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41,811,000 | comment | ruthmarx | 2024-10-11T16:38:10 | null | > "used in production" is not the same as being a serious wordpress alternative.<p>You only said you thought it wasn't ready for prime time, which I think a reasonable interpretation is that you were saying you didn't think it was ready for production use.<p>> Would bet that none of those production deployments are without some non-negligible developer time investment.<p>That's the thing, I think the time invested is pretty negligible. Especially when compared to maintaining wordpress and having to deal with plugin craziness.<p>> Having to code standard CMS functionalities becomes an eye-rolling exercise.<p>You only really have to setup models for pages, tags, categories etc, after that the editor is incredibly functional. | null | null | 41,807,564 | 41,805,391 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,001 | comment | nurettin | 2024-10-11T16:38:22 | null | From experience, it is a huge inconvenience to people surviving the deceased leaving without any way to pay their debits. And if you don't care about what happens after you die, why did you even care when alive? Why not always be a dick? At least it is consistent. | null | null | 41,810,800 | 41,809,879 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,811,002 | comment | ezekg | 2024-10-11T16:38:23 | null | I did read it. The purpose of the article seems to be a Tesla hit piece. | null | null | 41,810,879 | 41,810,627 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,811,003 | comment | ChocolateGod | 2024-10-11T16:38:26 | null | > No, the end is to destroy national identities and cultures and we are seeing an increasing pushback against that.<p>The creation of a pan-European identity does not in anyway degrade from having a "British identity", as you can see in places like the USA with Texas.<p>Whilst net migration was above 0, this was mostly due to arrivals from outside the EU, as we can see from post-Brexit immigration figures, EU free movement has always been a two way street that many Brits took advantage of (those "expats" in Spain). | null | null | 41,804,066 | 41,799,016 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,811,004 | story | mfiguiere | 2024-10-11T16:38:28 | Java Performance Update 2024 by Per Minborg [video] | null | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xFb_LcapbXw | 2 | null | 41,811,004 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,811,005 | story | PaulHoule | 2024-10-11T16:38:36 | China's 'red collectors' cherish bygone Maoist era | null | https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2024/09/29/asia-pacific/china-red-collectors/ | 1 | null | 41,811,005 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,811,006 | comment | bialpio | 2024-10-11T16:38:38 | null | Yeah, people that don't care enough to vote should not be weighted in, that's the whole point. Weighing them in does not mean they actually get represented. The only problem is people that want to vote but can't are going to be disenfranchised, but that is true in both systems and should be addressed separately. This is what is actually exploitable with EC - suppress the vote of a specific population within a state and you're going to kill 2 birds with 1 stone as they not only didn't vote against you, but they also will be weighted in towards you on the national scale.<p>Your entire point about fraud does not get worse with popular vote system so it's irrelevant here.<p>Does Argentina get automatic recounts? How many people are covered by a single polling station in Argentina? How many people count the votes within a single polling station? Those are all the things that'll affect how quickly the results are known, not how the votes get aggregated later. And EC can slow things down significantly more than popular vote (one slower state could be deciding factor for EC even though nationwide results would already be known because the uncertainty is too small to matter on national scale; Bush v. Gore). | null | null | 41,810,186 | 41,792,780 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,007 | comment | lmeyerov | 2024-10-11T16:38:55 | null | Nice!<p>It's interesting from the perspective of maintenance too. You can bet most constants like warp sizes will change, so you get into things like having profiles, autotuners, or not sweating the small stuff.<p>We went more extreme, and nowadays focus on several layers up: By accepting the (high!) constant overheads of tools like RAPIDS cuDF , we get in exchange the ability to easily crank code with good saturation on the newest GPUs and that any data scientist can edit and extend. Likewise, they just need to understand basics like data movement and columnar analytics data reps to make GPU pipelines. We have ~1 CUDA kernel left and many years of higher-level.<p>As an example, this is one of the core methods of our new graph query language GFQL (think cypher on pandas/spark, w optional GPU runtime), and it gets Graph500 level performance on cheapo GPUs just by being data parallel with high saturation per step: <a href="https://github.com/graphistry/pygraphistry/blob/master/graphistry/compute/hop.py">https://github.com/graphistry/pygraphistry/blob/master/graph...</a> . Despite ping-ponging a ton because cudf doesn't (yet) coalesce GPU kernel calls, V1 competes surprisingly high, and is easy to maintain & extend. | null | null | 41,808,013 | 41,808,013 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,811,008 | comment | wolpoli | 2024-10-11T16:39:11 | null | This is basically an offer to buy your business for $0 and we might hire you as a contractor. It's a bad deal. I mean Jimmy Wales himself wouldn't have accepted this for Wikipedia. | null | null | 41,802,542 | 41,797,719 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,009 | comment | s1artibartfast | 2024-10-11T16:39:31 | null | This topic makes me think about identity and who gets to change the definition of it and who doesn't.