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41,810,500 | comment | Towaway69 | 2024-10-11T15:45:12 | null | I'm a big fan of iA Writer - it basically does everything I need. The best part is its clean interface - just a white screen and cursor.<p>Markdown based with HTML templates to allow for different appearance when converted to PDF. It also has cross references to other files, so that long documents can be broken down into separate files.<p>It doesn't have all the features that NotesHub has - hats off to that and I hope NotesHub becomes a success. | null | null | 41,808,943 | 41,808,943 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,501 | comment | HDThoreaun | 2024-10-11T15:45:15 | null | Society has decided that car crashes are a worthy trade off for having cars. Its not in the news because the vast majority of americans agree that cars are good even if they have downsides. | null | null | 41,805,488 | 41,804,460 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,502 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T15:45:17 | null | null | null | null | 41,810,292 | 41,810,292 | null | null | true | null |
41,810,503 | comment | adamdecaf | 2024-10-11T15:45:20 | null | Yea, and you would delete the pending message. Good idea… | null | null | 41,810,461 | 41,809,879 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,504 | comment | rangerelf | 2024-10-11T15:45:25 | null | "Thanks" for making me spit my coffee, that's hilarious but awesome; I <i>will</i> be using it in the future. :-D | null | null | 41,810,419 | 41,808,943 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,505 | comment | daedrdev | 2024-10-11T15:45:28 | null | Cigarettes directly damage lung tissue, thats why the cause so much lung cancer, so probably its just when the lung cancer spreads everywhere | null | null | 41,806,446 | 41,786,768 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,506 | comment | lucozade | 2024-10-11T15:45:36 | null | In no particular order:<p>12 Angry Men<p>Princess Bride<p>Shawshank Redemption<p>Ferris Bueller's Day Off<p>My Cousin Vinnie | null | null | 41,803,780 | 41,803,780 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,507 | story | tcsenpai | 2024-10-11T15:45:48 | Show HN: I made an Ollama summarizer for Firefox | Source: <a href="https://github.com/tcsenpai/spacellama">https://github.com/tcsenpai/spacellama</a> | https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/spacellama/ | 2 | null | 41,810,507 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,810,508 | story | shutty | 2024-10-11T15:45:50 | Hacker News Comments Dataset | null | https://huggingface.co/datasets/nixiesearch/hackernews-comments | 2 | null | 41,810,508 | 1 | [
41810770
] | null | null |
41,810,509 | comment | cma | 2024-10-11T15:45:53 | null | The Android version of Firefox still doesn't have working keyboard shortcuts after 13 years or a way to delete individual history items to prevent broken auto complete. The money is going into lots of other things than the browser. | null | null | 41,810,011 | 41,809,698 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,510 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T15:45:58 | null | null | null | null | 41,809,698 | 41,809,698 | null | null | true | null |
41,810,511 | comment | sureIy | 2024-10-11T15:46:01 | null | Correct.<p>Fun fact: you do not need to close most tags in a valid HTML5 document.<p>This is valid:<p><pre><code> <!DOCTYPE html>
<title>Foo</title>
<p>paragraph
<p>second
<ul>
<li>item
</ul>
<table>
<tr><td>hi!
