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41,809,500 | comment | enragedcacti | 2024-10-11T13:52:18 | null | Ignoring for a moment that three is still more than two, drivers in the US don't love it but its usually fine if you are respectful and have a reason, especially in an Uber or Lyft. Elsewhere its more common to sit up front or even considered rude not to. Regardless, I think your argument speaks to my point. Even if the cybertaxi compares similarly in capability to a traditional taxi, Tesla isn't positioning it as one, they are positioning it as the vehicle of the future but the design betrays a complete lack of imagination for what that future will look like beyond playing Cyberpunk on your commute. Why should we be comparing it solely against the 2% niche of vehicle miles in ridehailing instead of the other 98% that its promising to make obsolete? | null | null | 41,809,047 | 41,805,706 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,809,501 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T13:52:21 | null | null | null | null | 41,809,455 | 41,809,455 | null | null | true | null |
41,809,502 | story | ezekg | 2024-10-11T13:52:36 | Balancing Makers and Takers to Scale and Sustain Open Source | null | https://dri.es/balancing-makers-and-takers-to-scale-and-sustain-open-source | 1 | null | 41,809,502 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,809,503 | comment | seanc | 2024-10-11T13:52:36 | null | Maybe an apochryphal story, but a famous orchestra conductor was talking to the players before a Mozart review show and had this to say:<p>"Look, I know that professionals like you have been playing this music since you were kids and don't find it very inspiring anymore. And I'll be honest, we do this material to sell tickets and make money for our other more challenging repertoire.<p>But if you're having trouble finding your passion for this show, please remember that it's a full house, so you can be sure that for some of those people, this will be the first time they hear this music.<p>And for others in the audience, it will be their last." | null | null | 41,801,300 | 41,801,300 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,504 | comment | chrisjj | 2024-10-11T13:52:36 | null | > There is something about RISC-V that really inspires lots of hackers<p>"Not Arm" :) | null | null | 41,808,938 | 41,808,696 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,505 | comment | jarsin | 2024-10-11T13:52:39 | null | Healthcare is the top sector for jobs. Software development is at the bottom. | null | null | 41,809,443 | 41,809,443 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,506 | comment | beretguy | 2024-10-11T13:52:43 | null | Have fun playing with your license after company shuts down game’s central server.<p>I personally don’t care about buying licenses. I’m interested in buying games. I’m not finding licenses particularly fun or useful for… anything, really. I could print them out and wipe a… table with them, but paper towels are better suited for that purpose. | null | null | 41,809,405 | 41,809,193 | null | [
41810423
] | null | null |
41,809,507 | comment | amelius | 2024-10-11T13:53:05 | null | I can see how the information can be useful from a big-data perspective (finding correlations between the data of thousands of people), but for individuals I'm not convinced yet. For example, how do you know if a spike in BP is normal, or if it's only happening in your specific case and it needs attention? | null | null | 41,809,340 | 41,799,324 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,809,508 | comment | cherryteastain | 2024-10-11T13:53:09 | null | I'm saying that the "not trying to win the datacenter GPU market" bit is not quite correct, as they had a lot of products trying to address that market. Agree that their offerings today are a marked improvement over the previous ones though. | null | null | 41,809,422 | 41,808,351 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,509 | story | jnmakuru | 2024-10-11T13:53:14 | null | null | null | 1 | null | 41,809,509 | null | [
41809510
] | null | true |
41,809,510 | comment | jnmakuru | 2024-10-11T13:53:14 | null | Test Objectives:<p>1) Understand the limitations of traditional networks and the problems SDN aims to solve.
2) Explain the fundamental principles and architectural components of SDN.
