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41,811,200 | comment | f1shy | 2024-10-11T17:01:15 | null | I think in this an other videos, what she says is "they are not even wrong" and she does have a point there. | null | null | 41,808,127 | 41,808,127 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,201 | comment | jamiedumont | 2024-10-11T17:01:16 | null | This is a brilliant endeavour and incredibly well executed! I’ll certainly be bookmarking it to share with others.<p>I’ve recently decided to start adding to my website with just hand-written HTML, and slowly migrating the back catalogue. I love its directness, its ability for ad-hoc changes to a page and its robustness. After trying almost every system for publishing on the web under the sun; I’ve concluded HTML is the right tool for the job, even if it means a little extra work up front.<p>As a retired developer I’m happy to tinker with Rust or SQL or something embedded when the mood strikes, but when I want to write, I just want to write - and HTML kind of lets me do that. I think if more people saw HTML as a document to author rather than just a build target then we’d have a lot simpler systems. This mindset has resulted/allowed for a huge dumbing down of average computer/web users and huge headaches for developers. I can’t think who all the complexity we’ve brought into the world serves 99% of the time.<p>This resource might be one of the things that nudges us back on track. | null | null | 41,801,334 | 41,801,334 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,202 | comment | notamy | 2024-10-11T17:01:34 | null | > John Carlos Baez<p>For those like me who didn't know, <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_C._Baez" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_C._Baez</a><p>> John Carlos Baez (/ˈbaɪ.ɛz/;[2] born June 12, 1961) is an American mathematical physicist and a professor of mathematics at the University of California, Riverside (UCR)[3] in Riverside, California. He has worked on spin foams in loop quantum gravity, applications of higher categories to physics, and applied category theory. Additionally, Baez is known on the World Wide Web as the author of the crackpot index. | null | null | 41,808,143 | 41,808,127 | null | [
41811429,
41811279,
41811697,
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] | null | null |
41,811,203 | story | cameron_b | 2024-10-11T17:01:40 | AMD EPYC 9005 Turin with 768 Threads per Server | null | https://www.servethehome.com/amd-epyc-9005-turin-turns-transcendent-performance-solidigm-broadcom/ | 2 | null | 41,811,203 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,811,204 | comment | aguaviva | 2024-10-11T17:01:45 | null | <i>Your previous d̶o̶u̶b̶l̶e̶s̶p̶e̶a̶k̶ comment.</i><p>Which was?<p>No need for fancy optic effects here - just say what you mean. | null | null | 41,810,244 | 41,776,721 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,205 | comment | jlos | 2024-10-11T17:01:47 | null | (1) Live and Speak Honestly<p>(2) Be Childlike in your approach to life and relationships<p>(1) Honest Living<p>If your boring (and I don't know if you are), its probably because you stopped pursuing things that you wanted and excited you for something safe.
Boring people also mask their emotions when speaking to people to avoid rejection.<p>To find people you genuinely connect with, you need to express yourself fully. Honest expressions will make you more polarizing, and you will experience rejection. But the people you connect with will be much deeper because they see who you actually are.<p>Honest living usually means some therapy or self reflection to identify the things in your life you stopped purusing. A simple litmus test: you are in a social situation and see a person you find attractive. Do you make excuses for not talking to them or go and talk to them, openly stating your interest?<p>(2) Childlike<p>Children play until they get hurt or get in trouble. Do you approach relationships with this attitude? Is your heart open to loving other people even if it hurts and they reject you? | null | null | 41,810,889 | 41,810,889 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,811,206 | comment | vundercind | 2024-10-11T17:01:51 | null | What would traffic enforcement folks be doing that would require all kinds of tactical upgrades to their cars, once we take car chases (again: already usually a bad idea and danger to the public well in excess of their benefits, no matter how the cop cars are equipped) out of the picture?<p>Scenario: ordinary traffic stop. Writes ticket or issues warning. Everything’s fine.<p>Scenario: I’m driving with a suspended license and may have an outstanding warrant for a missed court date. I elect not to run. Normal cop car called, takes me in. I won’t attack the traffic enforcement officer, because this is all being recorded and <i>that gains me nothing</i> except lost time and more charges, since if…<p>Scenario: The above is the situation but I elect to flee. No chase occurs, so this doesn’t turn into a prolonged risk to the public. Since I know the traffic enforcers don’t pursue and it’s well-publicized that their car and body cam footage is uploaded constantly, there’s zero reason to engage with or attempt to harm them.