<p>I think it is fascinating how the battleground has shifted over time from conflict over objective interaction in the real world to etymology and the internal classification systems people use to model the world. | null | null | 41,797,882 | 41,769,971 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,010 | comment | seccode | 2024-10-11T16:39:52 | null | I'm not predicting the number I'm predicting number%2==0. The model predicted better than the distribution probability | null | null | 41,807,726 | 41,805,941 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,011 | comment | kadoban | 2024-10-11T16:39:52 | null | > In my experience, a shit game on steam will make 3 figures if you're lucky. A shit game on Switch will make four figures most of the time.<p>Is that a good metric? Ideally shit games _should_ make very little money. Don't we want to look at what decent games are making and how they're doing? | null | null | 41,810,473 | 41,808,917 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,811,012 | comment | xyst | 2024-10-11T16:39:53 | null | I’ll use this for my next wormable vuln instead of hard coding DNS checks ;) | null | null | 41,809,879 | 41,809,879 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,013 | comment | sangnoir | 2024-10-11T16:39:56 | null | Forum 101: someone who posted flamebait cannot blame those who got baited for flamebaiting. Both are problematic, but the baiter is responsible for raising the temperature. | null | null | 41,809,805 | 41,786,768 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,014 | comment | zoezoezoezoe | 2024-10-11T16:39:56 | null | > ICANN’s policy on ccTLDs is pretty straightforward — your territory has to be on the ISO 3166 list and the ccTLD has to match the code ISO gives you. If your code drops off the list, you have five years, extensible to 10, to conduct an orderly transition before the TLD is retired.
Yeah, no, on the ISO 3166 list the soviet union is notably absent, and that country has been gone for over 30 years and yet, you can still buy a .su domain to this day if you wanted. ICANN considers the usage of the domains and how potentially damaging it could be to remove a domain, I strongly strongly believe that .io is here to stay. | null | null | 41,781,827 | 41,781,827 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,015 | comment | aithrowawaycomm | 2024-10-11T16:39:59 | null | The problem here is that throwing in little gotchas like that is a tactic used by math and physics educators to ensure that students actually understand the topic by reasoning through new problems, rather than mindlessly turning the crank from learning the "surface structure" of earlier problem sets. The argument here is that the LLM is not reasoning, it's mindlessly turning a crank.<p>I don't think this exact question would be out of place on a 6th grade math test. I distinctly remember being taught this skill in "word problems," learning to identify information that actually pertains to the question rather than being distracted by red herrings the teacher threw in. | null | null | 41,810,517 | 41,808,683 | null | [
41811554
] | null | null |
41,811,016 | comment | tpoacher | 2024-10-11T16:40:13 | null | OH GOD, MY EYES!!! [starry eyed emoji]<p>While I'm sure this was a nightmare to make, it's fun to use! \o/ | null | null | 41,810,148 | 41,809,469 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,017 | comment | sensanaty | 2024-10-11T16:40:50 | null | But they can simply continue using whatever version of Python works for them, right?<p>I never got this argument, personally. Sure, having to rip out a bunch of code because of lang-level changes can suck, but you also only really need to do that if you're starting a new project anyway or for whatever reason want to keep being pinned to @latest version of the lang.<p>If you're a researcher who uses Python 2 as a means to an end, then just stick to Py2. It's unreasonable to expect the entire python world to freeze in place so you don't have an annoying migration journey. If you <i>need</i> the latest Py3 features, them's just the brakes I'm afraid, eventually APIs need to change. | null | null | 41,808,024 | 41,787,041 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,018 | comment | ricksunny | 2024-10-11T16:41:11 | null | Counter: the [Robin] Hansonian universe.
('Grabby Aliens' in his unfortunately chosen IMO nomenclature). However rare life is, and however rarer intelligent life is, it expands to fill galaxies, even allowing for lightspeed limitation. | null | null | 41,810,883 | 41,760,971 | null | [
41811505,
41811778
] | null | null |
41,811,019 | comment | ChrisArchitect | 2024-10-11T16:41:13 | null | That masto link isn't even up to date. (<a href="https://x.com/brewster_kahle/status/1844485102312751421" rel="nofollow">https://x.com/brewster_kahle/status/1844485102312751421</a>)<p>Discussion: <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41792500">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41792500</a> | null | null | 41,810,937 | 41,810,937 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,020 | comment | dang | 2024-10-11T16:41:16 | null | Yes, this is a generic tangent—somewhere between generic and offtopic, actually—and certainly a flamewar tangent, so it is correctly flagged. Please don't create accounts to break HN's rules with.<p>"<i>Eschew flamebait. Avoid generic tangents.</i>"<p><a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html">https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html</a> | null | null | 41,808,286 | 41,807,681 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,021 | comment | grinich | 2024-10-11T16:41:40 | null | Hey, I’m the founder of WorkOS (which makes AuthKit).<p>Would love to learn where we missed on the developer experience. Can you email me? [email protected]<p>We have hundreds of happy customers using AuthKit including high-demand apps like Cursor. Lots more features coming too. | null | null | 41,805,031 | 41,801,883 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,022 | comment | kuhsaft | 2024-10-11T16:41:40 | null | On the contrary, MV2 used onBeforeRequest which let extensions see what requests you were making. They could then take that data and use it for malicious purposes.<p>MV3 doesn’t allow extensions to know what requests are being made, so extensions can’t use your data maliciously.<p>Requests to ads that are blocked are blocked.<p>I think you’re thinking of Privacy-preserving ad measurement which is an option in Firefox and Safari.