</table></code></pre> | null | null | 41,807,550 | 41,801,334 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,512 | comment | Workaccount2 | 2024-10-11T15:46:06 | null | >I challenge you to give it even a simple, but original, problem to solve.<p>(34903173/x)+(238 * 2650) - 323326 = 45323434, solve for x<p>Statistically, no one has ever done this calculation ever before. It's entirely unique.<p>O1 answered "x = 34,903,173 divided by 45,016,060", which is correct.[1][2]<p>Now I guess you can pick up the goal post and move it.<p>[1]<a href="https://chatgpt.com/share/6709481a-3144-8004-a7fd-0ccd9e3bc58d" rel="nofollow">https://chatgpt.com/share/6709481a-3144-8004-a7fd-0ccd9e3bc5...</a><p>[2]<a href="https://www.wolframalpha.com/input?i=%2834903173%2Fx%29%2B%28238+*+2650%29+-++323326+%3D+45323434" rel="nofollow">https://www.wolframalpha.com/input?i=%2834903173%2Fx%29%2B%2...</a> | null | null | 41,810,076 | 41,808,683 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,810,513 | comment | chthonicdaemon | 2024-10-11T15:46:14 | null | Python's `with` and Javascript's `with` don't do the same thing. In Python it introduces a context, which is a scope within which certain cleanup tasks are guaranteed, which improves the ergonomics of things that require you to close() at the end, similar to `defer` in Go. In Javascript it allows you to access object properties without prefixing with a name, which leads to confusion about scope. | null | null | 41,810,462 | 41,787,041 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,514 | comment | jorvi | 2024-10-11T15:46:17 | null | > Microsoft entered kinda late and never really developed their phone OS enough and eventually gave up, but that's because their product wasn't good enough, not because of anything the others were doing to stop them.<p>Not sure if this is meant tongue-in-cheek.<p>Google very aggressively chased any 3rd-party Windows Phone apps out of town that were Google—services compatible, whilst refusing to release 1st party apps themselves.<p>Microsoft shares a fair part in the blame because they made developers switch frameworks like… 5 times (?) in the span of 3 OS versions. Not to mention the constant sunsetting of devices.<p>The UI was amazing though. All content and no dressing, performant on low-end hardware, had dark mode half a decade before Android / iOS. | null | null | 41,801,401 | 41,784,287 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,515 | comment | nalinidash | 2024-10-11T15:46:23 | null | Profile is already available in Firefox(before chrome implemented it). Details on how to use it: <a href="https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/profile-manager-create-remove-switch-firefox-profiles" rel="nofollow">https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/profile-manager-create-...</a><p>Also in chrome, multiple profiles need multiple google account(If I understand the UI correctly)connected, but in Firefox no account is needed. | null | null | 41,809,875 | 41,809,698 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,810,516 | comment | dtgm92 | 2024-10-11T15:46:26 | null | I will recommend Librewolf. Default Firefox has a lot of garbage and bloat. | null | null | 41,809,698 | 41,809,698 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,517 | comment | woopwoop | 2024-10-11T15:46:29 | null | This paper, among other things, shows that LLMs have dramatically worse performance on basic algebra questions when you add in irrelevant information. The examples are things like "John picked 43 kiwis on Monday, 24 kiwis on Tuesday. On Wednesday, 5 of the kiwis he picked were smaller than usual. Altogether, on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, John picked 87 kiwis. How many kiwis did John pick on Wednesday?" In this question, the remark about some of the kiwis on Wednesday being small is irrelevant, but adding things like this reduces performance on a popular benchmark from 95% to 77% for GPT-4o, for example.<p>I don't find this very impressive. Forget LLMs for a second. Let's say _you_ read a question of that kind with some bit of irrelevant information. There are two possibilities you have to consider: the question may as well have excluded the irrelevant information, or the question was miswritten and the irrelevant information was meant to be relevant. The latter is a perfectly live possibility, and I don't think it's a dramatic failure to assume that this is correct. I have to confess that when I read some people's LLM gotcha questions, where they take some popular logic puzzle and invert things, I think I would get them "wrong" too. And not wrong because I don't understand the question, but wrong because with no context I'd just assume the inversion was a typo. | null | null | 41,808,683 | 41,808,683 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,810,518 | comment | corysama | 2024-10-11T15:46:31 | null | I answered that recently here: <a href="https://old.reddit.com/r/GraphicsProgramming/comments/1fpi2cv/learning_cuda_for_graphics/loz9sm3/" rel="nofollow">https://old.reddit.com/r/GraphicsProgramming/comments/1fpi2c...