3) Describe the role of OpenFlow and its importance in SDN implementation. | null | null | 41,809,509 | 41,809,509 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,511 | comment | adamc | 2024-10-11T13:53:33 | null | I get that life experiences give you biases. Those of us who've been blamed for things we definitely didn't do might have the opposite bias.<p>Either way, organizations that cannot communicate why they took certain actions are not to be trusted. | null | null | 41,809,354 | 41,808,917 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,512 | comment | neom | 2024-10-11T13:53:53 | null | Boy I'm never going to live that one down around here huh? Hackernews always going to keep you honest, ha. :D | null | null | 41,809,471 | 41,805,446 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,513 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T13:53:53 | null | null | null | null | 41,809,431 | 41,809,431 | null | null | true | null |
41,809,514 | comment | carlmr | 2024-10-11T13:54:04 | null | >The first time I ever used C# was probably version 5? Maybe? We're on version 12 now and there's so much stuff in there that sometimes modern C# code from experts looks unreadable to me.<p>The funny thing is if you used F# over a decade ago almost all the C# improvements seem familiar. They were lifted from F#, some of them badly.<p>And I know F# borrows a lot from OCaml. But it's hard to fathom why we need to use the badly adopted F# features in C# instead of just getting F# as a main Microsoft adopted language. | null | null | 41,802,034 | 41,787,041 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,515 | comment | morpheuskafka | 2024-10-11T13:54:12 | null | Don't you actually need to set something in the text editor to save it as UTF-8 in the first place if you are going to put that tag? Wouldn't Notepad for example use UTF-16 by default like the rest of Windows? | null | null | 41,806,723 | 41,801,334 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,516 | comment | oasisbob | 2024-10-11T13:54:21 | null | Assuming rural areas have less fiber availability isn't always a good assumption.<p>In NW Washington state at least, the rural counties (Whatcom, Island, Skagit, etc) have had a robust market in dark fiber for over two decades.<p>The normal telcos weren't responsive to need, so private carriers picked up the slack. When I was last involved in this market, you could get a P2P strand, including reasonable buildout, for less than a cost of a T1 line with a two-year commit.<p>The tiny four-branch credit union I worked for had dedicated fiber loops between all our locations, no big deal. It was great. | null | null | 41,807,924 | 41,805,446 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,517 | comment | aaron695 | 2024-10-11T13:54:26 | null | [dead] | null | null | 41,802,939 | 41,802,939 | null | null | null | true |
41,809,518 | comment | seanc | 2024-10-11T13:54:34 | null | Now I'm wondering how well calibrated those automatic public cuffs are in the first place... | null | null | 41,809,402 | 41,799,324 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,519 | comment | rcarmo | 2024-10-11T13:54:38 | null | I don't get why iOS doesn't have filesystem notebooks on the comparison table. | null | null | 41,808,943 | 41,808,943 | null | [
41809990,
41809656
] | null | null |
41,809,520 | comment | hgomersall | 2024-10-11T13:54:54 | null | Right, so I suggest now you're highlighting your lack of understanding. What do you mean by "unsound money"? | null | null | 41,809,378 | 41,780,569 | null | [
41809575
] | null | null |
41,809,521 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T13:55:08 | null | null | null | null | 41,809,387 | 41,809,387 | null | null | true | null |
41,809,522 | comment | ickelbawd | 2024-10-11T13:55:15 | null | If making one mistake is enough to put one off forever then they’re really not going to like programming which is just a sequence of writing bugs and fixing bugs. :) | null | null | 41,807,494 | 41,801,334 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,523 | comment | throwaw12 | 2024-10-11T13:55:17 | null | This is in general a good advise, but not a practical at a times.<p>For example, you can read all of the Linux source code to become expert in most areas: networking, scheduling,... (except AI/ML) But difficult to achieve without a good structure or you can read a book about Linux kernel development (e.g. Linux Kernel development, old book by Robert Love) and get more up to speed | null | null | 41,809,457 | 41,809,423 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,524 | comment | ollivera | 2024-10-11T13:55:46 | null | Initially, I didn’t like having the tables as images, but using GPT Vision might be a more accurate way to obtain the markdown. I was also considering using the Adobe Extraction API to extract markdown from the CSV file. So, I will try your API over the weekend and see the results. | null | null | 41,804,341 | 41,804,341 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,525 | comment | technothrasher | 2024-10-11T13:55:46 | null | I'll put up the oriental bittersweet that is slowly taking over and pulling down all my trees as a contender in that fight. | null | null | 41,808,977 | 41,780,229 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,526 | comment | egypturnash | 2024-10-11T13:56:38 | null | Magazines and guidebooks.