<a href="https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/privacy-preserving-attribution" rel="nofollow">https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/privacy-preserving-attr...</a> | null | null | 41,810,636 | 41,809,698 | null | [
41812305,
41811870
] | null | null |
41,811,023 | comment | ChocolateGod | 2024-10-11T16:41:43 | null | > There is not enough internal immigration to cause any disruption to national identity.<p>The British expats in Spain and Portugal are famous for learning the local language and culture. | null | null | 41,806,654 | 41,799,016 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,024 | comment | noncoml | 2024-10-11T16:41:44 | null | That’s like saying let’s not equip planes that won’t crash with black boxes. Only the ones that crash need it. Let’s split up crashing and non crashing planes. | null | null | 41,810,865 | 41,810,627 | null | [
41811206,
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] | null | null |
41,811,025 | comment | neilv | 2024-10-11T16:41:47 | null | Better Stack got on my disapproval list, for spamming me with a series of automated sales emails 15-20 minutes apart, which seemed designed that way. "One more thing.", etc.<p>They should've sent <i>one</i> welcome&upsell email, not several. And not abused contact info that was intended to reach me reliably and promptly.<p>For my immediate very simple need, Uptrends didn't spam me, and so far they've reliably and promptly notified me whenever my site is down even briefly (e.g., rebooting for kernel update), so they'll be getting money from me as I grow. <a href="https://www.uptrends.com/" rel="nofollow">https://www.uptrends.com/</a> | null | null | 41,810,565 | 41,809,879 | null | [
41811302
] | null | null |
41,811,026 | comment | darepublic | 2024-10-11T16:42:23 | null | so the 90% is really meaningless in that case.. it's what we judge to be 90% which is erroneous. | null | null | 41,809,180 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,027 | story | ibobev | 2024-10-11T16:42:37 | An Overview of BRDF Models [pdf] | null | https://digibug.ugr.es/bitstream/handle/10481/19751/rmontes_LSI-2012-001TR.pdf | 2 | null | 41,811,027 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,811,028 | comment | dang | 2024-10-11T16:42:38 | null | Can you please make your substantive points without name-calling and flamebait? We've had to ask you this before!<p><a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html">https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html</a> | null | null | 41,808,285 | 41,807,681 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,029 | comment | scottyah | 2024-10-11T16:42:40 | null | Modern gas pumps don't work without electricity, but batteries and generators can still charge electric cars. | null | null | 41,810,864 | 41,810,627 | null | [
41811071
] | null | null |
41,811,030 | comment | HarryHirsch | 2024-10-11T16:42:46 | null | The incidence for hemosiderosis is somewhere around 1:500 or somesuch. What's underappreciated is anemia due to frequent blood donations. If you give blood regularly and feel off, it's worth getting a lab test for ferritin/TIBC. The outcome might surprise you. | null | null | 41,810,240 | 41,753,677 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,031 | comment | jwhitlark | 2024-10-11T16:42:50 | null | Rust also runs on picos and Esp32s, if that’s your jam. | null | null | 41,809,355 | 41,808,696 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,032 | story | achristmascarl | 2024-10-11T16:42:54 | SpaceX wants to go to Mars. To do so, environmentalists say it's trashing Texas | null | https://www.npr.org/2024/10/10/nx-s1-5145776/spacex-texas-wetlands | 9 | null | 41,811,032 | 8 | [
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41,811,033 | comment | kelseyfrog | 2024-10-11T16:42:57 | null | It sounds like you find my outlook reprehensible.<p>This is a great example of how communication between people with different outlooks breaks down. We'll eventually get frustrated, call it quits, and never speak again. It's the exact pattern played out in miniature. | null | null | 41,810,697 | 41,804,460 | null | [
41811751,
41811446
] | null | null |
41,811,034 | comment | dang | 2024-10-11T16:43:04 | null | Could you please stop posting unsubstantive comments and flamebait? You've unfortunately been doing it repeatedly. It's not what this site is for, and destroys what it is for.<p>If you wouldn't mind reviewing <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html">https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html</a> and taking the intended spirit of the site more to heart, we'd be grateful. | null | null | 41,807,819 | 41,807,681 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,035 | comment | duggan | 2024-10-11T16:43:08 | null | Routinely surprised that there are adult human beings that do this, but so it goes. | null | null | 41,810,898 | 41,809,879 | null | [
41811113
] | null | null |
41,811,036 | comment | MBCook | 2024-10-11T16:43:11 | null | There wouldn’t be two rust compilers.<p>But you still need GCC + rustc to compile the full kernel. And that’s what was suggesting was an issue. I suspect people want to be able to use <i>only</i> GCC. | null | null | 41,810,570 | 41,805,288 | null | [
41812797
] | null | null |