</a> | null | null | 41,810,251 | 41,808,013 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,519 | comment | yupyupyups | 2024-10-11T15:46:32 | null | Yeah, I don't browse the web without an ad blocker. | null | null | 41,809,962 | 41,809,698 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,520 | comment | adamdecaf | 2024-10-11T15:46:35 | null | The idea is an app checks in after scheduled jobs, which extends the snooze | null | null | 41,810,384 | 41,809,879 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,521 | comment | danudey | 2024-10-11T15:46:36 | null | If you copy the app over to your work Macbook it should ask you to authenticate to the App Store when you try to launch it so that it can validate your license. IIRC this doesn't cause it to save that login to the app store but just does a one-off authentication for that app.<p>YMMV, but this is my recollection. | null | null | 41,809,768 | 41,808,943 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,522 | comment | User23 | 2024-10-11T15:46:36 | null | That’s not really true. I don’t have a link handy (might try to find later), but I read a rather scathing critique of the state of crypto math by a mathematician. The short summary is that crypto math is overwhelmingly unnecessarily inelegant. | null | null | 41,807,458 | 41,801,883 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,523 | comment | EasyMark | 2024-10-11T15:46:38 | null | Then they could have made Mv3 an option to turn on by sysadmins who lock down their browsers. If you aren’t locking down your users browsers then that’s on you. I mean at worst they could have made mv2 opt-in and most people would have highly curtailed their complaints of “I’ll jump ship to _____________” . People don’t like it when features are removed especially when there are viable alternatives like, adding a special tier of review to get mv2 approval for your extension, opt-in/out as discussed, easy access by sysadmins to turn it on/off. Instead google pulled a bully “so, pencil-neck, what are you gonna do about it?” instead. They are tone-deaf and see themselves as the new 800lb silverback on the block. | null | null | 41,810,253 | 41,809,698 | null | [
41810681
] | null | null |
41,810,524 | comment | sandworm101 | 2024-10-11T15:46:57 | null | Close, but the root is more nuanced. Once upon a time, Microsoft was talking about regulating "apps" on windows like Apple does for the iPhone. Valve saw the writing on the wall: a potential ban on violent or otherwise adult-themed games. So Valve started the steambox project. Get the games running on linux/WINE and they could tell Microsoft to push off. Years later, we have the steamdeck as a revolutionary product and linux is the go-to OS for portable gaming. | null | null | 41,809,845 | 41,799,068 | null | [
41810732
] | null | null |
41,810,525 | comment | sharpshadow | 2024-10-11T15:47:04 | null | Path of Exile was so keen to host the community Wiki[0] back in the days because Fandom just sucks.<p>0. <a href="https://www.poewiki.net/wiki/Path_of_Exile_Wiki" rel="nofollow">https://www.poewiki.net/wiki/Path_of_Exile_Wiki</a> | null | null | 41,797,719 | 41,797,719 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,526 | comment | HDThoreaun | 2024-10-11T15:47:08 | null | This has been thought about quite a bit. <a href="https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/ethics-deontological/" rel="nofollow">https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/ethics-deontological/</a> | null | null | 41,806,034 | 41,804,460 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,527 | comment | kstrauser | 2024-10-11T15:47:16 | null | That's literally how iOS works today. If I go into Settings > Privacy & Security > Photos, I can give apps None, Limited Access, or Full Access. Same with Contacts, same with the clipboard (where the per-app choices are Ask, Deny, or Allow).<p>> It is not fair that Siri is the only one that can access these things now.<p>That would be true if it was, but it isn't. | null | null | 41,810,189 | 41,809,698 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,528 | comment | accra4rx | 2024-10-11T15:47:17 | null | In Obsidian , you can even sync to github or dropbox with community plugins . so price wise it is free
Also Obsidian has much better search (using community plugin) which is lacking in noteshub | null | null | 41,810,077 | 41,808,943 | null | [
41810707
] | null | null |
41,810,529 | comment | red-iron-pine | 2024-10-11T15:47:26 | null | debatable given how much he's been cozying up to the Russians and Saudis<p>betcha in 10 years time we'll learn about all of the ITAR violations and other shady behavior | null | null | 41,808,309 | 41,805,706 | null | [
41810620
] | null | null |
41,810,530 | comment | consp | 2024-10-11T15:47:30 | null | > It sucks and the general trend of workplaces trusting their employees less and less<p>You get what you pay for. Seeing that employee retention is frowned upon. | null | null | 41,810,253 | 41,809,698 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,531 | comment | lyu07282 | 2024-10-11T15:47:37 | null | this is such a killer feature I don't understand why it even is an extension, every browser that isn't adversarial to the user should have that feature tbh | null | null | 41,810,103 | 41,809,698 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,532 | comment | emot | 2024-10-11T15:47:50 | null | An update with today's numbers and Starlink growth in Florida as well:
