9's listen to GNU Guix
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https://the-dam.org/docs/explanations/Plan9ListenOnLinux.html
14
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0
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41,808,114
comment
Havoc
2024-10-11T10:18:29
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You can also get pretty cheap usb 2.5gbe dongles that work well with the pis
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41,775,641
41,775,641
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[ 41808146 ]
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41,808,115
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Iulioh
2024-10-11T10:18:32
null
The 4 fully steerable wheels on robottaxis is an interesting ones.<p>For human drivers were a little overkill with no real advange besides parking in small spaces) but they would be probably more usefull.<p>But the fact that they are a little too complex remains, maybe making them semi standardized and modular would help
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gnabgib
2024-10-11T10:18:34
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Discussion (83 points, 1 hours ago, 37 comments) <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=41807681">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=41807681</a>
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41,808,106
41,808,106
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41,808,117
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phoronixrly
2024-10-11T10:18:35
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[flagged]
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41,775,641
41,775,641
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[ 41808192, 41808126 ]
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41,808,118
story
ms7892
2024-10-11T10:19:03
Bharatcoin: A decentralised peer-to-peer digital cash system for India
null
https://jumpshare.com/s/pHLPjUTAJPHaMviwq5l1
5
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41,808,118
1
[ 41809188 ]
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41,808,119
comment
charamis
2024-10-11T10:20:19
null
I haven&#x27;t even heard Ετησίαι and I come from a town that has often Μελτέμια in August
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41,761,354
41,760,510
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41,808,120
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7734128
2024-10-11T10:20:19
null
I don&#x27;t feel any winter yet.
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41,807,634
41,805,446
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[ 41808954, 41808741 ]
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41,808,121
comment
null
2024-10-11T10:20:26
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41,807,926
41,807,909
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41,808,122
story
rbanffy
2024-10-11T10:20:27
AMD Gives Nvidia Some Serious Heat in GPU Compute
null
https://www.nextplatform.com/2024/10/10/amd-gives-nvidia-some-serious-heat-in-gpu-compute/
4
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41,808,122
1
[ 41808349, 41808573 ]
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comment
monocasa
2024-10-11T10:20:45
null
There&#x27;s not a lot of docs on how it works. It used to be entirely in the closed source driver, now it&#x27;s mainly a thin bridge to the closed source firmware blob.<p>But yes, for more than a decade now even with consumer cards, separate user processes have separate hardware enforced contexts. This is as true for consumer cards as it is for datacenter cards. This is core to how something like webgl works without exposing everything else being rented on your desktop to public Internet. There have been bugs, but per process hardware isolation with a GPU local mmu has been tablestakes for a modern gpu for nearly twenty years.<p>What datacenter gpus expose in addition to that is multiple virtual gpus, sort of like sr-iov, where a single gpu can be exposed to multiple CPU kernels running in virtual machines.
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gabaix
2024-10-11T10:21:02
null
The Hiroshima museum, while advocating for a nuclear free world, has an interesting take on why the US dropped the bomb on them.<p>According to them, the US dropped the bomb because they wanted to show their strengths against the Soviets. It makes little to no mention of the bloody battles in the Pacific.
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nunobrito
2024-10-11T10:21:03
null
It was quite convenient in those days to convince drug dealers to adopt bitcoin exactly because of that. Eventually all the smart ones moved to monero where privacy between transactions is beyond doubt.<p>Trivia:<p>1) Guess which crypto is now being delisted from all major exchanges?<p>2) Now guess which crypto the US gov is actively purchasing&#x2F;supporting?
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FirmwareBurner
2024-10-11T10:21:19
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The SW ecosystem and the community were always the selling point for the Pi, never the HW, that always sucked ass compared to the competition.
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41,808,117
41,775,641
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story
nabla9
2024-10-11T10:21:29
Why (fundamental) physics is dying [video]
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cBIvSGLkwJY
2
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41,808,127
2
[ 41808143, 41808404, 41808219 ]
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amelius
2024-10-11T10:21:29
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I once heard a story about a MEMS device. It was about a tiny motor that could do a million revolutions per second. However, as it turned out it would break after 1 second.
