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41,812,700 | comment | Cu3PO42 | 2024-10-11T19:28:30 | null | That was a very in-depth reply and is very appreciated. One point I did not expect that core and alloc are not qualified yet. In any case, you motivated me to do some research of my own to fill in the gaps in my own understanding. What follows is my attepmt to summarize all of this in the hope that you and anyone else reading it may also find it helpful.<p>I want to take a step back: why does the automative industry care about certain qualifications? Because the legaslative mandates that they follow them so that cars are "safe". In Germany the industry is required to follow whatever the "state of the art" is. This is not necessarily ISO 26262, but it might be. It might also be one of the many DIN norms, or even a combination thereof.<p>ISO 26262 concerns itself with mitigating risks and hazards introduced by safety-critical systems and poses a list of technical and non-technical requirements that need to be fulfilled. These concern both the final binaries and to some degree the development process. As you pointed out, the manufacturer needs to ultimately prove to some body that their binaries adhere to the standard. Use of a qualified compiler does not appear to be strictly necessary to achieve that. However, proving properties of a binary that is the result of a compilation process, is prohibitively difficult. We'd rather prove properties of our source code.<p>However, proving properties of source code is only sufficient to show properties of the binary if the compilation process does not change the behavior of the program. This is where having a qualified compiler seems to come in. If my compiler is qualified, I may assume that it is sufficiently free of faults. Personally, I'd rather have a formally verified compiler, but that's obviously a much larger undertaking. (For C, CompCert [0] exists.)<p>Now, as you point out, none of this helps if my own code is bad. I still need to certify my own code and Ferrocene can be a part of that. However, to circle back to my prior question of additional boxes that need to be checked: Yes, any Rust code written (and any parts of core, alloc, and std that are used) needs to be certified, but Ferrocene's rustc is ready to be used in software aiming for ISO26262 compliance today. No additional boxes pertaining to rustc need checking; although, qualified core and alloc would certainly be helpful.<p>[0] <a href="https://www.absint.com/compcert/" rel="nofollow">https://www.absint.com/compcert/</a> | null | null | 41,800,115 | 41,771,272 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,701 | comment | tivert | 2024-10-11T19:28:36 | null | > It's been happening way before COVID, your post exemplifies the sentiment: if trusted sources fail at any point they become absolutely distrusted, and people prefer to choose their sources which further departs from a shared reality.<p>This doesn't happen when they <i>fail</i> it happens when they <i>lie to manipulate the public</i>.<p>For instance: With the lab leak theory, I believe that was suppressed because the authorities didn't want some kind of backlash against China, therefore regardless of any merits the theory had, it was treated as absolutely false and unspeakable. With masks, I believe the authorities very publicly said <i>they didn't work</i>, because they didn't want the public to consume them.<p>I don't think they'd have lost trust if they hadn't done stuff like that, or spoke with a false confidence when they were just guessing.<p>And I say this as someone who followed all the recommendations during COVID, except for using a mask when they were telling people not to. | null | null | 41,808,770 | 41,807,121 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,702 | comment | yunwal | 2024-10-11T19:28:36 | null | > If that’s all you eat you can’t be fat and out of shape.<p>I promise you if ground beef is all you eat you will be much worse than fat and out of shape. | null | null | 41,812,585 | 41,811,263 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,703 | comment | andrewla | 2024-10-11T19:28:52 | null | Yes?<p>A lizard whose bite makes its prey eat less is crazy but it exists.<p>A lizard whose bite makes its prey eat more is also crazy, but maybe it exists?<p>The first lizard is literal, the second lizard is a stand-in for whatever mystery force I am postulating the existence of.<p>When you look at the historic literature on diet and nutrition from the first half of the century it's like looking into another universe. People are obsessed with getting people to eat more to prevent malnutrition even when food is freely available. Something changed. | null | null | 41,812,316 | 41,811,263 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,704 | comment | greenthrow | 2024-10-11T19:28:54 | null | This is a terrible post. Most professional typesetters/publishers use macOS for a reason and have for decades.<p>Also this blog post is 5 years old and woefully out of date anyway. | null | null | 41,812,358 | 41,812,358 | null | [