41,811,037 | comment | theamk | 2024-10-11T16:43:11 | null | emacs is a really bad comparison, given that it has million of functions and is infinitely customizable. It's slow performance has been subject of many jokes back in the 1970's [0] ("EMACS: Eight Megabytes And Constantly Swapping")<p>You should at least compare it to "nano" editor, or even better, it's predecessor "pico".<p>[0] <a href="https://github.com/emacs-mirror/emacs/blob/master/etc/JOKES#L172C1-L176C9">https://github.com/emacs-mirror/emacs/blob/master/etc/JOKES#...</a> | null | null | 41,806,206 | 41,777,995 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,038 | story | wpnewsify | 2024-10-11T16:43:12 | null | null | null | 1 | null | 41,811,038 | null | null | null | true |
41,811,039 | comment | tslocum | 2024-10-11T16:43:23 | null | Problems like this show why publishing outside of Google Play is necessary. I wrote about why I think F-Droid is the best alternative app store to use.<p><a href="https://rocket9labs.com/post/on-the-importance-of-f-droid/" rel="nofollow">https://rocket9labs.com/post/on-the-importance-of-f-droid/</a> | null | null | 41,808,917 | 41,808,917 | null | [
41811173
] | null | null |
41,811,040 | comment | Onavo | 2024-10-11T16:43:27 | null | Yes but most of the time in tools handling PDFs they are usually through the network. Would be a minefield if legal says the AGPL will affect every single microservice that interacts with your service. This is why there is a blanket AGPL ban at most tech companies. The AGPL is effectively an EULA. | null | null | 41,810,329 | 41,804,341 | null | [
41811659
] | null | null |
41,811,041 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T16:43:31 | null | null | null | null | 41,810,882 | 41,810,882 | null | null | true | null |
41,811,042 | comment | BrandoElFollito | 2024-10-11T16:43:32 | null | What is "dishonor" in that context? (Sorry, not a native speaker of English) | null | null | 41,810,680 | 41,809,879 | null | [
41811271,
41811122
] | null | null |
41,811,043 | comment | add-sub-mul-div | 2024-10-11T16:43:48 | null | Is there evidence for that, or is that just ingrained now as something we say when an article hurts our feelings? | null | null | 41,811,002 | 41,810,627 | null | [
41811216
] | null | null |
41,811,044 | story | impish9208 | 2024-10-11T16:43:49 | Pizza Hut Supports Your Job Search with a Pizza Box That Doubles as a Resume | null | https://blog.pizzahut.com/pizza-hut-aims-to-support-your-job-search-with-the-launch-of-reszames-a-pizza-box-that-doubles-as-a-resume/ | 3 | null | 41,811,044 | 0 | [
41811083
] | null | null |
41,811,045 | story | omk | 2024-10-11T16:43:54 | The Illusion of Information Adequacy | null | https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0310216 | 15 | null | 41,811,045 | 2 | [
41813161,
41812090
] | null | null |
41,811,046 | comment | modeless | 2024-10-11T16:44:02 | null | Tesla's advantage over <i>Boston Dynamics</i> will be manufacturing. Over China, it will have to be innovation and software. China is going to be much harder to beat than Boston Dynamics for sure. But remember that Tesla is no stranger to competing with Chinese companies and they are doing OK vs BYD today and not just in the US, with the bestselling car model in the world <i>and in China</i>. I think the "partnership trap" was more relevant years ago; today China has a lot less need to steal tech, at least in the domain of car manufacturing (note that Tesla is not manufacturing Optimus in China).<p>It's hardly new news that Elon is an awkward presenter and it isn't relevant to future performance of Tesla. You have to look at the pace of improvement of what Tesla is doing. Among humanoid companies that started in <i>2021</i> or later Tesla is the furthest along and improving much faster than the likes of Boston Dynamics. While they are still far behind, they have the time and the funding to catch up.<p>The Cybercab demo was an amusement park ride (and Elon explicitly billed it as such), however Tesla's FSD is released to the public and can be directly evaluated. While it is not yet near Waymo it <i>is</i> impressively good as of this month and the rate of improvement is very fast now. It just drove me across town for 20 minutes and I didn't have to touch the steering wheel a single time. It was incapable of that on that specific drive just two months ago. And I have the less powerful older variant of the Autopilot computer. | null | null | 41,807,898 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,047 | comment | FerretFred | 2024-10-11T16:44:10 | null | I can't help thinking that if/when the oil really starts to run out, the only vehicles that will be allowed to use it will be Emergency Services vehicles. I can't currently imagine (say) an electric fire truck, nor ambulance. | null | null | 41,810,627 | 41,810,627 | null | [
41811251,
41812544
] | null | null |