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[ 41808468 ]
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sans_souse
2024-10-11T10:21:40
null
I care but don&#x27;t have time or the resources. What I have made a habit of tho is registering to any new website or service using example [email protected] → register using [email protected]. I then take note of which variant &#x2F; which service.<p>I have no idea if this works the way I expect it logically <i>could or should</i>, but if it does I guess I have some data to go thru.
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drclau
2024-10-11T10:21:42
null
&gt; Microsoft has a large team dedicated towards improving these languages constantly<p>… and the people working on these projects need to deliver, else their performance review won’t be good, and their financial rewards (merit increase, bonus, refresher) will be low. And here we are.<p>Edit: I realize I’m repeating what you said too, but I wanted to make it more clear what’s going on.
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41,787,041
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[ 41809877 ]
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story
tosh
2024-10-11T10:21:48
SQLite Queue for LLM Calls
null
https://twitter.com/HamelHusain/status/1844527172293362070
3
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41,808,131
1
[ 41808353, 41808203 ]
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comment
emptyfile
2024-10-11T10:22:17
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[dead]
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41,807,681
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comment
amelius
2024-10-11T10:23:20
null
What kind of device would you want to use for the measurements? Conventional? MEMS?
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comment
defrost
2024-10-11T10:23:34
null
The evidence we have is<p>* one early bomb is more or less equivilant to one conventional HE + incendiary raid.<p>* 2,000+ <i>other</i> bombs have since been detonated, a good number of which were orders of magnitudes more destructive than the early &quot;first gen&quot; bombs used on Japan.<p>Nuclear war with the larger weapons that followed would be considerably worse than incendiary bombs, in physical destruction, in immediate deaths, and in injuries and following mortalities.
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41,807,681
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[ 41808205 ]
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story
ingve
2024-10-11T10:23:34
The Surprising Recovery of Currency Usage [pdf]
null
https://www.ijcb.org/journal/ijcb20q2a7.pdf
1
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41,808,135
0
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41,808,136
comment
ckastner
2024-10-11T10:23:55
null
That&#x27;s just the power. If one expects a H100 to run for three years at full load, 24 x 365 x 3 = 26280. Assuming a price of $25K per H100, that means about $1&#x2F;h to amortize costs. Hence the <i>unless they stole them</i>, I guess.<p>Factor in space, networking, cooling, security, etc., and $2 really do seem undoable.
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41,805,446
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[ 41808160, 41808279 ]
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dom96
2024-10-11T10:23:59
null
So your response is “it was worse in the past”?<p>Two wrongs don’t make a right. Either you’re a “free speech absolutist” or you’re just a lying charlatan. Elon is clearly the latter, the evidence is right in front of your eyes and you choose to make excuses.<p>ElonJet is posting publicly available information and isn’t banned on other platforms. Something coming with a warning is the same as restricting speech.
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41,805,706
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airbreather
2024-10-11T10:24:27
null
Implicit state is the enemy.
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41,765,594
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gwurk
2024-10-11T10:24:34
null
I think the american to party system is the problem, which happens to also be used in the uk. You can not make assumptions of the entire west about political matters based on something happening in two countries when they differ so much from other western countries in it&#x27;s political system.
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41,804,460
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[ 41808763 ]
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lupusreal
2024-10-11T10:24:34
null
It&#x27;s largely a generational thing. Most baby boomers are afraid to eat eat even slightly pink beef. Arguments that millions of Americans eat hamburgers with the middle of the paddy still oozing blood and virtually nobody is harmed by it fall on deaf ears. Old dogs, new tricks, etc.