<p>Video game magazines would regularly publish short walkthroughs and maps, as well as tips on common places to be stuck in popular games, and cheat codes.<p>Guidebooks were found in stores next to the games, they were typically slim, full-color affairs full of screenshots and production art, with complete lists of all the stuff you could do in the game. Full walkthroughs, item statistic charts, locations of the 52 Secret Gears you need to collect to build the Wind-Up Sword to achieve the secret ending, etc, etc. Here's a photo of someone's collection of a bunch of them: <a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/originalxbox/comments/12rsvll/seems_no_one_cares_to_collect_these_so_i_am_doing/" rel="nofollow">https://www.reddit.com/r/originalxbox/comments/12rsvll/seems...</a> | null | null | 41,805,566 | 41,797,719 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,527 | comment | pfortuny | 2024-10-11T13:57:27 | null | My mom almost died from a hemorrage after my birth… Mu granma was there and noticed the sheets getiting red… This was of course many years ago, no monitors etc. | null | null | 41,804,796 | 41,786,768 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,528 | comment | ocdtrekkie | 2024-10-11T13:57:30 | null | Microsoft will be selling games on Android next month, Epic will be next year. The solution is competition, and we can thank Tim Sweeney for finally making it happen on mobile. | null | null | 41,808,917 | 41,808,917 | null | [
41809968
] | null | null |
41,809,529 | comment | bentice | 2024-10-11T13:57:35 | null | Data is the wrong approach to develop reasoning. You we don't want LLM's to simply memorize 3x3 = 9 we want them to understand that 3 + 3 + 3 = 9 therefore 3x3 = 9 (obviously a trivial example). If they have developed reasoning very few examples should be needed.<p>The way I see it reasoning is actually the ability of the model to design and train smaller models that can learn with very few examples. | null | null | 41,809,198 | 41,808,683 | null | [
41809838
] | null | null |
41,809,530 | comment | danso | 2024-10-11T13:57:48 | null | > <i>A hypothetical [email protected] probably would prefer keeping that capitalization over "[email protected]".</i><p>And they can keep that capitalization when they type in their login or otherwise share their email address with the world. Are you suggesting that this Dr. Abby user would be offended that the website’s authentication infrastructure ends up working with it as lowercase? | null | null | 41,809,337 | 41,801,883 | null | [
41810463
] | null | null |
41,809,531 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T13:57:55 | null | null | null | null | 41,809,357 | 41,809,357 | null | null | true | null |
41,809,532 | comment | adamc | 2024-10-11T13:57:57 | null | Makes me think of ecology, and creatures (e.g., mites) that have high risk/high reward strategies. Sometimes you find a bubble of food and have lots of offspring! But mostly you die.<p>I can't remember where I read about this -- DHH, maybe -- but it's also the difference between going for a sustainable business or venture capital. VCs don't care if most of their investments die horribly as long as a few make them rich. But the people who work for those businesses might care.<p>Sometimes it's better for your own mental health to avoid these "opportunities". | null | null | 41,809,211 | 41,808,917 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,533 | comment | innocentoldguy | 2024-10-11T13:58:16 | null | The reasons I reach for Elixir and Phoenix over any other languages and frameworks for web development are:<p>1. Excellent tooling (e.g., Mix, IEx, Formatter, testing, debugging, Credo, ExDoc, Livebook, etc.)<p>2. Excellent concurrency and fault tolerance.<p>3. Ability to handle extremely large numbers of simultaneous connections in an efficient manner.<p>4. Lightweight processes that handle both vertical and horizontal scaling.<p>5. Phoenix channels.<p>6. Full-stack development support.<p>7. Supervision trees.<p>8. Macro support.<p>9. Interoperability with Erlang.<p>10. One of the most supportive communities I've experienced.<p>11. Excellent error messages and debug support.<p>12. Excellent testing framework.<p>13. Good support in my editor of choice (Helix).<p>14. Mike and Nicole at Pragmatic Studio (for teaching new hires who don't know Elixir). | null | null | 41,809,167 | 41,809,167 | null | [
41810592
] | null | null |
41,809,534 | comment | dev1ycan | 2024-10-11T13:58:30 | null | I don't understand the idiocracy we live in, it is beyond obvious not just that the stock market is a bubble but ESPECIALLY the AI related stocks are a massive bubble, when it pops, and it will, it is going to be very very ugly, yet people keep pouring in, as Sabine said it, it's starting to look like particle physics where they keep asking for bigger colliders, just because you have a bigger collider, if your methodology is flawed you aren't gonna get any more significant returns.<p>Eventually they will run out of exponential cash to pour in, and investors will start asking questions, stocks are already valued at 60x+ their earnings, whenever it pops you don't want to be the one who bought the top.<p>Guess it's still gonna take a while more for the layman to realize the issues with LLMs, but it'll happen. | null | null | 41,808,683 | 41,808,683 | null | [
41809830,
41810493
] | null | null |
41,809,535 | comment | ruune | 2024-10-11T13:58:30 | null | Not a lawyer, I'm guessing here.