<p>The remaining risks are things that aren’t really mitigated by car upgrades (someone driving off mid-stop, which is risky for the traffic enforcer already standing next to the stopped-person’s car) or the kind of risks also present at, I dunno, the grocery store (someone armed and crazy attacks you for absolutely no conceivable benefit to themselves)<p>A bonus is that this would make non-traffic-enforcement cops a <i>ton</i> safer, since most of their deaths are from traffic accidents (not intentional attacks with a vehicle, to distinguish the two) and they’d spend way less time driving, or standing on the side of highways. [edit] I got that wrong, vehicle strikes and car crashes are more like ~40% of deaths on the job, not over half. Still, it’s way up the list of risks. Unclear how major injury causes break down. | null | null | 41,811,024 | 41,810,627 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,207 | comment | michaelt | 2024-10-11T17:01:58 | null | At least in my country, there are several tiers of police driver training/expertise.<p>A large amount of police work involves things like "go to the scene of the burglary from yesterday, take witness statements and fingerprints" and "go to the place the noise complaint came from, tell them to turn it down" and things like that.<p>Tasks that need a police car and timely response, but they don't need to be speeding and running red lights. This work is done by officers in kinda basic police cars.<p>Other officers, with advanced driver training, are called on for tasks that might need high speed pursuit. They get faster cars, like Mitsubishi Evos and Impreza WRXes. | null | null | 41,810,890 | 41,810,627 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,208 | comment | FredPret | 2024-10-11T17:01:59 | null | As a non-physicist, it’s hard to understand if she has a point or not.<p>Any physicists care to weigh in? | null | null | 41,808,127 | 41,808,127 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,811,209 | comment | gizajob | 2024-10-11T17:02:05 | null | She was ripping on the valuations and economics of quantum computing companies the other week, and her critiques were such that they could be levelled against capitalism itself and basically any company in the market. Was an obvious and clear step way out of her area of expertise. | null | null | 41,811,140 | 41,808,127 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,811,210 | comment | insane_dreamer | 2024-10-11T17:02:14 | null | Because most liberals consider that one person having full control over what is meant to be a neutral social platform, is anti-democratic (the philosophy, not the party). Even when Bezos bought WashPo, he took steps to ensure that its editorial process remained independent.<p>Yes, you do have media networks that are clearly partisan: Fox on one side, MSNBC on the other (though not nearly as blatantly), but Twitter is/was an open network for _individual users_ to communicate and broadcast their views. Elon has turned it into a partisan media network. | null | null | 41,810,663 | 41,810,614 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,211 | job | null | 2024-10-11T17:02:15 | Hamming AI (YC S24) Is Hiring a Product Engineer | null | https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/hamming-ai/jobs/XTCQPuO-product-engineer | 1 | null | 41,811,211 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,212 | comment | bnkamalesh | 2024-10-11T17:02:30 | null | @zimpenfish yes you are right. refetch is initiated on the first Get between 9-10mins, and the timer is reset as soon as the back fetch is successful | null | null | 41,810,266 | 41,809,262 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,811,213 | comment | rrrrrrrrrrrryan | 2024-10-11T17:02:31 | null | > We've also been considering using Combined Statistical Areas using population instead, but the benefit with DMAs is that it offers full coverage of the entire US whereas some major tech hubs are still missing from CSAs if relying solely on population.<p>I think just using the 387 MSAs [1] instead of the 181 CSAs would get you far enough to cover all the major tech hubs.<p>[1] <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metropolitan_statistical_area" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metropolitan_statistical_area</a> | null | null | 41,792,764 | 41,792,055 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,214 | comment | xpe | 2024-10-11T17:02:31 | null | I will grant that fast iteration is beneficial. But for me, under 10 seconds is usually fast enough. (For example, I don't think I would care too much when comparing 0.5 vs 5 second builds.)<p>I personally care a lot more about having a confidence-inspiring language and ecosystem.<p>In my experience with Rust and WASM (with various tools such as Dioxus), I find myself caring a lot more about the WASM ecosystem and browser evolution/improvement.