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41,812,705 | comment | vessenes | 2024-10-11T19:28:57 | null | There are a number of pathways these drugs hit - dopamine receptors, they slow processing of food, and in tirzepatide's case at least increase insulin response. They're not just small portions in a shot.<p>I take "Studies show it just doesn't work" to mean "Studies show telling people to eat less and exercise more definitely doesn't work," as opposed to "caloric deficits don't work". | null | null | 41,812,180 | 41,811,263 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,706 | comment | squidlogic | 2024-10-11T19:29:04 | null | The Easy Path is a meal service like Factor that delivers healthy food directly to your door step.<p>The Easy Path is signing up for a fitness class on a regular schedule and baking it into your morning routine.<p>The Easy Path is not buying extra snacks - just don't have them laying around the house for you to eat when you're bored.<p>The Easy Path is the path of least resistance. However, you have some agency over the environment you create for yourself, so that path of least resistance is to some degree under your control. | null | null | 41,812,437 | 41,811,263 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,707 | comment | calculatte | 2024-10-11T19:29:07 | null | Even if that is true, there's no reason to bathe in it, cook with it, water our lawns with it.<p>And now it's becoming clear that IQ is affected by fluroride
<a href="https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3409983/" rel="nofollow">https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3409983/</a>
<a href="https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5285601/" rel="nofollow">https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5285601/</a>
<a href="https://www.reuters.com/world/us/epa-must-address-fluoridated-waters-risk-childrens-iqs-us-judge-rules-2024-09-25/" rel="nofollow">https://www.reuters.com/world/us/epa-must-address-fluoridate...</a><p>So how about we keep it out of our drinking water. If you want to put fluoride on your teeth, use fluoridated toothpaste. | null | null | 41,812,401 | 41,811,263 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,708 | comment | pixl97 | 2024-10-11T19:29:07 | null | >I might switch to a twice-a-week split dose at some point to ease the peaks and valleys.<p>If you're willing to shoot up more often it moderates the effects better. | null | null | 41,811,603 | 41,811,263 | null | [
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41,812,709 | comment | soulbadguy | 2024-10-11T19:29:11 | null | > About the point you're making, 2 generations before you and me, people where fit, more attentive & generally healthy (outside vaccines that prevent diseases now & positive effects due to advancements in medicine), what changed?<p>Air pollution, water quality, pestecide, food/produce quality, plastic particule everywhere...<p>I find this perspective so bizarre.<p>Whats the most probable in 2 generation of exponentially increasing and barely regulated technological changes : culture has change so dramatically as to change human nature and makes us all lazy... or... something in the environment/food chain is having phisiolical/biological effects... | null | null | 41,812,561 | 41,811,263 | null | [
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41,812,710 | comment | zanellato19 | 2024-10-11T19:29:14 | null | >The advantages of a language like Rust where most interactions are blocked on either user input or network IO are fairly limited. Rust shines when things are CPU or memory bound primarily. Web applications are mostly IO bound. Which is why people have been getting away with fairly poorly optimized interpreted languages for decades. Even when computers were a lot slower than they are today, this worked fairly well.<p>I kinda agree with this, but the speed of a language like Rust changes so much of the mental calculation. Like in Python/JS/Ruby you try to offload as much work to the database as possible, because its so much faster. In Rust, you might not need to do that, because its such a fast language. | null | null | 41,764,969 | 41,760,421 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,711 | comment | asib | 2024-10-11T19:29:15 | null | I’m trying to demonstrate that I’m not this ridiculous (and frankly grossly reductive) caricature of the overweight slob. And yet I still struggle with food. So maybe let’s drop that notion altogether, because it’s not at all helpful.<p>The extra weight is not muscle, to be clear. | null | null | 41,812,552 | 41,811,263 | null | [