41,811,048 | comment | cuu508 | 2024-10-11T16:44:19 | null | I am running my own SMTP for my SaaS. I used managed SMTP services, including SES, before. It took be roughly 2 months to get it all set up: research the SMTP server options, trial a few of them, pick one, learn it thoroughly, write deployment scripts, deploy it, switch email traffic over to it gradually to warm up the sending IP, and monitor it. Blogged about it here: <a href="https://blog.healthchecks.io/2023/08/notes-on-self-hosted-transactional-email/" rel="nofollow">https://blog.healthchecks.io/2023/08/notes-on-self-hosted-tr...</a><p>If you are starting from zero, and are not running in production yet, I suppose it's easier as you can afford to make mistakes and lose some email. I had to measure everything 7 times, and still had one major oh-no event :-) | null | null | 41,809,610 | 41,809,181 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,049 | comment | resters | 2024-10-11T16:44:19 | null | I think it's obvious that LLMs will be able to do "reasoning" far better than humans. We must separate our notion of what is remarkably human. Rarely is it the reasoning, it's the intuition that a logical path exists -- for example a mathematical proof that draws from separate sub-disciplines of mathematics, etc.<p>Consider that in a LLM, language inputs are tokenized and fed as inputs into the neural network, and connections in the network create output sequences that are not just syntactically correct (trivial) or form semantically plausible sentences (early transformers did this). LLM output sequences follow the deep patterns of language which include sometjhing that resembles reasoning as the model has learnt from its training data.<p>LLMs seem to fall short because they often fail at truly abstract reasoning tasks that humans find easy. If trained properly, LLMs can develop advanced representations of logical systems that will surely outpace what humans can do in terms of raw reasoning.<p>However, human mathematicians have not even unified around constructive mathematics as a must for the study of mathematics. This reveals that even highly evolved mathematical disciplines rely on objects whose characteristics do not lend themselves to full logical scrutiny and are in a way socially constructed and effectively hard to audit.<p>While notation in mathematics is incredible <i>technology</i> it is also a highly limiting factor that suffers major tradeoffs. Humans struggle to invent new notation fast enough and to discard outdated notation fast enough. If we do see an AI-powered boom in mathematics, I suspect our notion of notation and the fluidity we demand from it will change dramatically. | null | null | 41,808,683 | 41,808,683 | null | [
41811441,
41811177,
41811232
] | null | null |
41,811,050 | story | herbertl | 2024-10-11T16:44:42 | Why aren't we talking about the real reason male college enrollment is dropping? | null | https://celestemdavis.substack.com/p/why-boys-dont-go-to-college | 8 | null | 41,811,050 | 10 | [
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] | null | null |
41,811,051 | comment | littlestymaar | 2024-10-11T16:44:48 | null | With the same mindset, but without even PyTorch as dependency there's a straightforward CPU implementation of llama/gemma in Rust: <a href="https://github.com/samuel-vitorino/lm.rs/">https://github.com/samuel-vitorino/lm.rs/</a><p>It's impressive to realize how little code is needed to run these models at all. | null | null | 41,773,020 | 41,773,020 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,052 | comment | newsclues | 2024-10-11T16:44:49 | null | @dang | null | null | 41,808,564 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,053 | comment | lxe | 2024-10-11T16:44:50 | null | It's stage 0 for now but there are polyfills.<p>In .babelrc do<p><pre><code> {
"presets": [
[
"@babel/preset-env",
{
"targets": {
"esmodules": true
},
"include": ["es.autocirc"]
}
]
]
}</code></pre> | null | null | 41,809,391 | 41,787,041 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,054 | comment | ChrisArchitect | 2024-10-11T16:44:57 | null | Lots of discussion among others:<p><a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41803650">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41803650</a><p><a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41791369">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41791369</a> | null | null | 41,810,893 | 41,810,893 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,055 | comment | eberkund | 2024-10-11T16:44:58 | null | I would say they are similar but the focus is more on controlling everything through Git rather than IaC which leaves this ambiguous and can require updating the Git repo and then visiting a dashboard to press a button to check the repo and apply it.<p>Once you dig deep enough into many tech buzzwords you'll find that that different people can mean slightly different things with the same words. Some may consider special PR comments to control infrastructure operations as a form of GitOps because what would otherwise be a button in a dashboard now lives alongside the Git history in GitHub. | null | null | 41,810,998 | 41,810,998 | null | [
41811619
] | null | null |
41,811,056 | comment | spelunker | 2024-10-11T16:44:58 | null | Funny, I was just reading a chapter in The Dark Forest that included Ceres. What's that thing where you see/hear a word or concept and then it suddenly keeps appearing in places? | null | null | 41,760,971 | 41,760,971 | null | [
41811069,
41811586
] | null | null |