<a href="https://x.com/CloudflareRadar/status/1844764342668976159" rel="nofollow">https://x.com/CloudflareRadar/status/1844764342668976159</a> | null | null | 41,801,970 | 41,801,970 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,533 | story | paulpauper | 2024-10-11T15:47:51 | They're eating the bugs the many-legged moral horror-show of insect farming | null | https://wollenblog.substack.com/p/theyre-eating-the-bugs | 1 | null | 41,810,533 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,810,534 | comment | jorvi | 2024-10-11T15:47:51 | null | > The fact that there are a variety of companies whose browsers are under Google's control<p>Que?<p>If Google did some heinous stuff, tomorrow Microsoft would hard-fork Chromium and Brave et al would just switch their upstream to Edge. | null | null | 41,802,670 | 41,784,287 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,535 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T15:47:52 | null | null | null | null | 41,810,304 | 41,809,698 | null | null | true | null |
41,810,536 | comment | gabrielsroka | 2024-10-11T15:47:52 | null | Brave's creator, B. Eich, also created JavaScript, so I assume you have that disabled everywhere. | null | null | 41,810,428 | 41,809,698 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,537 | comment | pchristensen | 2024-10-11T15:48:09 | null | We may never be able to answer definitively, but another theory is that the evolution of life is a series of steps, some with highly probable pathways (lipids with hydrophobic tails forming enclosed boundaries) and some extraordinarily improbable (formation of eukaryotic cells, incorporation of mitochondria).<p>The book The Vital Question by biochemist Nick Lane goes into this in great depth. <a href="https://nick-lane.net/books/the-vital-question-why-is-life-the-way-it-is/" rel="nofollow">https://nick-lane.net/books/the-vital-question-why-is-life-t...</a> He estimated that simple, single celled prokaryotic organisms should be pretty common when the right conditions and probably happened multiple times independently on Earth, but eukaryotic mitochondrial cells may have only happened one single time and all complex life is descended from that one cell. I believe that was covered in <a href="https://lexfridman.com/nick-lane/" rel="nofollow">https://lexfridman.com/nick-lane/</a>) that | null | null | 41,808,181 | 41,760,971 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,538 | comment | mrgoldenbrown | 2024-10-11T15:48:15 | null | Yeah, same problem here. this was annoying enough for me to close the browser and give up. | null | null | 41,809,800 | 41,808,569 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,539 | comment | adamdecaf | 2024-10-11T15:48:16 | null | It sets up expected check in times for an app/job. The job is responsible for checking in, but the alert will fire regardless of your infra.<p>Doesn’t require a start command and your infra can completely fail and you’ll still get alerted. | null | null | 41,810,345 | 41,809,879 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,540 | comment | theultdev | 2024-10-11T15:48:17 | null | In no way do we fully understand things like the big bang or life.<p>How would we when we don't know what caused them. | null | null | 41,809,249 | 41,776,631 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,541 | comment | sureIy | 2024-10-11T15:48:26 | null | While you're right, I like to think that people, especially kids, would greatly benefit from <i>seeing</i> this stuff once or twice in their lifetime. They don't need to learn it or use it, but they will forever recognize it. And maybe one day they'll have to write that closing tag someone forgot.<p>This can be applied to all topics. Knowing the basics of everything is better than knowing nothing. | null | null | 41,808,609 | 41,801,334 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,542 | comment | LinuxBender | 2024-10-11T15:48:38 | null | I am not an expert in this area but I think one has to go further back in time before religions were weaponized, censored, intentionally mistranslated, edited and otherwise tainted by kings and emperors. One example might be Gnosticism [1] <i>not the modern version</i>. There are probably better examples from earlier times of antiquity but again I am not an expert in this area. I would wager someone here may be knowledgeable in this area. Perhaps some religions around the time period of the Mycenaean period or other periods where people may have partaken in mind expanding substances as a matter of religious or cult practice? Or perhaps theories around psychedelic drugs used in the Eleusinian Mysteries?