<p>For example, at bottom, the JS interop feels pretty sub-optimal. Calling this "hcky" might even be deserved: I'm talking about memory serialization between JS-land and WASM-land. As I understand it, we may see significant improvement under the hood in the next few years. (I'm not an expert on the particular proposals, their adoption, etc. Please weigh in if you have a better sense.) | null | null | 41,802,366 | 41,787,041 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,215 | comment | ericd | 2024-10-11T17:02:34 | null | I was just listening to the head of a municipal bus line on NPR talking about how there’s 70% non-payment of fares. Less than a third of his riders are doing what they’re supposed to. The interviewer then asked whether it was true that there was a policy not to even have a bus driver mention that the fare hadn’t been paid, let alone confront the person or kick them off, the guy responded, saying that that was indeed the policy, because the safety of his staff was paramount. This was just after he finished complaining about how people should follow social rules, but he’s apparently unwilling to enforce them. I personally think that public transportation should be fully subsidized as a public good, but if you’re going to have a rule, you need to enforce it if you want people to maintain general respect for the law.<p>So maybe just letting people run away from the police because it might be dangerous to chase them doesn’t seem like the right solution. At least find another way to implement the consequence. The alternatives that spring to mind require extensive surveillance, though, so I’m not sure there is a preferable alternative. | null | null | 41,810,865 | 41,810,627 | null | [
41812295,
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] | null | null |
41,811,216 | comment | ezekg | 2024-10-11T17:02:41 | null | Not really. I have no incentive to defend Tesla. I do not own one, and I do not want one. I own a Ford Expedition. I was merely saying that Cybertruck would have been a better choice (or even a larger Tesla!), and them plugging a Ford EV at the end seemed like a paid hit piece brought to you by Ford. | null | null | 41,811,043 | 41,810,627 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,217 | comment | cole-k | 2024-10-11T17:02:42 | null | I feel this is a little unfair to the parent as they are offering a solution for an unsupported platform. | null | null | 41,810,955 | 41,800,602 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,811,218 | comment | wahnfrieden | 2024-10-11T17:02:47 | null | Graeber & Wengrow published good work on reassessing "priest" labels in anthropologic and archaeologic works of the past | null | null | 41,809,033 | 41,776,631 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,219 | story | contol-m | 2024-10-11T17:02:48 | BigQuery Tables for Apache Iceberg | null | https://cloud.google.com/blog/products/data-analytics/announcing-bigquery-tables-for-apache-iceberg | 2 | null | 41,811,219 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,811,220 | comment | binary132 | 2024-10-11T17:02:50 | null | yes<p>that time<p>but maybe not next time | null | null | 41,811,120 | 41,801,415 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,811,221 | story | UpFrame | 2024-10-11T17:02:52 | UpFrame, convert images and handwritten notes into Miro Boards | null | https://upframe.ai/ | 2 | null | 41,811,221 | 0 | [
41811222
] | null | null |
41,811,222 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T17:02:52 | null | null | null | null | 41,811,221 | 41,811,221 | null | null | true | null |
41,811,223 | comment | stiltzkin | 2024-10-11T17:02:55 | null | [dead] | null | null | 41,808,543 | 41,808,543 | null | null | null | true |
41,811,224 | comment | wruza | 2024-10-11T17:02:56 | null | Thanks for the explanation, but then an IDE just runs on a cheapo laptop with a mount even slower than hdd. I don’t get the idea of the advice then. It stops being a cheap terminal and becomes a cheap laptop? | null | null | 41,811,098 | 41,792,570 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,811,225 | comment | chainingsolid | 2024-10-11T17:02:57 | null | I own a 5950x, that 130 number sounds extremly wrong for idle. I'd recommand checking settings in bios. I'm getting around 7-20 depending on which number I read in Ryzen Master, so adding in the gpu idle of around 30-40, I'm around half of 130 for the entire system! I'll also add low idle power would make scence for a server owner, so I could see AMD priorizing it.. | null | null | 41,807,125 | 41,803,324 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,226 | comment | kuhsaft | 2024-10-11T17:02:59 | null | > To all the engineers working on this stuff, I hope you're happy that your work is essentially destroying the world that you and I grew up in.<p>That was a world where the user base was much more limited and devices were less capable. Now we have children, grandparents, educated, and uneducated users with access to web connected devices. These devices now contain everything about you. Compromise of a device can destroy someone’s life.<p>Not only that, but compromise of a device can cause collateral damage to other devices on the same network.<p>We now have to cater to every user. Not just to the technologically adept. Look at what people believe on social media. The bar is so low to con people into compromising their device. | null | null | 41,810,118 | 41,809,698 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,811,227 | comment | grecy | 2024-10-11T17:03:00 | null | I agree. And the very important question is how quickly is it improving?