I'd assume the intention matters a lot. Scrape bots don't intend to cause trouble, they intend to get your data (for free). Same way as when some famous person tells people on Twitter to visit a website or when some poor blog gets the hug of death from HN. The intention wasn't to bring down the site.<p>Aside from that: is DDosing actually illegal (under US law)? | null | null | 41,805,486 | 41,797,719 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,536 | comment | talideon | 2024-10-11T13:58:36 | null | I believe you have Osiris access at least since Patch 7, when they opened things up to modders. | null | null | 41,808,076 | 41,800,764 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,537 | comment | tgv | 2024-10-11T13:58:44 | null | I'm sure we fall back on easy/fast associations and memories to answer. It's the way of least resistance. The text you quote bears more than a superficial similarity to the old riddle (there's really nothing else that looks like it), but that version also stipulates that the father has died. That adds "gendered" (what an ugly word) information to the question, a fact which is missed when recalling this particular answer. Basically, LLMs are stochastic parrots. | null | null | 41,809,441 | 41,808,683 | null | [
41810177
] | null | null |
41,809,538 | comment | randomdata | 2024-10-11T13:58:45 | null | Excel is the best first language if you just want a world full of computer programmers.<p>But there is an implicit context here around those who want to program alongside the professionals. That comes with wanting some deeper understanding of the machine. | null | null | 41,803,016 | 41,787,041 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,539 | story | antoniodipinto | 2024-10-11T13:58:48 | null | null | null | 1 | null | 41,809,539 | null | null | null | true |
41,809,540 | comment | zeristor | 2024-10-11T13:58:55 | null | Tesla share price seems to be down 9% today, at the moment. | null | null | 41,809,390 | 41,809,390 | null | [
41809607
] | null | null |
41,809,541 | story | fastprocrypto | 2024-10-11T13:59:01 | null | null | null | 1 | null | 41,809,541 | null | [
41809542
] | null | true |
41,809,542 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T13:59:01 | null | null | null | null | 41,809,541 | 41,809,541 | null | null | true | true |
41,809,543 | comment | dunekid | 2024-10-11T13:59:05 | null | As if the Genocidal overgrown miltary base will be gone. It will be protected at any cost. Like this article to sow hate and fear, at the cost of lesser journalistic integrity. | null | null | 41,804,152 | 41,803,922 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,544 | comment | s-macke | 2024-10-11T13:59:25 | null | > perhaps humans also mostly reason using previous examples rather than thinking from scratch.<p>We do, but we can generalize better. When you exchange "hospital" with "medical centre" or change the sentence structure and ask humans, the statistics would not be that different.<p>But for LLMs, that might make a lot of difference. | null | null | 41,809,441 | 41,808,683 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,545 | comment | HexDecOctBin | 2024-10-11T13:59:31 | null | Is there a embeddable Prolog implementation (à la Lua) that can be linked in to an application as a scripting language? | null | null | 41,800,764 | 41,800,764 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,546 | story | yamrzou | 2024-10-11T13:59:32 | Why you're so tired [video] | null | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gzLPa6NbcrE | 3 | null | 41,809,546 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,809,547 | story | walkersumida | 2024-10-11T14:00:07 | Show HN: AWS-SSO-Google – Acquire AWS STS Credentials via Google Workspace SAML | Acquire AWS STS credentials via Google Workspace SAML in a browser. | https://github.com/walkersumida/aws-sso-google | 1 | null | 41,809,547 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,809,548 | comment | AlotOfReading | 2024-10-11T14:00:16 | null | Look upthread. I would reuse an existing vehicle platform because it's cheaper at any realistic volume. | null | null | 41,807,540 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,549 | comment | lazide | 2024-10-11T14:00:48 | null | I think what you’re referring to is that a lot of traditional ‘hard’ science we are familiar with came out of a period of time when the most important thing was being provably correct (or not) - and it mattered in concrete ways - and so was enforced pretty heavily. Aka ~ early 1900’s to mid cold-war. When hard science and industrialization was a front and center, existential thing for society.<p>A lot of science (both back then, but especially now) is less hard and is more optimized towards being accepted. Psychology, Anthropology, Geology, Paleontology, many fields of Biology, and many others are all about social proof, since really what else <i>can</i> you use? There are too many lines of judgement that have to be drawn for any of it to make sense in a hard ‘verifiable’ way.<p>And hard science still requires reproducibility, but a lot of that is getting more niche and harder to verify, rather than more directly verifiable, so it is also falling prey to ‘acceptability’ vs ‘verifiable correctness’.<p>Going back even further Historically, it was very hard to afford verifiable correctness, so very few people could actually do it. Pretty much either very rich people, or people with rich rich sponsors - which also often required or