<p>[1] - <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gnosticism" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gnosticism</a> | null | null | 41,810,235 | 41,776,631 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,543 | comment | hn1986 | 2024-10-11T15:48:42 | null | Like someone said before, he's lost all credibility. As someone who picked up FSD some years back, I'll prob never get a Tesla again based on some future promise. | null | null | 41,806,626 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,544 | comment | c0balt | 2024-10-11T15:48:49 | null | That idle is unusually high, you should check for your cpu governor (if the host is Linux, use AMD state with balanced, otherwise refer to Windows power settings). If you talk about system idle (instead of CPU idle) then a dGPU can also have a significant impact. | null | null | 41,807,125 | 41,803,324 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,545 | comment | EasyMark | 2024-10-11T15:48:53 | null | Did you miss the barrage of ads for Chrome that google played for literally years on the internet and television? | null | null | 41,810,044 | 41,809,698 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,546 | comment | leoh | 2024-10-11T15:49:06 | null | Needs a re-entrant mutex? | null | null | 41,787,041 | 41,787,041 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,547 | comment | toomuchtodo | 2024-10-11T15:49:09 | null | +1 Hugo | null | null | 41,809,967 | 41,809,843 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,548 | story | jandrewrogers | 2024-10-11T15:49:32 | Even a Single Bacterial Cell Can Sense the Seasons Changing | null | https://www.quantamagazine.org/even-a-single-bacterial-cell-can-sense-the-seasons-changing-20241011/ | 1 | null | 41,810,548 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,810,549 | comment | asimpson | 2024-10-11T15:49:33 | null | You can achieve something similar using vlc + slop on Linux, here's the script I usually use (I run i3 typically).<p><pre><code> selection=$(slop -f %w,%h,%x,%y)
width=$(echo "${selection}" | cut -d , -f 1)
height=$(echo "${selection}" | cut -d , -f 2)
top=$(echo "${selection}" | cut -d , -f 4)
left=$(echo "${selection}" | cut -d , -f 3)
cvlc --no-video-deco --no-embedded-video --screen-fps=20 --screen-top=$top --screen-left=$left --screen-width=$width --screen-height=$height screen:// &
</code></pre>
Then "just" share the VLC window instead of your desktop. | null | null | 41,800,602 | 41,800,602 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,550 | comment | pessimizer | 2024-10-11T15:49:51 | null | Latin always gets badrapped when English people talk about how practical and clear Germanic equivalents would be, but Romance languages also sound like this to Romance speakers.<p>Modern English is just particularly goofy, young, and not conservative, especially in its American variant. We rankmark by accumulating more exotic words with more exotic vowels, until the vocabulary is absurdly large and redundant. | null | null | 41,780,389 | 41,771,440 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,551 | comment | theoldways | 2024-10-11T15:49:53 | null | We need freedom, not paternalism. And yet, somehow, despite this nanny state utopia, my data gets leaked approximately once every 17 minutes. Security my entire ass. | null | null | 41,810,397 | 41,801,334 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,552 | comment | wtallis | 2024-10-11T15:50:17 | null | > That's old news, as noted in my other comment:<p>None of your comments have actually provided evidence for this assertion, and the previous update dated June 3rd 2024 says users will start seeing a <i>warning</i>. So when between June 3 and October 9 did Google start actually disabling MV2 extensions, and where was it publicized prior to their October 9 update? | null | null | 41,810,434 | 41,809,698 | null | [
41810693
] | null | null |
41,810,553 | comment | wooque | 2024-10-11T15:50:18 | null | I'd argue it won't make a dent in Chrome market share.<p>People who really care about this (tech minded people) are not using Chrome anyway, others (regular people) will switch to less powerful Manifest V3 adblockers that would probably be good enough and won't switch from Chrome. | null | null | 41,809,962 | 41,809,698 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,554 | comment | leoh | 2024-10-11T15:50:22 | null | This is a good point, I think, in that — on account of wasm — there is really an opportunity for new languages in the browser | null | null | 41,801,853 | 41,787,041 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,555 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T15:50:23 | null | null | null | null | 41,810,469 | 41,810,469 | null | null | true | null |