<p>What if it’s one an hour now, one a day next year and one a week in 2026? | null | null | 41,805,838 | 41,805,706 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,811,228 | comment | hollerith | 2024-10-11T17:03:02 | null | That meanders a lot. | null | null | 41,800,481 | 41,800,481 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,229 | comment | great_kraken | 2024-10-11T17:03:09 | null | I'll just keep disabling everything I don't like insofar as it's possible. I'm focusing on pragmatism. I've used Linux on the desktop in the past, and the amount of work required to make things keep running smoothly and the amount of things I can't run natively outweigh the feel-good benefits of less data collection. It's vastly more convenient to know my computer will be working every day, and I can run whatever Windows-targeted software I want without any hassle. Whatever I need for development can be run on WSL with minimal effort as well (occasionally WSL will have minor issues, but it's infrequent and the solutions are pretty easy to find).<p>None of this is to insult anybody who prioritizes things differently, or anybody who feels more strongly about how much of a problem the stuff that MS does is. I just view it as one of the many things that it's easier not to worry too much about in order for things to go more smoothly. | null | null | 41,801,769 | 41,801,331 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,230 | comment | iamacyborg | 2024-10-11T17:03:12 | null | Hasn’t been announced by GGG yet but it’s up and available. No NDA breaching content, editors are only adding information that is publicly available.<p><a href="https://www.poe2wiki.net/wiki/Path_of_Exile_2_Wiki" rel="nofollow">https://www.poe2wiki.net/wiki/Path_of_Exile_2_Wiki</a> | null | null | 41,808,045 | 41,797,719 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,811,231 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T17:03:18 | null | null | null | null | 41,810,759 | 41,776,631 | null | null | true | null |
41,811,232 | comment | agentultra | 2024-10-11T17:03:28 | null | I don’t see how it’s obvious that LLM’s will be capable of any mathematical, “reasoning.<p>LLM’s can infer relationships and maintain longer context chains in order to generate their output… it still <i>happens</i> that some times the output is correct depending on the training data, layers, context, etc. And it can get more accurate when we change the parameters of the model. But the algorithm isn’t “doing” anything here. It will generate <i>something</i> regardless of what it’s prompted with.<p>Maybe it’s right. But the algorithm is an algorithm. It doesn’t care what truth is. It’s generating BS essentially.<p>A human is doing a lot more work when performing mathematics.<p>It may be that LLM’s can be a useful tool in mathematical reasoning but it’s not obvious that it will ever be capable of it without a human, let alone be better than a human. | null | null | 41,811,049 | 41,808,683 | null | [
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41,811,233 | job | null | 2024-10-11T17:03:33 | Hamming AI (YC S24) Is Hiring a Product Engineer | null | https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/hamming-ai/jobs/XTCQPuO-product-engineer | 1 | null | 41,811,233 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,234 | comment | dartos | 2024-10-11T17:03:42 | null | Right?<p>Then you get some strange ones where parts of whole words are generated by different experts.<p>Makes me think that there’s room for improvement in the expert selection machinery, but I don’t know enough about it to speculate. | null | null | 41,809,553 | 41,804,829 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,235 | comment | SamGyamfi | 2024-10-11T17:03:45 | null | Forget about the software, the entire artistic mission is cool as hell. | null | null | 41,777,995 | 41,777,995 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,811,236 | comment | eagleinparadise | 2024-10-11T17:03:49 | null | It looks like the keyboard shortcut Cmd-L conflicts with Arc browser in the web app.<p>Looks great otherwise!<p>Are there plans for plugins and so forth ala obsidian? For instance, it would be great to have a daily/monthly/quarterly/yearly note and what not. | null | null | 41,808,943 | 41,808,943 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,237 | comment | sureglymop | 2024-10-11T17:03:55 | null | This is honestly quite painful to see. Makes me all the happier to live in Switzerland and be able to use great trains and public transport everyday. (It's definitely not cheap though but the comfort is amazing) | null | null | 41,805,706 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,238 | comment | hedgehog | 2024-10-11T17:04:01 | null | I wasn't aware of the license issue, wow. Not a good look especially considering how simple that is to resolve.<p>The model storage doesn't bother me but I also use Docker so I'm used to having a lot of tool-managed data to deal with. YMMV.<p>Edit: Removed question about GPU support. | null | null | 41,810,988 | 41,773,020 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,239 | comment | chris_st | 2024-10-11T17:04:03 | null | I definitely see your point, but let's look at what Bitwarden does:<p>1. Back up my passwords on their server for a fee. Well, that's (alas) hackable, so if someone gets their password they will have everyone's password file.
2. Except each one is encrypted with that user's password, and in my case it's really long. So they'd then have to break each individual one.