provided social proof/acceptance.<p>Religion helps wrap the whole thing up in a way that is marketable, and secrecy protects the ‘trade secrets’ so any sort of professionalism can be supported for further work or development. And because people need to eat. | null | null | 41,809,451 | 41,776,631 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,550 | comment | amtamt | 2024-10-11T14:00:49 | null | Should be repeatedly posted by some automation, every few months. | null | null | 41,803,342 | 41,800,036 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,551 | story | kingkongjaffa | 2024-10-11T14:00:56 | Signs of Diminishing Returns with LLMs | It has been some time since the last major step change in LLMs.<p>The latest round of models are not huge step changes this time around, but more employing certain steps such as CoT.<p>For open-AI the o1 model adds a new 'thinking' step to get better answers, o1-mini is cheaper and they say çompetitive with o1 in some areas. So the difference between the two models is not that vast.<p>For Anthropic, claude opus and claude sonnet are not too different. Opus is meant to be the most powerful model yet even on a paid plan the default option is sonnet and Opus is slower and only marginally better at times.<p>Until something like GPT-5 or Claude Opus 4 is out, for now it seems like the 'throw massive compute' at GPT architectures has been taken already pretty far, and there's no reason to expect transformational changes in capabilities from subsequent models AFAICT. | null | 2 | null | 41,809,551 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,809,552 | comment | crazymalhavoc | 2024-10-11T14:01:00 | null | From my point of view, that's the whole point of wearing a continuous biometric monitor so that you can see the normal variation. These one off medical tests that people use to make major life and health decisions seems kinda crazy to me. | null | null | 41,800,950 | 41,799,324 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,553 | comment | MacsHeadroom | 2024-10-11T14:01:08 | null | I see a whitespace expert, a punctuation expert, and a first word expert. It's interesting to see how the experts specialize. | null | null | 41,808,745 | 41,804,829 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,554 | comment | canterburry | 2024-10-11T14:01:16 | null | Task Fails | null | null | 41,804,341 | 41,804,341 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,555 | story | sherlockxu | 2024-10-11T14:01:32 | Top Open-Source Vision Language Models | null | https://www.bentoml.com/blog/multimodal-ai-a-guide-to-open-source-vision-language-models | 1 | null | 41,809,555 | 0 | [
41809621
] | null | null |
41,809,556 | comment | fuzztester | 2024-10-11T14:01:33 | null | I agree.<p>What desktop make and model do you use? | null | null | 41,802,049 | 41,792,570 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,557 | comment | bob1029 | 2024-10-11T14:01:40 | null | > we investigate the fragility of mathematical reasoning in these models and demonstrate that their performance significantly deteriorates as the number of clauses in a question increases. We hypothesize that this decline is due to the fact that current LLMs are not capable of genuine logical reasoning<p>I'd offer a simpler explanation: Tokenization.<p>If you tokenize "12345 * 27271" you will get the following:<p><pre><code> "123", "45", " *", " ", "272", "71"
</code></pre>
The statistical likelihood that any of these tokens predicts any of the others is completely meaningless in the context of simple arithmetic.<p>You can argue that this is where tool use comes in (and I would be inclined to agree), but I don't think this bodes well for "genuine logical reasoning". | null | null | 41,808,683 | 41,808,683 | null | [
41809649,
41809716,
41809754,
41809655
] | null | null |
41,809,558 | comment | piva00 | 2024-10-11T14:01:49 | null | Or Google could use some of the US$ 50b of profit in a quarter to have better systems and human support for this kind of automated bullshit.<p>How many more hoops will people have to jump through because a company holding a very significant share of the market refuses to provide a basic level of support to people, people that are helping to enrich Google's own ecosystem by developing apps for their platform? | null | null | 41,809,304 | 41,808,917 | null | [
41810425,
41810466
] | null | null |
41,809,559 | comment | morpheuskafka | 2024-10-11T14:01:53 | null | > tiny mistakes like 1 typo in a file name causing everything to break, which can put someone off coding forever<p>One typo in your math or chemistry homework will quite likely give you the wrong final answer, but hopefully that wouldn't "put you off science" forever. Otherwise none of us would be here as I'm sure we have all made hundreds or more.<p>Are we not expecting students to be resilient and solve problems anymore? One of the Common Core standards that used to be on the classroom wall was "persevere in problem solving." I say it's great for students to make a few easy mistakes like forgetting a semicolon to get in the habit of reading error messages and troubleshooting while they are still straightforward to fix. | null | null | 41,807,494 | 41,801,334 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,560 | comment | banditelol | 2024-10-11T14:02:11 | null | I'm curious what kind of quick calculation do you usually use llm for?<p>Edited for clarity | null | null | 41,809,365 | 41,808,683 | null | [