41,810,556 | comment | adamgordonbell | 2024-10-11T15:50:24 | null | Love the demo! | null | null | 41,808,569 | 41,808,569 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,557 | comment | nox101 | 2024-10-11T15:50:25 | null | bike-shedding but you should consider renaming them from "unsafe" to "volatile" or some other word that expresses that they are not unsafe to the user/browser/os. They are only changeable by other threads.<p>The word "unsafe" will be picked up as meaning "can infect your computer" which we can already see examples of these messages. | null | null | 41,808,182 | 41,787,041 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,558 | comment | undercut | 2024-10-11T15:50:30 | null | It was a long time ago but I'm 99% sure that there was a banner for Chrome on Google.com since the first public release. | null | null | 41,810,173 | 41,809,698 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,559 | story | emot | 2024-10-11T15:50:31 | Hurricane Milton: Internet Traffic Down in 40 Florida Cities, Starlink Usage Up | null | https://twitter.com/CloudflareRadar/status/1844764342668976159 | 2 | null | 41,810,559 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,810,560 | comment | grounder | 2024-10-11T15:50:33 | null | I don't know much about Arc. But Arc users could give Firefox "Nightly" a try to preview new features coming up. It has vertical tabs and you can "pin" a few tabs at the top. Nightly also has containers already built-in, so you can have multiple accounts open for the same site in different container tabs. | null | null | 41,809,875 | 41,809,698 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,561 | comment | red-iron-pine | 2024-10-11T15:50:44 | null | DARPA doesn't give us anything, it just runs with ideas and develops them enough to push to others to build and run.<p>ARPA gave us TCP/IP, but MS, Google, telcos, etc. gave us the modern internet and the tools to use it | null | null | 41,808,812 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,562 | comment | smileybarry | 2024-10-11T15:50:53 | null | Do you hold Apple Intelligence's local LLM to the same standard?<p>Apple Intelligence will index all of your messages, app data, etc. into a queryable index. That will also obviously reside on disk somewhere, encrypted. And it could be just as exfiltratable as your hypothetical. (Because both cases require compromising the host computer) | null | null | 41,804,432 | 41,801,331 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,563 | story | giuliomagnifico | 2024-10-11T15:50:55 | Chinese researchers claim they have broken AES encryption using quantum computer | null | https://thequantuminsider.com/2024/10/11/chinese-scientists-report-using-quantum-computer-to-hack-military-grade-encryption/ | 3 | null | 41,810,563 | 1 | [
41810584
] | null | null |
41,810,564 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T15:50:57 | null | null | null | null | 41,810,446 | 41,810,446 | null | null | true | null |
41,810,565 | comment | herpderperator | 2024-10-11T15:51:08 | null | So... like BetterStack's heartbeat monitor? [0]<p>[0] <a href="https://betterstack.com/docs/uptime/cron-and-heartbeat-monitor/" rel="nofollow">https://betterstack.com/docs/uptime/cron-and-heartbeat-monit...</a> | null | null | 41,809,879 | 41,809,879 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,566 | comment | RankingMember | 2024-10-11T15:51:10 | null | Well that was fun for awhile until inevitably some anonymous coward started spamming racist nonsense | null | null | 41,809,469 | 41,809,469 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,567 | story | thunderbong | 2024-10-11T15:51:17 | Experimenting with High-Speed Chips | null | https://www.emulationonline.com/systems/chiplab/experimenting-with-highspeed-chips/ | 1 | null | 41,810,567 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,810,568 | comment | seatac76 | 2024-10-11T15:51:25 | null | I had a similar experience, looking at the contorted metal lunchboxes and other household items was more terrifying, I always used to think things just go poof. | null | null | 41,808,423 | 41,807,681 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,569 | comment | wilg | 2024-10-11T15:51:26 | null | They’re taking legal liability when you are driving a straight line on selected freeways going less than 40mph and with a car in front of you to follow during the day. This doesn’t demonstrate advanced capability, just limited scope. | null | null | 41,808,255 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,570 | comment | SkiFire13 | 2024-10-11T15:51:27 | null | That works with rustc, so you only need one rust compiler frontend as opposed to two. | null | null | 41,809,442 | 41,805,288 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,571 | story | elashri | 2024-10-11T15:51:37 | Why the black hole information paradox still hasn't been solved | null | https://bigthink.com/starts-with-a-bang/black-hole-information-paradox-solved/ | 1 | null | 41,810,571 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,810,572 | comment | faefox | 2024-10-11T15:51:45 | null | So are we taking bets on what the <i>real</i> price and launch date will be? | null | null | 41,805,706 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,573 | comment | serialx | 2024-10-11T15:51:49 | null | PSA: You can also use singleflight[1] to solve the problem. This prevents the thundering herd problem. Pocache is an interesting/alternative way to solve thundering herd indeed!<p>[1]: <a href="https://pkg.go.dev/golang.org/x/sync/singleflight" rel="nofollow">https://pkg.go.dev/golang.org/x/sync/singleflight</a> | null | null | 41,809,262 | 41,809,262 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,574 | comment | rozenmd | 2024-10-11T15:51:58 | null | The term of art you're looking for is: "heartbeat check"/"healthcheck", or most commonly: "cron job monitor". | null | null | 41,809,879 | 41,809,879 | null | [