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monocasa
2024-10-11T10:24:41
null
At it&#x27;s core, this device file is responsible for managing a GPU local address space, and sharing memory securely with that address space in order to have a place to write command buffers and data that the gpu can see. It doesn&#x27;t really make sense without a heavy memory mapping component.<p>A plan 9 like model that&#x27;s heavily just a standard file would massively cut into gpu performance.
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41,807,094
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comment
vkazanov
2024-10-11T10:24:48
null
Author here so happy to explain the concept!
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41,808,143
comment
nabla9
2024-10-11T10:24:54
null
John Carlos Baez thinks Sabine has a point.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;mathstodon.xyz&#x2F;@johncarlosbaez&#x2F;113285631281744111" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;mathstodon.xyz&#x2F;@johncarlosbaez&#x2F;113285631281744111</a><p>&gt;Despite the silly clickbait title of this video, Sabine says a lot of interesting stuff in it: her criticism of claimed deviations from Lorentz invariance in loop quantum gravity is about as good as you&#x27;ll get from anyone who hasn&#x27;t actually worked on loop quantum gravity. I worked on it for about 10 years, and the situation is even a bit worse than she makes it sound.
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41,808,127
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faggotbreath
2024-10-11T10:24:58
null
You have no idea what you’re talking about. 2 billion people will die in the first 70 minutes of a peer nuclear exchange.
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41,808,002
41,807,681
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[ 41808214 ]
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comment
MathMonkeyMan
2024-10-11T10:25:12
null
repurposed!
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41,807,150
41,760,971
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[ 41808302 ]
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41,808,146
comment
null
2024-10-11T10:25:28
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41,775,641
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41,808,147
comment
bell-cot
2024-10-11T10:25:35
null
Stable solutions to the 3-body problem were known centuries ago...but Phys.org couldn&#x27;t resist adding &quot;discovered&quot; to their headline.<p>The paper itself merely claims to have done a bunch of work to further characterize and statistically analyze 3-body situations.
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082349872349872
2024-10-11T10:25:48
null
I don&#x27;t know.<p>Could Hirohito (Suzuki, etc.) have been convinced by bombs dropped elsewhere?<p>(our physicists were able to back-of-the-envelope; should their physicists have needed hundreds of thousands of civilian deaths to calculate what an A-bomb could do?)<p>So I think it&#x27;s not obvious (multiple books have been written on the subject) what could or should have been done or not done back then; now, from my point of view, those cards have been dealt, for good or for ill.
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makeitdouble
2024-10-11T10:25:52
null
&gt; instead of a more self-reflective &quot;nationalism is terrible&quot; or something along those lines.<p>It used to bother me a lot, until I realized that<p>- the US purposefully left the Emperor in place with only a slap on the fingers (&quot;you&#x27;re not a god anymore...except for those who still believe you are&quot;)<p>- all surrounding countries have incentives to to keep distances from Japan (in particular as long as the US are there, Japan and China will never be allies, same for Russia), Taiwan being the exception.<p>I see no future where Japan nationalism is truly solved, short of these two things also getting solved. And boy is there no end in sight to this.
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[ 41808195 ]
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comment
poincaredisk
2024-10-11T10:26:05
null
&gt;And it&#x27;s a movie from 45 years ago that was so culturally significant that even if you never saw it you know what happens because you&#x27;ve seen other media reference it<p>I don&#x27;t (i only know there&#x27;s an alien chest bursting scene). If I went to cinema and someone spoiled the movie for me, I&#x27;d just get up and leave because I hate spoilers.<p>Though I don&#x27;t watch a lot of movies and don&#x27;t go to cinemas, so obviously my opinion doesn&#x27;t matter.