41809983
] | null | null |
41,809,561 | comment | dunekid | 2024-10-11T14:02:12 | null | I don't think anything will ever be embarrassing to the Genocidal regime. And no damage will be done either, as long as its creators-protectors goes out of their way to protect it. | null | null | 41,807,470 | 41,792,500 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,562 | comment | itishappy | 2024-10-11T14:02:20 | null | Noita is a game based around the concept of a chemistry engine running at the pixel level. It uses a custom rules engine written in C++.<p>It's one of the more interesting games I have ever played.<p><a href="https://store.steampowered.com/app/881100/Noita/" rel="nofollow">https://store.steampowered.com/app/881100/Noita/</a><p><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=prXuyMCgbTc" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=prXuyMCgbTc</a> | null | null | 41,809,197 | 41,800,764 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,563 | story | call_me_al | 2024-10-11T14:02:20 | Trends: A mobile-friendly way to see the top trending CVEs in news and social | null | https://trends.cytidel.com/ | 1 | null | 41,809,563 | 1 | [
41809564
] | null | null |
41,809,564 | comment | call_me_al | 2024-10-11T14:02:20 | null | A free resource that can hopefully help some busy vulnerability analysts to quickly identify the top trending CVEs on news and social media.<p>Includes emerging threats not yet in NVD and CISA KEV vulnerabilities.<p>It's pretty lightweight to begin with, but we're hoping to roll out more features soon. Any feedback greatly appreciated. | null | null | 41,809,563 | 41,809,563 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,565 | comment | AlgorithmicTime | 2024-10-11T14:02:31 | null | [dead] | null | null | 41,805,180 | 41,786,768 | null | null | null | true |
41,809,566 | comment | EasyMark | 2024-10-11T14:03:02 | null | So like usual I offer up "what's your alternative" ? Is it to ignore Russian's invasion of countries? Ignore Iran's chaos it wants to sew constantly in the Middle East? It's easy to say "just be peaceful" but history shows that countries are not peaceful towards one another, they constantly want to take other's resources, or force their way of life on others, or settle some vague issue they have with another country (or people there). I think most people would love if countries would just stop attacking others. right now we don't have the tech to live on "other bodies", that is pie in the sky. I would love if nation-states just stopped the nonsense and were good to one another and their inhabitants, but that has never been the case. | null | null | 41,808,186 | 41,807,681 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,567 | story | surprisetalk | 2024-10-11T14:03:07 | The case of the default thread pool heuristic | null | https://roadrunnertwice.dreamwidth.org/601085.html | 1 | null | 41,809,567 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,809,568 | comment | jncfhnb | 2024-10-11T14:04:02 | null | You don’t get the law and order unless the government is able to derive power from an accepting populace. | null | null | 41,794,355 | 41,780,569 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,569 | comment | janice1999 | 2024-10-11T14:04:04 | null | > I’m not saying it’s the author’s fault<p>>the author’s name is atypical<p>I would like to know what you consider a "typical" name for the 2+ billion Android users. | null | null | 41,809,304 | 41,808,917 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,570 | story | gorkmckr | 2024-10-11T14:04:14 | null | null | null | 1 | null | 41,809,570 | null | null | null | true |
41,809,571 | comment | MichaelZuo | 2024-10-11T14:04:34 | null | In any possible scenario, be it quality, quantity, and so on, there has to be some advantage of some kind for the trade to happen in the first place. | null | null | 41,804,404 | 41,799,016 | null | [
41810483
] | null | null |
41,809,572 | comment | psd1 | 2024-10-11T14:04:38 | null | The article doesn't mention my train for loving TypedDict.<p>I worked on a python app built by a man with a stronger will to succeed than ability to code.<p>Data was passed as dicts. Many methods (in the god object, natch) destructured, unwrapped or mutated before passing the new dict to some other method.<p>TypedDict allowed me to annotate these shitty dicts. It became possible to reason about the code without spending two hours tracing code paths.<p>The real solution is to be better at code. But, given an app written by a dict fetishist, it's a pretty good solution. | null | null | 41,801,415 | 41,801,415 | null | [
41809599
] | null | null |
41,809,573 | comment | einarfd | 2024-10-11T14:04:43 | null | My problem with this puzzle, is how do you know that Alice and her brothers share both parents?<p>Is it not correct English to call two people who share one parent, sisters, or brothers?<p>I guess I could be misguided by my native Norwegian where you have to preamble the word with "hell" (full), or "halv" (half), if you want to specify the number of shared parents. | null | null | 41,809,257 | 41,808,683 | null | [
41810198,
41809642
] | null | null |