41,811,057 | comment | aaronfc | 2024-10-11T16:45:01 | null | Didn't know about this! Thanks :) | null | null | 41,743,960 | 41,742,210 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,058 | comment | coredog64 | 2024-10-11T16:45:16 | null | I’d guess that there’s not enough energy density in the waste heat to do anything useful, especially once you bring it away from the clean areas of the facility where it’s produced to someplace you could actually use it at scale. | null | null | 41,810,899 | 41,805,446 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,059 | comment | throwup238 | 2024-10-11T16:45:18 | null | As far as I know South Pasadena is the only one that has converted their entire fleet to Teslas. It’s a small city in the middle of suburban LA with zero off roading and they borrow lots of resources from the Pasadena PD so the limitations probably aren’t that big a deal. There’s not a lot going on in the town so if someone is getting arrested half the officers on duty show up anyway.<p>Other departments are running smaller trials or converting to more suitable cars like the F-150 Lightning mentioned in the article. | null | null | 41,810,857 | 41,810,627 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,060 | story | bfirsh | 2024-10-11T16:45:21 | Flux is fast on Replicate, and it's open-source | null | https://replicate.com/blog/flux-is-fast-and-open-source | 2 | null | 41,811,060 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,811,061 | comment | sweeter | 2024-10-11T16:45:24 | null | Yea. You either have to pump a ton of money into it like Apple tries to do to get devs to target your OS, or you can take matters into your own hands and do the unthinkable with Wine and Proton. Its unironically a silver bullet solution. Otherwise we'd all be waiting for years to make 1/1000th the progress | null | null | 41,810,804 | 41,799,068 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,062 | comment | greiskul | 2024-10-11T16:45:35 | null | Google has an option for what to do with your account if you are inactive for a set period of time. So you can choose what to delete, and what to give access to someone you want. You can also have it send emails to up to 10 people, with whatever message you want. | null | null | 41,810,680 | 41,809,879 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,063 | comment | T3RMINATED | 2024-10-11T16:45:42 | null | [dead] | null | null | 41,808,943 | 41,808,943 | null | null | null | true |
41,811,064 | story | FoxyGraytail | 2024-10-11T16:45:46 | Pokemon-Inspired Fantasy Football (Gotta Coach 'Em All) | null | https://old.reddit.com/r/fantasyfootball/comments/1g0quj1/pokemoninspired_fantasy_football_gotta_coach_em/ | 5 | null | 41,811,064 | 0 | [
41811065,
41811077
] | null | null |
41,811,065 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T16:45:46 | null | null | null | null | 41,811,064 | 41,811,064 | null | null | true | null |
41,811,066 | comment | s-macke | 2024-10-11T16:45:47 | null | Tried it with N=2 and M=1 (brother singular) with the gpt-4o model and CoT.<p>1. 50% success without "full" terminology.<p>2. 5% success with "full" terminology.<p>So, the improvement in clarity has exactly the opposite effect. | null | null | 41,810,203 | 41,808,683 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,067 | comment | jayemar | 2024-10-11T16:45:48 | null | Hadn't heard of Pre-Scheme so I looked through the site a bit and was surprised to see this:<p>> Pre-Scheme only supports data-types which are supported natively by C. There are no lists,<p>A lisp without lists, very interesting project! | null | null | 41,797,875 | 41,797,875 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,068 | comment | scottyah | 2024-10-11T16:45:56 | null | Irvine did, looks like it's working for them: <a href="https://ngtnews.com/tesla-cybertruck-ready-to-help-enforce-the-law-in-irvine-california" rel="nofollow">https://ngtnews.com/tesla-cybertruck-ready-to-help-enforce-t...</a> | null | null | 41,810,844 | 41,810,627 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,069 | comment | beng-nl | 2024-10-11T16:45:56 | null | The baader-meinhof phenomenon. | null | null | 41,811,056 | 41,760,971 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,070 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T16:46:02 | null | null | null | null | 41,809,663 | 41,808,683 | null | null | true | null |
41,811,071 | comment | lokar | 2024-10-11T16:46:06 | null | Most cities have their own pumps at the maintenance yard, and they can run on generators | null | null | 41,811,029 | 41,810,627 | null | [
41811185
] | null | null |
41,811,072 | comment | bongodongobob | 2024-10-11T16:46:21 | null | No it's not. If something was stolen from your car or the neighbors music is too loud, you don't need a fully armed paramilitary with a 500 horsepower souped up car. A dude with a baton in a Prius is perfectly fine. If they need bigger guns, they can call them in if necessary. | null | null | 41,811,024 | 41,810,627 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,073 | comment | amimetic | 2024-10-11T16:46:25 | null | I didn't go that far (every permission) but had the same experience. | null | null | 41,810,967 | 41,808,943 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,074 | comment | MisterBastahrd | 2024-10-11T16:46:31 | null | The entire purpose of nuclear armaments is to make certain wars too nasty to fathom engaging in. If their organization didn't exist at all, we'd still have exactly the same number of nuclear war casualties since the 1940s. | null | null | 41,807,884 | 41,807,681 | null | [