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41,801,300
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story
kergonath
2024-10-11T10:26:10
The cover of the new Discworld tabletop RPG brings back a flood of memories
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https://www.polygon.com/tabletop-games/463865/discworld-ttrpg-cover-reveal-paul-kidby-josh-kirby
3
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41,808,151
0
[ 41808560 ]
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41,808,152
comment
KK7NIL
2024-10-11T10:26:18
null
&gt; is not readily accessible to objective&#x2F;quantitative methods.<p>Just because the mind is not readily quantifiable with current technology doesn&#x27;t mean that it&#x27;s subjective &quot;by nature&quot;.<p>&gt; for instance qualia, whose existence is self-evident,<p>No, it isn&#x27;t and I see no way to test for &quot;qualia&quot; so, applying Newton&#x27;s flaming laser sword, it&#x27;s not worthy of debate.<p>It&#x27;s a very dangerous thing to draw conclusions about empirical phenomenon from metaphysics. I suggest you stick to the scientific method when trying to understand the empirical world, it has been far more successful than philosophical rambling.
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41,780,328
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thimabi
2024-10-11T10:26:20
null
But was it really obvious? From what I can tell, much of the nuclear arms race happened thanks to espionage. Had information on warheads and the like been properly contained, maybe other countries would not have so easily developed the bomb.
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41,808,059
41,807,681
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[ 41809482, 41809867 ]
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comment
airbreather
2024-10-11T10:26:36
null
Medical diagnosis is not a form of state based behaviour, therefore it can&#x27;t be &quot;automated&quot; in the strict sense.<p>Medical diagnosis is interpretation, you can&#x27;t predict all possible states involved in the diagnosis and outcome, it is inherently unsuitable to be treated in such a way.
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story
Hard_Space
2024-10-11T10:26:46
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41,808,155
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41,808,156
comment
kbumsik
2024-10-11T10:27:02
null
I have heard NVSwitch is used for GPU-to-GPU interconnection over network.<p>How is it different?
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41,787,547
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[ 41808500, 41808389 ]
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lupusreal
2024-10-11T10:27:26
null
Do you go by how it tastes, or by the printed use-by date? They&#x27;re unrelated...
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41,765,006
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Dalewyn
2024-10-11T10:27:51
null
I&#x27;m Japanese-American, so I can throw two cents in your hat.<p>Post-war Japan is against nuclear weapons to an absolute, but it must be admitted that the response to nukes in particular is just as much a kneejerk reaction. NHK literally <i>spams</i> the entirety of August with anti-nuclear propaganda every year. Japan&#x27;s anti-nuclear stance is also hypocritically at odds with relying on the US nuclear umbrella for national security.<p>More rationally, post-war Japan is against wars of any and all kinds to an absolute. This goes as far as refusing to defend the US in the event of an attack on the US-Japan alliance; this was only changed recently in the last decade or so after strong pressure from the US to reciprocate the US&#x27;s defense commitments to Japan.<p>Nationalism is a... complex topic. You will be considered a crazy person if you wave the Japanese flag or put up a flagpole on or around your house, but at the same time loyalty and reverence to the Emperor still remains strong and the country is politically and culturally very conservative&#x2F;liberal with a very interesting mix of individualism and conformity. Most Japanese ex-pats actually leave Japan because they are more progressive and can&#x27;t stand the conservative culture.<p>Japan is actually quite welcoming of foreigners, but there is a hard gentlemen&#x27;s agreement that if you&#x27;re in Japan you do as the Japanese do. Those who can adapt are welcomed, those who can&#x27;t&#x2F;don&#x27;t are excluded and ejected sooner or later.
null
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41,807,914
41,807,681
null
null
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null
41,808,159
comment
monocasa
2024-10-11T10:27:51
null
Yeah, the Nvidia stuff isn&#x27;t really made to be hacked on.<p>I&#x27;d check out the AMD side since you can at least have a full open source GPU stack to play with, and they make a modicum of effort to document their gpus.
null
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41,807,671
41,787,547
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null
41,808,160
comment
Negitivefrags
2024-10-11T10:27:57
null
None of that matters if you already bought the H100 and have no use for it. You might as well recoup as much money as you can on it.