41,809,574 | comment | rgbrgb | 2024-10-11T14:04:44 | null | agree, this statement should be in the docs. didn’t realize app router wasn’t intended for my use case | null | null | 41,806,254 | 41,803,327 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,575 | comment | willcipriano | 2024-10-11T14:04:51 | null | I see no point in arguing further as what you suggest is entirely a pipe dream. | null | null | 41,809,520 | 41,780,569 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,576 | comment | ilaksh | 2024-10-11T14:04:53 | null | That makes the whole conclusion obviously false.<p>I don't really understand why, but I think we are going to see total denial from a significant percentage of the population all the way up to and past the point where many average mathematicians and software engineers cannot in any way compete with AI.<p>We already are reportedly getting pretty close with o1 (not o1-preview).<p>There are also new paradigms for machine learning and hardware in the pipeline that will continue to provide orders of magnitude performance gains and new capabilities in the next 5-10 years.<p>Many people still claim that "self driving cars don't exist", in so many words, even though they are deployed in multiple cities. | null | null | 41,809,429 | 41,808,683 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,577 | comment | kvemkon | 2024-10-11T14:04:53 | null | For a value solution I'd take then an ASUS B650E/X670E mainboard (with PCIe 5.0 x16 and ECC support) for half the price.<p>But I'm not aware of a value 400 GbE NIC. Mellanox ConnectX-7 400G costs more than 3x the CPU. | null | null | 41,806,415 | 41,802,254 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,578 | comment | djkivi | 2024-10-11T14:05:07 | null | "We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." - William J. Casey, CIA Director (1981)<p><a href="https://naacp.org/articles/spread-disinformation-and-how-we-respond" rel="nofollow">https://naacp.org/articles/spread-disinformation-and-how-we-...</a> | null | null | 41,807,121 | 41,807,121 | null | [
41809964
] | null | null |
41,809,579 | comment | yyyk | 2024-10-11T14:05:20 | null | It would have been more neat if he could set it up as a TTY device and print that way. | null | null | 41,742,210 | 41,742,210 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,580 | comment | tb_technical | 2024-10-11T14:05:20 | null | This is why I'll always buy cheap used cars - they already have a history of running. All they need is intensive oil changes and occasional part replacement for a couple years before I move onto my next used car.<p>I avoid all the whizbang rent seeking bullshit just by driving horrible old cars.<p>I really hope someone makes a conversion kit for the computer in these cars. It would suck to be out on a new car, and just have a brick sitting in your driveway. | null | null | 41,802,219 | 41,802,219 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,581 | story | clickzyn | 2024-10-11T14:05:21 | I have a quick question for you | I would like to create a solution that matches e-commerce entrepreneurs in pairs and connects them with digital marketing agencies.<p>I feel like this idea might be a dumb idea. What do you think? | null | 1 | null | 41,809,581 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,809,582 | comment | AlotOfReading | 2024-10-11T14:05:33 | null | "Strictly conforming" has a specific meaning in the standard, including that all observable outputs of a <i>program</i> should not depend on implementation defined behavior like the precision of floating point computations. | null | null | 41,808,231 | 41,757,701 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,583 | comment | fragmede | 2024-10-11T14:05:58 | null | complaining costs $0 | null | null | 41,809,481 | 41,808,917 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,584 | comment | shortrounddev2 | 2024-10-11T14:06:03 | null | Very cool, but should be bigger on desktop, it's hard to read | null | null | 41,809,469 | 41,809,469 | null | [
41810074
] | null | null |
41,809,585 | comment | nusl | 2024-10-11T14:06:13 | null | I like the strange little chat function. It's quite cute and something I haven't seen before. | null | null | 41,809,469 | 41,809,469 | null | [
41809685,
41809891
] | null | null |
41,809,586 | comment | yjftsjthsd-h | 2024-10-11T14:06:26 | null | So you want me to go spend money on a fancy new monitor... because by having a big enough desk and with a lot of tweaking, I can negate the extra pixels and get back to what I have now? (A lot of tweaking also includes having to jump through hoops when doing screen shares) | null | null | 41,807,316 | 41,800,602 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,587 | comment | deafpolygon | 2024-10-11T14:06:34 | null | This might be an unpopular take, but I'm tired of all these Markdown text editors. It almost feels like a cop-out at this point. Ever since text editors started supporting Markdown, we've gotten away from all of these great rich-text editors. Apple Notes is an example of a notetaking application "done right", albeit with fewer features. It's enjoyable to use and offers good UI for attaching files. It certainly is not without its flaws, however. Obsidian gets really close. I bet the devs could go all the way.<p>I want something WYSIWYG-like, without dealing with the underlying mechanisms... give me rich-text on the front and save the file in Markdown behind the scenes. I hardly care, as long as there is a robust export option built-in.<p></end rant> | null | null | 41,808,943 | 41,808,943 | null | [
41809761,