41811636
] | null | null |
41,811,075 | comment | vundercind | 2024-10-11T16:46:32 | null | Even spike traps and “pit maneuvers” (AKA forcing another car to lose control at speed—take away the cool term and they’re just causing someone to lose control of a ton or three of steel on public streets, which is obviously nuts even if the only people at risk are in the fleeing car, unless the situation is already extreme) are crazy-dangerous and aren’t good to employ outside exceptional circumstances.<p>These tactics (outside extraordinary cases) are a solution to a problem the cops created themselves by chasing the fleeing suspect, and turning it into a life-and-death matter. It’s one of those cases where a knee-jerk and kinda authoritarian sense of justice (“they’re running, you can’t run from the cops, they have to go after them!”) is at sharply at odds with public benefit. | null | null | 41,810,989 | 41,810,627 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,076 | comment | supriyo-biswas | 2024-10-11T16:46:45 | null | One other way of reining in such a manager in is to bring someone in the meeting who the manager trusts and who you too have good rapport with, and have them say the same points that you would have made otherwise.<p>Effectively a form of trust and reputation arbitrage, but it was effective for dealing with a particularly difficult manager who didn’t accept certain things about the design of an API, and yet when the other guy told him the same things, he just asked a few mild follow ups and accepted what I was telling him all along. | null | null | 41,807,034 | 41,765,594 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,077 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T16:46:52 | null | null | null | null | 41,811,064 | 41,811,064 | null | null | true | null |
41,811,078 | story | littlestymaar | 2024-10-11T16:46:54 | Lm.rs: Minimal CPU LLM inference in Rust with no dependency | null | https://github.com/samuel-vitorino/lm.rs | 90 | null | 41,811,078 | 25 | [
41812637,
41812524,
41812438,
41812615,
41812454,
41811889,
41812151
] | null | null |
41,811,079 | comment | oivey | 2024-10-11T16:47:00 | null | Yeah, that’s true. CUDA is in large part for big HPC servers, where ARM historically wasn’t a player and still isn’t dominant. x86 got clobbered for HPC by CUDA. | null | null | 41,810,799 | 41,808,013 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,080 | comment | seccode | 2024-10-11T16:47:06 | null | Thanks this is a good point, I'll change proof to evidence | null | null | 41,810,080 | 41,805,941 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,081 | story | g8oz | 2024-10-11T16:47:15 | Smartphone rules parents should follow, according to a social psychologist | null | https://fortune.com/well/article/rules-for-curbing-kid-smartphone-use-mental-health-crisis/ | 1 | null | 41,811,081 | 0 | [
41811091
] | null | null |
41,811,082 | comment | ChrisMarshallNY | 2024-10-11T16:47:25 | null | Not really my department. I just have anectdata for you. | null | null | 41,810,876 | 41,780,229 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,083 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T16:47:27 | null | null | null | null | 41,811,044 | 41,811,044 | null | null | true | null |
41,811,084 | comment | grecy | 2024-10-11T16:48:02 | null | Like any robot on a vehicle assembly line, it’s going to be trivial to get it to follow a pre programmed path. All the cars it has to clean are identical…. So actually it will be simple. | null | null | 41,806,378 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,085 | comment | danso | 2024-10-11T16:48:17 | null | But Teslas vehicles can’t operate ANYWHERE autonomously — <i>not even with supervision inside the closed loop tunnels in Las Vegas</i> [0] — 6+ years after Musk said autopilot/FSD was capable of driving itself coast to coast.<p>Whenever Teslas manage to offer autonomous driving, what makes you think LIDAR etc will still cost what it does now?<p>[0] <a href="https://www.reviewjournal.com/news/news-columns/road-warrior/new-tunnels-coming-for-vegas-loop-autonomous-driving-on-horizon-3147274/amp/" rel="nofollow">https://www.reviewjournal.com/news/news-columns/road-warrior...</a> | null | null | 41,806,570 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,086 | comment | bobthepanda | 2024-10-11T16:48:32 | null | Buddhism has ongoing violence, today, if you count the persecution of the Rohingya in Myanmar. | null | null | 41,810,941 | 41,776,631 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,087 | comment | MisterBastahrd | 2024-10-11T16:48:33 | null | If the past 8 years have shown us anything, it's that we are capable of electing incredibly stupid people who likely would get us into war if being blown back into the stone age weren't a possibility. I like nuclear weapons for that reason. It scares tyrants into complacency on the larger scale. | null | null | 41,808,602 | 41,807,681 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,088 | story | yamrzou | 2024-10-11T16:48:46 | Working Memory and Object Permanence (2017) | null | https://halfanhour.blogspot.com/2017/10/working-memory-and-object-permanence.html | 2 | null | 41,811,088 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,811,089 | comment | modeless | 2024-10-11T16:48:59 | null | Reuters said that, and Elon directly denied it. I think it is likely that the $25k car was delayed somewhat from whatever its initial plan was, but not canceled. | null | null | 41,808,865 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,090 | comment | qup | 2024-10-11T16:48:59 | null | I'm one of the people you might invite. I'm an introvert and I don't think to include others in my plans. When I think about it now, I mostly assume they wouldn't want to.<p>I will accept almost every social engagement with people I like, though.<p>So: maybe it's not you. | null | null | 41,810,889 | 41,810,889 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,091 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T16:49:12 | null | null | null | null | 41,811,081 | 41,811,081 | null | null | true | null |