null
null
41,808,136
41,805,446
null
[ 41808864, 41808281 ]
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null
41,808,161
story
null
2024-10-11T10:28:00
null
null
null
null
null
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null
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null
41,808,162
comment
3np
2024-10-11T10:28:00
null
Which would make it all the more interesting to look at.
null
null
41,802,760
41,798,359
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null
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null
41,808,163
comment
tmtvl
2024-10-11T10:28:09
null
Shamus Young had a gaming equivalent (unfortunately I can&#x27;t find the actual comic, the Internet Archive may have it, though): <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.shamusyoung.com&#x2F;twentysidedtale&#x2F;?p=9866" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.shamusyoung.com&#x2F;twentysidedtale&#x2F;?p=9866</a>
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null
41,805,001
41,799,068
null
null
null
null
41,808,164
comment
faggotbreath
2024-10-11T10:28:22
null
A nuke and a pave way? That’s like comparing a 22lr to a 155mm HE shell.
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null
41,808,109
41,807,681
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null
41,808,165
comment
tliltocatl
2024-10-11T10:28:26
null
There are 90% and then there are 90% more.
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null
41,807,877
41,805,706
null
[ 41808506 ]
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null
41,808,166
comment
airbreather
2024-10-11T10:28:32
null
They are also the sort of person that thinks the problem can defined by thinking about and describing wanted behaviour alone.
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null
41,798,783
41,765,594
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null
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null
41,808,167
comment
ktosobcy
2024-10-11T10:28:38
null
You are ignoring the fact that the world doesn&#x27;t end with the USA (and EU)... Even in LatAm (which is &quot;west&quot;) there is abundance of Chinese cars... In Africa it&#x27;s probably even more visible...
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null
41,806,519
41,805,706
null
null
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null
41,808,168
comment
ifwinterco
2024-10-11T10:28:49
null
Yep, it&#x27;s going to take time but eventually one day the vast majority of JS code in the wild will be strict mode and the non-strict stuff will be de facto deprecated and not expected to work everywhere
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null
41,807,249
41,787,041
null
null
null
null
41,808,169
comment
rajnathani
2024-10-11T10:28:50
null
From your bio, your company is Hot Aisle.<p>This company TensorWave covered by TechCrunch [0] this week sounds very similar, I almost thought it was the same! Anyway, best of luck, we need more AMD GPU compute.<p>[0] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;techcrunch.com&#x2F;2024&#x2F;10&#x2F;08&#x2F;tensorwave-claims-its-amd-powered-cloud-for-ai-will-give-nvidia-a-run-for-its-money&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;techcrunch.com&#x2F;2024&#x2F;10&#x2F;08&#x2F;tensorwave-claims-its-amd-...</a>
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null
41,807,088
41,805,446
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null
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null
41,808,170
comment
andreasmetsala
2024-10-11T10:28:59
null
And if nobody goes to see the interview, that’s an important signal to not waste time on doing them.
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null
41,803,887
41,801,300
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null
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null
41,808,171
comment
lupusreal
2024-10-11T10:29:02
null
Unnecessary and wasteful is a good way to describe shipping out of state milk into a state that has so many cows of their own. Do you think those trucks all run on pixie farts?
null
null
41,802,493
41,765,006
null
null
null
null
41,808,172
story
jmsflknr
2024-10-11T10:29:28
OpenAI's GPT Store Has Left Some Developers in the Lurch
null
https://www.wired.com/story/openai-gpt-store/
1
null
41,808,172
0
null
null
null
41,808,173
story
PaulHoule
2024-10-11T10:30:00
High CO2 levels are greening the drylands, but it's not good news
null
https://news.mongabay.com/podcast/high-co2-levels-are-greening-the-worlds-drylands-but-its-not-good-news/
1
null
41,808,173
0
null
null
null
41,808,174
comment
ascagnel_
2024-10-11T10:30:11
null
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;developer.apple.com&#x2F;games&#x2F;game-porting-toolkit&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;developer.apple.com&#x2F;games&#x2F;game-porting-toolkit&#x2F;</a>
null
null
41,805,690
41,799,068
null
[ 41810201 ]
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null
41,808,175
comment
edarchis
2024-10-11T10:30:18
null
Cross-compiling ? Aren&#x27;t M1 and Pi both ARM processors ? I&#x27;ve been building apps for my M1 to run on Pi without any issue. Some optimization options maybe ?