41810121,
41809738,
41810016,
41809870,
41810069
] | null | null |
41,809,588 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T14:06:44 | null | null | null | null | 41,809,395 | 41,809,193 | null | null | true | null |
41,809,589 | comment | TobTobXX | 2024-10-11T14:07:03 | null | Yes, I was one time suddebly getting whine ads on an E-Mail for a service I signed up. I contacted the service (rather unfriendly) and they apologized and the unwanted E-Mails stopped. | null | null | 41,801,021 | 41,792,500 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,590 | comment | datameta | 2024-10-11T14:07:09 | null | The book A Beautiful Question explores this topic quite well. | null | null | 41,809,426 | 41,776,631 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,591 | comment | wavemode | 2024-10-11T14:07:24 | null | Placebos have been studied. Most studies have found that, while placebos are effective for treating pain, they are mostly not effective outside of that, when compared to receiving no treatment at all.<p>Some people really do become spontaneously cured of diseases, yes - it happens all the time, and is something worth studying further. But the idea that the placebo effect is what causes it, is not really well-founded. | null | null | 41,807,432 | 41,780,328 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,592 | comment | dunekid | 2024-10-11T14:07:25 | null | >i hate how Zionism has become a bad word<p>What do you consider worse? The Genocide of the people of Gaza and the occupation? Or that the Zionism is now a bad word? | null | null | 41,801,236 | 41,792,500 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,593 | comment | trq01758 | 2024-10-11T14:07:32 | null | Simplicity, it's a modern MOS 6502. Base RISC-V has even less instructions than 6502. | null | null | 41,808,938 | 41,808,696 | null | [
41810407
] | null | null |
41,809,594 | comment | qqtt | 2024-10-11T14:07:38 | null | When it comes to comparing market cap, the more apt business relevant to AMD's MI line is Nvidia's data center division, and investors are probably rightly assessing that AMD will not dent Nvidia's market position any time soon. That said, AMD's data center GPU is growing at an extremely healthy pace and enjoys high profit margins, so they have proven their ability to execute in this space to a degree and as a business it shows a promising future.<p>When looking at the market cap, there are three main pillars of valuation - revenue growth, profit growth, and net income. If all three are growing, you are an industry darling. If two are growing, you are still likely to be valued highly. If you have only one, you are much riskier. If you have none, it's a red flag.<p>As of the latest earnings report, AMD profit, revenue and net income are all increasing. Intel, they are all decreasing. If analysts assume trends hold, AMD can grow into its valuation and Intel is currently heading towards being worth nothing unless they change their business. Simply put, a business that is losing all three of revenue, profit margin, and net income is simply headed on the wrong path for investors, and will be punished in an outsized way when it comes to predicting it's future value (ie, market cap). | null | null | 41,808,970 | 41,808,351 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,595 | comment | traceroute66 | 2024-10-11T14:07:51 | null | Worth pointing out for balance that Tresorit are aware of the paper and have published a statement on their LinkedIn[1].<p>[1] <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/posts/tresorit_end-to-end-encrypted-cloud-storage-in-the-activity-7250388407380504576-EaX5" rel="nofollow">https://www.linkedin.com/posts/tresorit_end-to-end-encrypted...</a> | null | null | 41,803,220 | 41,798,359 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,596 | story | georgehill | 2024-10-11T14:08:05 | Scaling Laws for Diffusion Transformers | null | https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.08184 | 1 | null | 41,809,596 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,809,597 | comment | wang_li | 2024-10-11T14:08:07 | null | Yeah. There are plenty there that would convert a yes to a no. Many of them give the impression of lawyering and make me think the person knows they will routinely act on the margins of acceptable. | null | null | 41,809,368 | 41,808,767 | null | [
41810258
] | null | null |
41,809,598 | comment | EasyMark | 2024-10-11T14:08:36 | null | literally all the Russians have to do is stop and go back home and the war is over. they will never do that because they elected a President who is named Putin and now he has a Hitleresque dream of taking all the old Soviet vassal states back. He is the one doing this and he is the one you will have to convince to stop; although I am sure there are plenty of yes men that he has attracted to his orbit to support his crazed dream of Soviet restoration | null | null | 41,808,395 | 41,807,681 | null | null | null | null |
41,809,599 | comment | sevensor | 2024-10-11T14:08:45 | null | I’ve been in the same boat. The amount of pain you can reduce by pushing type annotations through a codebase like that is spectacular. And although I love dataclasses, the non-totality that you get from typeddicts is key for modeling the kind of mess you describe. | null | null | 41,809,572 | 41,801,415 | null | [
41809723
] | null | null |
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