3. Except signing in with my password on a new device requires my YubiKey as well, or one of my lost-my-YubiKey tokens, which also only I possess.<p>So I'm not as worried as I probably should be :-) | null | null | 41,806,819 | 41,801,883 | null | [
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41,811,240 | comment | SmartJerry | 2024-10-11T17:04:05 | null | Autonomy is solved. It will have hiccups/mistakes, but fewer than a human driver makes. The lack of steering wheel is solved by having support drivers who can work it remotely when the passenger presses a 'help' button or similar. | null | null | 41,806,354 | 41,805,706 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,811,241 | story | roelljr | 2024-10-11T17:04:10 | null | null | null | 1 | null | 41,811,241 | null | null | null | true |
41,811,242 | comment | pfortuny | 2024-10-11T17:04:23 | null | It is important to note that the paper deals with addition modulo a specific prime P=113 (I think it is prime). This is important because the paper does not prove that the LLM discovers the algorithm for addition modulo n for general n. | null | null | 41,809,716 | 41,808,683 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,243 | comment | gamblor956 | 2024-10-11T17:04:24 | null | Per NPR, washing eggs was the historical norm until the 1960s or 1970s...(<a href="https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2014/09/11/336330502/why-the-u-s-chills-its-eggs-and-most-of-the-world-doesnt" rel="nofollow">https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2014/09/11/336330502/wh...</a>)<p>What changed is that the USDA discovered how to wash eggs properly and so mandated the method by which eggs must be washed, while Europe went the complete opposite direction and decided to outlaw washing eggs (prior to sale) but encouraged/mandated that chickens get vaccinated for salmonella (which is not required in the U.S.). | null | null | 41,800,967 | 41,765,006 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,244 | comment | Jtsummers | 2024-10-11T17:04:38 | null | <a href="https://www.swi-prolog.org/pldoc/man?section=embedded" rel="nofollow">https://www.swi-prolog.org/pldoc/man?section=embedded</a> - I've never used this myself so can't comment on how good it is. There are probably others, too.<p><a href="http://minikanren.org/" rel="nofollow">http://minikanren.org/</a> - MiniKanren, a different language in the same vein, small and embedded into lots of host languages.<p><a href="https://microsoft.github.io/z3guide/docs/logic/intro/" rel="nofollow">https://microsoft.github.io/z3guide/docs/logic/intro/</a> - Z3, again a different language but hits many of the same areas and use cases along with plenty of others. Also usable as a library (probably how most people access it, often through Python). | null | null | 41,809,545 | 41,800,764 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,245 | job | null | 2024-10-11T17:04:50 | Hamming AI (YC S24) Is Hiring a Product Engineer | null | https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/hamming-ai/jobs/XTCQPuO-product-engineer | 1 | null | 41,811,245 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,246 | story | bskinny129 | 2024-10-11T17:04:53 | null | null | null | 1 | null | 41,811,246 | null | null | null | true |
41,811,247 | comment | tgv | 2024-10-11T17:05:01 | null | TS is pretty good. In the beginning, I had to resort to 'any' frequently, but nowadays it's often possible to avoid that by writing some auxiliary types. It's not easy, but you can get quite far. JS without TS' safety net is a nightmare... | null | null | 41,803,472 | 41,787,041 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,248 | story | cipherboy | 2024-10-11T17:05:06 | OpenBao's First Roadmap and Community Direction | null | https://openbao.org/blog/roadmap/ | 3 | null | 41,811,248 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,811,249 | story | tldl | 2024-10-11T17:05:13 | The $1B Bet on AI: How Cloud Computing Is Entering a New Era | null | https://open.spotify.com/episode/5xlNrM7mHvDODshqStwMkh | 1 | null | 41,811,249 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,811,250 | comment | dctoedt | 2024-10-11T17:05:13 | null | Point taken; I edited my comment. | null | null | 41,811,217 | 41,800,602 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,251 | comment | falcolas | 2024-10-11T17:05:24 | null | I can't currently imagine (say) an electric fire truck, nor ambulance.<p>Why? The biggest problem I can think of is that they have a shorter range, but for a fire truck or ambulance the extra weight for longer range wouldn't really be an issue. The lower maintenance requirements might also mean ambulances won't be the shitshow that private ambulance companies make them right now.<p>In the worst case scenario, I imagine there would be more priority for a vehicle which can provide power to on-scene electric vehicles, which is something frequently done for lighting up scenes even today.<p>That said, I don't see these coming today or tomorrow. In a couple of years, though, we'll start seeing them more. | null | null | 41,811,047 | 41,810,627 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,252 | story | modinfo | 2024-10-11T17:05:24 | Duracell PowerCheck [video] | null | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zsA3X40nz9w | 3 | null | 41,811,252 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,811,253 | comment | dartos | 2024-10-11T17:05:25 | null | Let’s call it a day and just go for a single colo. | null | null | 41,808,904 | 41,805,446 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,254 | comment | lokar | 2024-10-11T17:05:26 | null | Sure, both systems work equally well in an extended power failure | null | null | 41,811,185 | 41,810,627 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,255 | comment | atahanacar | 2024-10-11T17:05:30 | null | As far as I can understand from the video, pattern is variable frequency PWM. | null | null | 41,809,195 | 41,757,808 | null | [