null
null
41,775,641
41,775,641
null
[ 41808323, 41808191 ]
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null
41,808,176
comment
akhileshwar09
2024-10-11T10:30:20
null
CANT HURT ME ! by david goggins
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null
41,759,206
41,759,206
null
null
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null
41,808,177
comment
joelthelion
2024-10-11T10:30:23
null
Realisticly speaking, is Asahi Linux usable right now for a random schmuck who just wants to use his computer?
null
null
41,799,068
41,799,068
null
[ 41808746 ]
null
null
41,808,178
comment
elihu
2024-10-11T10:30:31
null
I hope SpaceX does as you say and starts sending a lot of probes, but a lot really depends on the whims of Elon. There isn&#x27;t really a strong business case for scattering probes around the solar system. Starlink makes money. Selling launch capabilities to NASA makes money. Doing basic science? Establishing a Mars colony? Those sound more like the kind of thing that isn&#x27;t going to happen unless Elon insists they do it, and it seems like maybe he&#x27;s not as interested in space exploration these days as he is in trying to get Donald Trump elected to another term.
null
null
41,807,871
41,760,971
null
[ 41808923, 41808230, 41808409 ]
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null
41,808,179
comment
noch
2024-10-11T10:30:58
null
&gt; Same old nonsense story.<p>Most of the passionate (embittered? salty? flavourless?) critiques of Elon always sound like a confession: His critics can&#x27;t explain why he is successful, why his companies are successful, nor why he is wealthy. When they attempt an explanation, it&#x27;s less an explanation and more a dismissal: luck, other people, teams, theft, subsidies, corruption, &quot;the system is broken!&quot;, a technoaccelerationist cabal secretly pulling the levers of power.<p>But, fundamentally, the question whose answer eludes the majority of humans especially Elon&#x27;s critics is: <i>Why am I not as wealthy and relevant as Elon yet I&#x27;m obviously smarter and more ethical than he is?</i> (Their implicit answer is that &quot;life is unfair and doesn&#x27;t reward the best people.&quot;)<p>Because if any of his critics <i>actually</i> had a meaningful critique that corresponds to reality, they would simply build better products and companies, become billionaires themselves and exemplify rather than pontificate about a better mode of billionaire behaviour and grandeur of vision.
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null
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41,805,706
null
[ 41809034 ]
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story
healthypunk
2024-10-11T10:30:59
null
null
null
1
null
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41,808,181
comment
pfdietz
2024-10-11T10:31:11
null
The existence of liquid water on such bodies, particularly in the early solar system when such bodies were warmed by short lived radioactive decay, has strong implications for theories of the origin of life. It&#x27;s possible life originated in such a body, then later was seeded onto Earth (and Mars, and Venus) when impacts dispersed life-bearing fragments to later fall as meteorites. It&#x27;s also conceivable that life could have been seeded into the nascent solar system to colonize such bodies, then later spread to the planets.<p>This is relevant because the early origin of life on Earth is taken as evidence that origin of life is a fast, high probability process. But if its origin here depended on events that require such warm moist small bodies, then it may be that it either happened early or it wouldn&#x27;t happen as all, and such an inference would be invalid.
null
null
41,760,971
41,760,971
null
[ 41810537, 41809641, 41809322, 41809744 ]
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41,808,182
comment
syg
2024-10-11T10:31:17
null
Author here. I hear your feedback about unsafe blocks. Similar sentiment is shared by other delegates of the JS standards committee.<p>The main reason it is there today is to satisfy some delegates&#x27; requirement that we build in guardrails so as to naturally discourage authors from creating thread-unsafe public APIs and libraries by default. We&#x27;re exploring other ideas to try to satisfy that requirement without unsafe blocks.