41810619,
41810694,
41810585
] | null | null |
41,810,575 | comment | bryanlarsen | 2024-10-11T15:52:06 | null | AFAICT, that's a better description of the project for people like us. It's a way to add a missing heart beat alert to PagerDuty. | null | null | 41,810,384 | 41,809,879 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,576 | comment | hypeatei | 2024-10-11T15:52:13 | null | That's what I thought; this tool is "kicking the can" to whatever third party service you're using. So, it's essentially just a tool that will ping stuff for you in a slightly more convienent way? | null | null | 41,810,426 | 41,809,879 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,577 | comment | ericd | 2024-10-11T15:52:17 | null | Ah yeah, it was all before July, so if they made big changes then, then maybe my experience isn’t representative. | null | null | 41,806,233 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,578 | comment | eek2121 | 2024-10-11T15:52:17 | null | That is the fault of the blockers themselves. The one I use (<a href="https://apps.apple.com/us/app/1blocker-ad-blocker/id1365531024" rel="nofollow">https://apps.apple.com/us/app/1blocker-ad-blocker/id13655310...</a>) works extremely well and even uses a local VPN setup for app ad-filtering.<p>Twitter and YouTube ads are blocked.<p>The drawback? It isn’t free. | null | null | 41,810,168 | 41,809,698 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,579 | comment | turtlebits | 2024-10-11T15:52:24 | null | I'm not sure running an additional service plus a SaaS requirement is better than relying on infra. Standing up this service is going to rely on your infra. What if it goes down?<p>If you're going to have to write a scheduled check-in anyways, why not use something like cronitor and reduce the complexity? (they host the check-in endpoint) | null | null | 41,809,879 | 41,809,879 | null | [
41810738
] | null | null |
41,810,580 | comment | anthk | 2024-10-11T15:52:24 | null | When the amount of AI generated output surpasses human curated data as the AI input, you'll get AI generated disasters taken as proper imput from clueless novices.<p>Guess what will happen to these techbros. | null | null | 41,810,387 | 41,810,387 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,581 | story | adrian_mrd | 2024-10-11T15:52:34 | Student finds scorpion crawling inside Shein parcel | null | https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c39l3ex0mpgo | 1 | null | 41,810,581 | 1 | [
41810626
] | null | null |
41,810,582 | comment | EasyMark | 2024-10-11T15:52:36 | null | I’ve been out of the windows game for so long I forgot all that malware that was installed by various installer engines and was so relieved when I found portable apps and oldversion.com and ninite. And now I guess there are things like chocolaty that do similar things. Switching to Mac and Linux I don’t really miss it at all | null | null | 41,810,134 | 41,809,698 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,583 | comment | jorvi | 2024-10-11T15:52:36 | null | For what it’s worth, I have been making the exact same argument for a few years now. At this point, Blink has become the kernel for the web, so why not focus all our efforts there?<p>Hell, even Firefox could relatively easily swap to running on Blink since most of their UI these days is CSS+JS. | null | null | 41,803,989 | 41,784,287 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,584 | comment | giuliomagnifico | 2024-10-11T15:52:37 | null | To be precise “the Present, Gift-64, and Rectangle algorithms”:<p>> According to SCMP, the research team employed the D-Wave Advantage quantum computer to target the Present, Gift-64, and Rectangle algorithms, called key representatives of the Substitution-Permutation Network (SPN) structure. This structure is foundational for advanced encryption standards (AES), a system widely deployed in military and financial encryption protocols, according to the newspaper. While AES-256 is often labeled as military-grade and considered the most secure encryption standard available, the study suggests that quantum computers may soon threaten such security. | null | null | 41,810,563 | 41,810,563 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,585 | comment | herpderperator | 2024-10-11T15:52:44 | null | Yeah I thought "dead man's switch" was such a weird name for this. | null | null | 41,810,574 | 41,809,879 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,586 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T15:52:45 | null | null | null | null | 41,810,376 | 41,810,376 | null | null | true | null |