41813025
] | null | null |
41,811,256 | story | contrecc | 2024-10-11T17:05:31 | The 4 Evolutions of Your Observability Journey | null | https://thenewstack.io/the-4-evolutions-of-your-observability-journey/ | 1 | null | 41,811,256 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,811,257 | comment | diggan | 2024-10-11T17:05:40 | null | What do you mean? Why wouldn't it work next time? | null | null | 41,811,220 | 41,801,415 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,258 | comment | achandlerwhite | 2024-10-11T17:05:45 | null | On many games I have tried DX => DXVK => MoltenVk => Metal is significantly faster than DX => D3DMetal. For example XCOM2 is about twice the frames per second (yeah it has an official Mac version but it is even slower). | null | null | 41,805,103 | 41,799,068 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,259 | comment | v3ss0n | 2024-10-11T17:05:47 | null | Better have something that runs off the cloud. PagerDuty is not something under your countrol. A stuff as imporant as dead man switch should not rely on someone's service. | null | null | 41,809,879 | 41,809,879 | null | [
41812751,
41811541
] | null | null |
41,811,260 | comment | iknowstuff | 2024-10-11T17:05:50 | null | ok. I think you missed the point so to be clear: it’s exactly as first shown, and the doors are a big selling point. | null | null | 41,807,077 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,261 | job | null | 2024-10-11T17:06:08 | Hamming AI (YC S24) Is Hiring a Product Engineer | null | https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/hamming-ai/jobs/XTCQPuO-product-engineer | 1 | null | 41,811,261 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,262 | comment | wang_li | 2024-10-11T17:06:15 | null | If that one million people dying is followed by 3649 days of no one dying from that cause, yes it is. | null | null | 41,809,031 | 41,807,681 | null | [
41811562
] | null | null |
41,811,263 | story | thehoff | 2024-10-11T17:06:30 | How long til we're all on Ozempic? | null | https://asteriskmag.com/issues/07/how-long-til-were-all-on-ozempic | 141 | null | 41,811,263 | 589 | [
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] | null | null |
41,811,264 | comment | diwank | 2024-10-11T17:06:36 | null | Grokking is so cool. What does it even mean that grokking exhibits similarities to criticality? As in, what are the philosophical ramifications of this? | null | null | 41,810,753 | 41,810,753 | null | [
41811816
] | null | null |
41,811,265 | comment | echoangle | 2024-10-11T17:06:45 | null | They’re probably doing it on purpose as a joke at this point. | null | null | 41,810,735 | 41,799,068 | null | [
41811716
] | null | null |
41,811,266 | comment | FloNeu | 2024-10-11T17:07:01 | null | Lmao … I don’t have anything else to say, but feel it had to be said | null | null | 41,805,706 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,267 | comment | wantsanagent | 2024-10-11T17:07:04 | null | Someone explain to me how this isn't reinventing LSTMs please. | null | null | 41,810,150 | 41,810,150 | null | [
41811427
] | null | null |
41,811,268 | comment | comprev | 2024-10-11T17:07:06 | null | Introverted people existed long before WFH / hybrid employment and they attended office meetings in person.<p>Unless everyone was blindfolded, how is a remote meeting with webcams any different?<p>Camera switched on shows basic respect to the others attending and at very least demonstrates some engagement in the meeting. | null | null | 41,807,896 | 41,807,896 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,269 | comment | neoromantique | 2024-10-11T17:07:09 | null | Fair play, but by that logic you shouldn't touch Mac OS as well, so the whole thing is moot since Mac OS is the only OS that is supported by Orion. | null | null | 41,809,872 | 41,809,698 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,270 | job | null | 2024-10-11T17:07:25 | Hamming AI (YC S24) Is Hiring a Product Engineer | null | https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/hamming-ai/jobs/XTCQPuO-product-engineer | 1 | null | 41,811,270 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,271 | comment | eep_social | 2024-10-11T17:07:27 | null | As a native speaker, I don’t think the phrasing is idiomatic but I read it to mean imprisoned or otherwise
out of society without actually being dead. | null | null | 41,811,042 | 41,809,879 | null | [
41811792
] | null | null |
41,811,272 | comment | tgv | 2024-10-11T17:07:28 | null | That's not me, and I use it. I like TS, but in the browser. It has not much use elsewhere, certainly not in the backend. Go is not only simple and stable, it's quite flexible, has a good eco-system, a wonderful build system, and is really fast and light at runtime. | null | null | 41,808,995 | 41,787,041 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,273 | comment | bob1029 | 2024-10-11T17:07:31 | null | <a href="https://semiconductor.samsung.com/us/about-us/careers/jobs/" rel="nofollow">https://semiconductor.samsung.com/us/about-us/careers/jobs/</a> | null | null | 41,808,968 | 41,800,036 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,274 | comment | xtrapol8 | 2024-10-11T17:07:55 | null | The website was down (HN deluge?) , I googled it and read the summary for the book of the similar name! | null | null | 41,810,957 | 41,797,648 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,275 | comment | will-burner | 2024-10-11T17:08:04 | null | I think Psychology is really interesting - what could be more interesting than studying why humans behave the way we do.