null
null
41,801,835
41,787,041
null
[ 41810557, 41808823 ]
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null
41,808,183
comment
novitzmann
2024-10-11T10:31:19
null
Then ask yourself a question - how big of a support you gonna provide ? I would limit support hours to an annual amount you can accept, and treat larger needs beyond that limit as a separate development work order. Prepare a well-done documentation with examples, so you can say - for your own peace of mind - that support covers things not described in the documentation.
null
null
41,807,363
41,801,363
null
[ 41808321 ]
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null
41,808,184
comment
ktosobcy
2024-10-11T10:31:19
null
Yes, but imagine not having to deal with those ;)<p>Besides, in case of Spanish the spelling is more uniform. Aforementioned locales are mostly for GUIs and regional wording differences. And the thread started with &quot;unifying english spelling&quot; which is just a mess…
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null
41,803,468
41,787,647
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null
41,808,185
comment
somerandomqaguy
2024-10-11T10:31:20
null
I suppose if would depend on whether you believe that inaction leading to more death is more ethical then actively choosing to murder one life to save the other.<p>Let&#x27;s look at the same problem but swap out the actors. Say you have one man with a mortal wound to his heart, and another man with a mortal wound to his lungs. Both will probably die, both men have families, and neither wants to die. Is it ethical to murder one man without his consent and harvest the deceased&#x27;s organs to save the other?
null
null
41,806,034
41,804,460
null
[ 41808504 ]
null
null
41,808,186
comment
cynicalpeace
2024-10-11T10:31:55
null
Phenomenal choice. While 80 years is nice- it&#x27;s a blip on the timescale of history.<p>I personally think we&#x27;re a button click away from going back to the stone age. I know others will disagree, but it&#x27;s not something you wanna take a gamble on.<p>I think it&#x27;s one of the reasons we have to be self sustaining on other heavenly bodies.<p>And also why wars or proxy wars between nuclear powers are extremely foolish and should be stopped with great urgency.
null
null
41,807,681
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null
[ 41808340, 41808342, 41809566, 41808902, 41808209, 41808239, 41808350, 41808292 ]
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null
41,808,187
comment
null
2024-10-11T10:32:10
null
null
null
null
41,807,705
41,807,705
null
null
true
null
41,808,188
comment
GoblinSlayer
2024-10-11T10:32:15
null
Its adoption was hindered by patents.
null
null
41,805,303
41,801,883
null
null
null
null
41,808,189
comment
never_inline
2024-10-11T10:32:17
null
Those people haven&#x27;t used Java 11+ or Python with types.<p>Python with types is a double edged sword. If you can enforce other collaborators and SDKs use strict typing, it&#x27;s a very pleasant experience to write, coupled with Pydantic for defining POJO-like structs. For CLI tools Click + Poetry build system.<p>Java17+ type system is pretty good. Way better than Go in terms of dev experience. you may need a POJO generation tool (Lombok, Autovalue) and preferably validation libraries. I&#x27;d still write java over Go if efficiency and single binary is not a concern.
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null
41,807,609
41,801,415
null
null
null
null
41,808,190
comment
LightBug1
2024-10-11T10:32:41
null
a.k.a. Tsutomu &quot;Wolverine&quot; Yamaguchi
null
null
41,808,087
41,807,681
null
null
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41,808,191
comment
jcelerier
2024-10-11T10:32:55
null
If the app leverages the page size in some way you can get into very subtle crashes - app is built on M1 (with 16k page size), page size is stored in a constant in the binary because it&#x27;s a macro, then you trt to access the entire range of a page in a pi (4k pages) - and things break.
null
null
41,808,175
41,775,641
null
null
null
null
41,808,192
comment
Hikikomori
2024-10-11T10:33:19
null
Price?