41,811,092 | comment | aantix | 2024-10-11T16:49:24 | null | You ask directly - the very questions you outlined.<p>You have to risk the relationship - the very thoughts you fear, the thoughts "Oh, I could never ask that, they'll hate me."<p>Those thoughts. You have to voice them.<p>It's the only way to maintain intimacy and reveal who you truly are. | null | null | 41,810,889 | 41,810,889 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,093 | comment | aithrowawaycomm | 2024-10-11T16:49:24 | null | It's easy enough to generate an enormous amount of formal math problems, but utterly quixotic to generate an enormous amount of <i>quantitative reasoning</i> problems, which is the thing LLMs are lacking. | null | null | 41,809,198 | 41,808,683 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,094 | comment | cromka | 2024-10-11T16:49:36 | null | „On <i>Windows</i>, only the graphics card driver needs to be installed if you own an NVIDIA GPU. On <i>Windows</i>, if you have an AMD GPU, you should install the ROCm SDK v6.1 and then pass the flags --recompile --gpu amd the first time you run your llamafile.”<p>Looks like there’s a typo, Windows is mentioned twice. | null | null | 41,810,936 | 41,773,020 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,095 | comment | binary132 | 2024-10-11T16:49:54 | null | I love Lua but I spend way more time than is fair hunting through my codebase to find the name of that one thing I was trying to access but that doesn’t seem to be present any more and where and when it was created. (Inb4 “better unit tests!” — typesystems do that bit of thinking for you…)<p>I feel the same way about Lisps, but more strongly. It’s really fast and fun to sketch stuff up until you’re about 3 or 4 functions deep trying to figure out the shape of that one inner associative array and what made you think this little adventure was a good idea in the first place. | null | null | 41,808,484 | 41,801,415 | null | [
41811120
] | null | null |
41,811,096 | comment | s1artibartfast | 2024-10-11T16:49:55 | null | Seems wild. Is there precedent for the costal commission using personal character and speech as a criteria for licensing?<p>Seems outside their preview and contrary to free speech and equal treatment. | null | null | 41,810,649 | 41,810,649 | null | [
41812673,
41811297
] | null | null |
41,811,097 | comment | mistrial9 | 2024-10-11T16:49:56 | null | I once knew an academic who would not fly in an airplane. He was invited to a distinguished conference across the country, but complained to me that he was too scared to fly. "Why?" I ask.. "Terrorists" he replied.. "it is too serious. I just can't do it". so a year or two pass and then I see this Academic again. While talking he mentions that he just returned from a great conference far away. "What? I thought you were afraid to fly in an airplane!" .. He replies "that was true, I was scared of someone carrying a bomb on the flight. But, I calculated the statistical odds of there being TWO bombs on a single plane, and it was infinitesimal..."<p>"So now I carry my own!" | null | null | 41,808,002 | 41,807,681 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,098 | comment | sshtml | 2024-10-11T16:49:58 | null | Most remote dev machine setups I've seen involve some combination of SSH, port forwarding, mounting remote drives, etc., not actually running remote desktop. So you don't RDP and open your IDE on the remote machine, you open the IDE on your cheapo laptop and use whatever SSH or remote filesystem mechanism it provides to connect it to your dev machine. Services like Tailscale make it easy to establish the connectivity between devices. Doesn't work for all dev workflows though, sometimes you're forced to use the GUI on the remote host. | null | null | 41,807,385 | 41,792,570 | null | [
41811224
] | null | null |
41,811,099 | comment | christina97 | 2024-10-11T16:50:06 | null | I sometimes think about a “dead man service”: you leave instructions (that you upload to the service), then when you pass away/etc, the service operators go and follow your instructions and do whatever you asked for. You’d pay some pre-agreed sum, possibly annuity-type subscription, and at the end we go and follow your wishes. Basically a technically competent will executor. It’s probably too much to expect your family to know how to operate your systems. Maybe you encrypt the instructions and give fractional keys to family etc. | null | null | 41,809,879 | 41,809,879 | null | [
41811407,
41811123
] | null | null |
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