<p>For a while in undergrad I was a double math and psychology major. I spent a semester doing undergraduate research in a psychology lab where I would take people in to do be subjects in the experiment and then write them a check afterwards for participating. During the experiment they'd listen to one syllable sounds some from a english and some not from english and the experiment tested whether the subjects were better at remembering the one syllable sounds from the english language when played one syllable sounds back after listening to the first set.<p>As I type this I think it's an interesting experiment, but it felt to me that the interesting questions in Psychology need to be so dumbed down to be able to run an experiment to test any hypothesis that what's actually interesting about Psychology get's lost in the weeds of trying to rigorously so the scientific method. I don't know a solution to this or whether it's even a problem, but it's problem endemic to the question of whether we're actually making progress in psychology. For the record, I do think we're making progress in Psychology. | null | null | 41,780,328 | 41,780,328 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,276 | comment | cynicalpeace | 2024-10-11T17:08:07 | null | You responded “Yes but how?” to my question. Did I misunderstand and you meant wars between nuclear powers is <i>not</i> foolish? | null | null | 41,808,700 | 41,807,681 | null | [
41813323,
41811498
] | null | null |
41,811,277 | story | benrutter | 2024-10-11T17:08:09 | Personal Information | null | https://tonsky.me/personal-information/ | 1 | null | 41,811,277 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,811,278 | comment | cuu508 | 2024-10-11T17:08:10 | null | The configuration example in README has "Reports Finalized", so I assume this is more for IT infra monitoring, than for taking irreversible actions when you become incapacitated :-) | null | null | 41,811,170 | 41,809,879 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,279 | comment | dang | 2024-10-11T17:08:22 | null | And <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/user?id=johncarlosbaez">https://news.ycombinator.com/user?id=johncarlosbaez</a>!<p>Perhaps he'll contribute to this thread (or perhaps it would waste his time) | null | null | 41,811,202 | 41,808,127 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,280 | comment | protomolecule | 2024-10-11T17:08:24 | null | >as we saw with the Russians who boarded the ISS in blue and yellow<p>That's just the colors of one of the top Russian universities from which all three cosmonauts had graduated. [0]<p>[0] <a href="https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Московский_государственный_технический_университет_имени_Н._Э._Баумана#/media/Файл:Герб_МГТУ_имени_Н._Э._Баумана.svg" rel="nofollow">https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Московский_государственный_тех...</a> | null | null | 41,808,443 | 41,807,681 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,281 | comment | bigbacaloa | 2024-10-11T17:08:25 | null | [dead] | null | null | 41,780,229 | 41,780,229 | null | null | null | true |
41,811,282 | comment | krab | 2024-10-11T17:08:30 | null | Yes. That's a risk assessment every company must make. What's the probability of downtime vs the development slowdown and the operating costs of a fully redundant infrastructure?<p>I worked for a payments company (think credit cards). We designed the system to maintain very high availability in the payment flow. Multi-region, multi-AZ in AWS. But all other flows such as user registration, customer care or even bill settlement had to stop during that one incident when our main datacenter lost power after a testing switch. The outage lasted for three hours and it happened exactly once in five years.<p>In that specific case, investing into higher availability by architecting in more redundancy would not be worth it. We had more downtime caused by bad code and not well thought out deployments. But that risk equation will be different for everyone. | null | null | 41,809,364 | 41,805,446 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,283 | comment | nullc | 2024-10-11T17:08:38 | null | A normal qubes user workflow doing all your gpu requiring stuff in a single appvm-- you're not forced into isolation that doesn't work for you.<p>But you're also not running qubes if minimizing battery usage is a high priority for you.<p>As far as the tedium, perhaps a little, but bringing up a terminal on a non-currently-running app vm takes about 5 seconds for me, so it's faster than you might expect.<p>I think in general my view is that qubes has serious operating costs but they are much less than I anticipated.<p>And whats the real alternative? It's still better than carrying 5 laptops in terms of ease and usability.<p>We live in a world where browsers are constantly required but where their probably hasn't been a single day since their initial releases where Chrome and Firefox were without a RCE vulnerability (though often not a publicly known one). | null | null | 41,807,391 | 41,796,030 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,284 | job | null | 2024-10-11T17:08:43 | Hamming AI (YC S24) Is Hiring a Product Engineer | null | https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/hamming-ai/jobs/XTCQPuO-product-engineer | 1 | null | 41,811,284 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,285 | comment | meroes | 2024-10-11T17:08:43 | null | Irrelevant info is taught in grade skill and is a skill for the SAT for example.<p>Basically any kind of model (not just LLMs/ML) has to distill out irrelevant info.<p>The point is having an answer that you can defend logically and most people would agree.<p>If the model said “I’m not sure if this portion is a typo”, I guarantee you the model creators would take the RLHF in a different direction, because that is somewhat reasonable and defensible. However in your specific question, I personally think there is a singular objective answer—but that isn’t always the case to be fair for misleading/irrelevant prompts. The models are being fooled however based on how they respond.