null
null
41,808,117
41,775,641
null
[ 41808221 ]
null
null
41,808,193
comment
bomewish
2024-10-11T10:33:21
null
This exists in CeLLM and various other implementations. Well done on a smooth version. The sad thing is that when one clicks in an LLM populated cell, one cannot see&#x2F;edit the content as if it were normal text. One only gets the formula. So sad. Anyone think of a workaround ? Utility would be 10x otherwise.
null
null
41,786,584
41,786,584
null
null
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null
41,808,194
comment
ktosobcy
2024-10-11T10:33:41
null
&gt; Yeah but we in the Anglosphere have this wonderful phrase for people that get too hung up on it: “get over it.”<p>Unfortunately for the rest of the world outside of your beloved &quot;anglosphere&quot; using wrong spelling results in said &quot;anglosphereian&quot; being utterly butthurt.<p>Maybe the whole world should adopt universal language with saner spelling and leave english to anglosphere?
null
null
41,801,957
41,787,647
null
[ 41809746 ]
null
null
41,808,195
comment
Dalewyn
2024-10-11T10:33:46
null
&gt;the US purposefully left the Emperor in place with only a slap on the fingers<p>This was a deliberate political decision in an effort to not repeat the grave mistake of how post-WW1 Germany was handled which essentially led to WW2. Denying Japan of their identity and dignity would have risked an eventual WW3, and the US did not want to even entertain the possibility.<p>It also didn&#x27;t help that practically all of Japan were not going to see their Emperor deposed or worse; Japan was willing to compromise on literally everything <i>but</i> the Emperor in making peace with the US and the west, and the extended Imperial family along with all the other nobles thereof lost their titles and powers in the post-war occupation and restructuring.
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null
41,808,149
41,807,681
null
[ 41808397 ]
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41,808,196
comment
eviks
2024-10-11T10:34:04
null
The army of &quot;researched, data-backed experts&quot; behind you is imaginary. So instead of repeating the same appeal to an imaginary authority I&#x27;d advise you cite a single good UI research study where a slower site-specific shortcut is better that a more common faster one when &quot;time is of the essence&quot; (and whatever else you think is based on &quot;expert research&quot;)
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null
41,808,062
41,793,597
null
null
null
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41,808,197
comment
pvg
2024-10-11T10:34:06
null
Show HN is for things that can be tried now so you could post it as a Show HN after you&#x27;re past the pure spec phase or as is but without the Show HN - take a look at <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;showhn.html">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;showhn.html</a>
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41,807,705
41,807,705
null
[ 41808354, 41808503 ]
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41,808,198
comment
ryandrake
2024-10-11T10:34:13
null
That’s the problem with HN comment threads: if you try to make a general point and use broad generalities, people will object and point out counterexamples to nit pick against those generalities. But, instead if you go into specifics, people will nit pick those specifics. You can’t win. It’s an inevitable part of arguing with software engineers who get paid to find the missing negative sign in 1M lines if code: you’re going up against pedants and nit pickers.<p>I understood OP’s general point as: bringing religion, particularly US Christianity, into life and death decisions is fraught due to its practitioners’ <i>general</i> and <i>typical</i> inability to separate fantasy from reality. With the disclaimer that there are always degrees and exceptions. Sure, it’s a spicy take, but I don’t think he needs to get piled on like he has in this thread.
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null
41,806,593
41,786,768
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null
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null
41,808,199
comment
gwurk
2024-10-11T10:34:15
null
Do you actually believe that most western countries use a two party system?<p>Do you use a different definition of two party system than I do, when I say 2 party system I mean &quot;first past the post&quot;-systems, see:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;First-past-the-post_voting" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;First-past-the-post_voting</a><p>and for which countries use that system: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;First-past-the-post_voting#&#x2F;media&#x2F;File:Countries_That_Use_a_First_Past_the_Post_Voting_System.png" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;First-past-the-post_voting#&#x2F;me...</a>
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41,807,614
41,804,460
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