41,810,587 | comment | yellow_lead | 2024-10-11T15:52:53 | null | It's pretty common for sites to crash, especially those relying on some AI or GPU backed service. | null | null | 41,808,941 | 41,808,941 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,588 | comment | BurningFrog | 2024-10-11T15:52:58 | null | I suspect it's what someone who claims to be a knowledge authority comes up with when everyone asks how the world was created.<p>I mean, if you're that guy, you can't just say you don't know! | null | null | 41,809,864 | 41,776,631 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,589 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T15:53:01 | null | null | null | null | 41,810,387 | 41,810,387 | null | null | true | null |
41,810,590 | comment | foobazgt | 2024-10-11T15:53:06 | null | I have two reactions to this:<p>- Complicated authorization systems bleed through everything else, adding exponential complexity. Maybe, as an industry, we should seek better tradeoffs? One example I can think of is preferring auditing over authorization. It's a lot easier to build a generic, unified auditing system and interface than to build sleek, fluent UIs that also have to accommodate arbitrarily complex authz behaviors.<p>- OTOH, I'm very keen on fine-grained controls over what data I grant third parties access to. For example, I want to be able to say, "grant this lender access to the last 18 months of account balance for this specific account" and exactly no more or less. | null | null | 41,804,843 | 41,801,883 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,591 | comment | sidewndr46 | 2024-10-11T15:53:09 | null | Sure you can do that, but the desire for catalytic converters is pretty static. They aren't a luxury good like diamond jewelry. You don't have the option of making them scarce and desirable. | null | null | 41,810,030 | 41,760,971 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,592 | comment | ralmidani | 2024-10-11T15:53:09 | null | I work with Elixir full-time and agree with all of these. I just want to add:<p>- Elixir docs are top notch, both the existing docs for the language and its ecosystem, and the ease of generating your own docs for your projects and libraries.<p>- The only thing that is not currently top notch in Elixir is the Language Server and therefore IDE support. This will hopefully improve soon after the formation of an official Language Server team to unify previously disparate efforts (<a href="https://elixir-lang.org/blog/2024/08/15/welcome-elixir-language-server-team/" rel="nofollow">https://elixir-lang.org/blog/2024/08/15/welcome-elixir-langu...</a>).<p>I mention the Language Server and IDE support because, IMO, it is the biggest __technical__ hurdle preventing widespread adoption. If you’re considering learning Elixir, I think now is a great time! | null | null | 41,809,533 | 41,809,167 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,593 | comment | remram | 2024-10-11T15:53:14 | null | If you call this a "dead man's switch" I'd expect it to turn my app off when I die. E.g. "switch" something when something happens to a "man".<p>Your own README links to this definition: "A dead man's switch is a switch that is designed to be activated or deactivated if the human operator becomes incapacitated".<p>This is a watchdog timer / monitor / heartbeat, setting off an alert if a timer elapses. | null | null | 41,809,879 | 41,809,879 | null | [
41810680,
41810769
] | null | null |
41,810,594 | story | paulpauper | 2024-10-11T15:53:18 | Numb in India, part 3: Numb in Pakistan | null | https://samkriss.substack.com/p/numb-in-india-part-3-numb-in-pakistan | 1 | null | 41,810,594 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,810,595 | comment | kstrauser | 2024-10-11T15:53:26 | null | Yep, and it's great. Beyond ads, you can also configure it to block malware. Got a phishing email from scammer.ru? Nothing happens even if you to click the link in it because that name won't resolve. There were a very short list of exceptions, maybe 2 or 3, I had to add to ours over the years, mainly for hostnames like tracking.shippingcompany.com that got added by mistake.<p>Note that it does nothing to block DNS over HTTPS lookups. If your browser insists on going around your LAN's DNS setup, Pi-hole can't help you. | null | null | 41,810,227 | 41,809,698 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,596 | comment | pchristensen | 2024-10-11T15:53:31 | null | Yes - check out Brentwood, Gilroy, etc where middle class Bay Area residents are commuting from. The expense and shortage of non-tech labor is also pushing things like ghost kitchens, coffee robots, self-checkout kiosks, etc. | null | null | 41,793,675 | 41,792,055 | null | null | null | null |
41,810,597 | story | null | 2024-10-11T15:53:31 | null | null | null | null | null | 41,810,597 | null | null | true | true |
41,810,598 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T15:53:37 | null | null | null | null | 41,810,254 | 41,809,469 | null | null | true | null |
41,810,599 | story | paulpauper | 2024-10-11T15:53:40 | Video is Impossible pt. 2: Exceptions Make the Rule | null | https://www.infinitescroll.us/p/video-is-impossible-pt-2-exceptions | 1 | null | 41,810,599 | 0 | null | null | null |
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