<p>I say this as a RLHF’er who sees and is told to write similar questions at times.<p>At the end of the day, this is how the Model creators want their models to predict language. And anyone using them is in for their ride. | null | null | 41,810,517 | 41,808,683 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,286 | comment | bberrry | 2024-10-11T17:08:48 | null | It can't handle YouTube ads unfortunately. | null | null | 41,810,227 | 41,809,698 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,287 | comment | rowanG077 | 2024-10-11T17:09:20 | null | I mean practice has shown it's not a problem. What else is there? | null | null | 41,810,732 | 41,799,068 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,288 | comment | SmartJerry | 2024-10-11T17:09:24 | null | Because most Uber rides are 1-2 person and a car designed to be smaller is cheaper. | null | null | 41,805,778 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,289 | comment | brutal_chaos_ | 2024-10-11T17:09:32 | null | Chicken and egg. People need to also host on F-Droid to pull more users to F-Droid. Eventually if enough momentum is built towards F-Droid, dropping Google Play wouldn't be too much of an issue. Granted this is a really long longshot, but Google Play could use some serious competition amd the more apps that host on multple app stores, the more likely that is to happen. | null | null | 41,811,173 | 41,808,917 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,290 | comment | yunwal | 2024-10-11T17:09:33 | null | > Can you imagine the horror of a large city where most people each use an individual vehicle? That just dystopia.<p>Yes<p>- every American | null | null | 41,808,014 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,291 | story | herbertl | 2024-10-11T17:09:54 | Influencer Dynamics [pdf] | null | https://drive.google.com/file/d/1U-yDE_xPHgFlaqjSCrQvaeisWRUcQolo/view | 1 | null | 41,811,291 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,811,292 | comment | beadey | 2024-10-11T17:09:55 | null | For my specific situation, these are some profound questions and ways to frame my outlook. Thanks for your wisdom. | null | null | 41,811,205 | 41,810,889 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,293 | job | null | 2024-10-11T17:10:00 | Hamming AI (YC S24) Is Hiring a Product Engineer | null | https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/hamming-ai/jobs/XTCQPuO-product-engineer | 1 | null | 41,811,293 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,294 | comment | resters | 2024-10-11T17:10:05 | null | I don't disagree, however I'm optimistic because most of the current reasoning "ability" of LLMs comes from the accidental reasoning embedded in language patterns.<p>For example, the prompt completion: "The mouse has a unique digestive system compared to other rodents, however the sparrow" on GPT-4o is<p><i>"exhibits a highly specialized digestive system adapted for rapid processing of food, particularly seeds and insects, through structures like the crop and gizzard, which are not found in rodents."</i><p>Claude 3.5 completes it as<p><i>"has a completely different digestive anatomy as a bird. Birds like sparrows have adaptations for flight, including a lightweight skeletal system and a specialized digestive tract. Unlike mice, sparrows have a crop for storing food, a gizzard for grinding it, and generally shorter intestines to reduce weight. They also lack teeth, instead using their beak to manipulate food."</i><p>What appears to be a thoughtful contrast is merely a language pattern. Similarly, a prompt like "Assume -B, A->B. Under what circumstances is B true?" will simply follow the gradient to return output that is likely correct. Prompts like "what is 2+2" fail only because nobody bothers to write about it so simple arithmetic was not in the training data.<p>However the way that multi-modal LLMs handle images is inspiring as it effectively converts from the visual domain into the sequential token domain. The same could be done for symbolic systems, etc. | null | null | 41,811,177 | 41,808,683 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,295 | comment | AStonesThrow | 2024-10-11T17:10:08 | null | Around 2002, I asked a Dominican friar if it was true that <i>The Matrix</i> films were promoting Gnosticism. He said that I could find Gnosticism just about anywhere, if I looked closely enough.<p>Pair that with Modernism, and you've got a recipe for some slippery definitions of "truth". | null | null | 41,811,102 | 41,776,631 | null | [
41812188
] | null | null |
41,811,296 | comment | bee_rider | 2024-10-11T17:10:40 | null | I wonder if we can come up with an experiment that requires a ton of identical probes as a middle ground. Like, can we make an astronomical interferometer telescope out of thousands of probes? Maybe? As someone who doesn’t understand space or astronomical interferometers, that sounds cool as heck. | null | null | 41,809,942 | 41,760,971 | null | null | null | null |
41,811,297 | comment | null | 2024-10-11T17:10:49 | null | null | null | null | 41,811,096 | 41,810,649 | null | null | true | null |
41,811,298 | story | PaulHoule | 2024-10-11T17:10:49 | Erlang Solutions: Why do systems fail? Tandem NonStop system and fault tolerance | null | https://www.erlang-solutions.com/blog/why-do-systems-fail-tandem-nonstop-system-and-fault-tolerance/ | 12 | null | 41,811,298 | 3 | [
41813252,
41812795,
41811939
] | null | null |
41,811,299 | story | lucgagan | 2024-10-11T17:10:56 | Replacing GitHub Copilot with Local LLMs | null | https://glama.ai/blog/2024-10-11-replacing-github-copilot-with-local-llms | 3 | null | 41,811,299 | 0 | null | null | null |
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