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41,812,712 | comment | mrweasel | 2024-10-11T19:29:27 | null | That's my experience, I strongly dislike ClearType, it always looked blurry, even with all the tweaking Microsoft allowed you to do it new became really clear and sharp like on the mac. Sadly Linux seems to have gone the Windows route and smudged the fonts, rather than making them clearer and sharper.<p>If HiDPI is what made fonts on macOS what they are, then there's now way around it, we have to rid ourselves of none HiDPI display. | null | null | 41,812,639 | 41,812,358 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,713 | comment | amluto | 2024-10-11T19:29:28 | null | And yet current Safari on current MacOS renders text in the HN comment box very poorly. | null | null | 41,812,639 | 41,812,358 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,714 | comment | nixosbestos | 2024-10-11T19:29:32 | null | These are the same effects I got from doing OMAD and going gluten free. If I fuck up and eat processed food, the "food brain" comes back, and I start chasing dopamine like a fiend.<p>I'm a fan of these tools helping people get this insight, because otherwise people just accept that cloud as their normal. | null | null | 41,811,603 | 41,811,263 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,715 | comment | danaris | 2024-10-11T19:29:41 | null | I don't <i>assume</i> I'm the good guy. I strive, every day, to be good, and to become better.<p>And yes, the issue of Palestinian rights in Israel, <i>in particular</i>, is extremely thorny, which I presume is why you picked it. There are extremes on both sides—both of which are very real positions that very real people are taking today, neither of which is supportable—and there are shades of gray in the middle, and if I had an answer to that question that didn't raise 100 more, I'd probably have already won the Nobel Peace Prize.<p>But there are plenty of people in the US who would <i>genuinely try to argue</i> that black people don't deserve the same rights as white people, and unless you are one of them, I think you're likely to agree that that is <i>not</i> a thorny issue: there's a very clear right and wrong answer. It's not conceptually analogous to the situation in the Middle East, even though the words sound similar.<p>The existence of hard moral questions without easy answers does not negate the existence of moral questions with very obvious answers that a large number of people are nonetheless very obviously on the wrong side of. | null | null | 41,811,772 | 41,804,460 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,716 | comment | palata | 2024-10-11T19:29:48 | null | Well if it was possible, it would be an alternative. But it's not, period. Counting on it happening in your life time is simply preposterous. But you know what might collapse during your lifetime? Our civilization. Pretty likely. | null | null | 41,811,805 | 41,807,681 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,717 | comment | jrflowers | 2024-10-11T19:29:53 | null | > People in the 50s weren't slimmer because they had ironclad determination to stay such.<p>People in the 50s (in the US) had, among other things, fistfuls of benzedrine.<p>Edit: here is a link for the skeptical folks
<a href="https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/speedy-history-americas-addiction-amphetamine-180966989/" rel="nofollow">https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/speedy-history-americ...</a> | null | null | 41,812,339 | 41,811,263 | null | [
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] | null | null |
41,812,718 | story | speckx | 2024-10-11T19:30:04 | Vietnamese Duo Hit with Injunction After 117,000 Bogus DMCA Claims | null | https://www.techdirt.com/2024/10/11/vietnamese-duo-hit-with-injunction-after-117000-bogus-dmca-claims/ | 2 | null | 41,812,718 | 1 | [
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] | null | null |
41,812,719 | comment | hollerith | 2024-10-11T19:30:04 | null | >then the number was down<p>I don't follow. The number of what? | null | null | 41,812,541 | 41,798,916 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,720 | comment | cortesoft | 2024-10-11T19:30:08 | null | Its a pretty well known fact that exercise alone (unless you are doing extreme athlete training) is not going to change your weight without a change in diet.<p>You can get healthier with exercise, but not smaller. That is almost entirely based on diet.<p>Just think about it; your thirty minutes of running probably burned between 300-500 calories. That one protein bar probably has about 300 calories by itself. | null | null | 41,812,384 | 41,811,263 | null | [
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41,812,721 | comment | pixl97 | 2024-10-11T19:30:09 | null | How much data do we have on obesity and the effects of it? | null | null | 41,812,514 | 41,811,263 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,722 | story | zackangelo | 2024-10-11T19:30:12 | Show HN: Mixlayer – code and deploy LLM prompts using JavaScript | Hi HN,<p>I'm excited to introduce Mixlayer, a platform I've been working on over the past 6 months that allows you to code and deploy prompts using simple JavaScript functions.<p>Mixlayer recreates the developer experience of using LLMs locally without having to do all of the local setup yourself. I originally came up with this idea when using LLMs on my MacBook and thought it’d be cool to build a product that makes it easy for everyone. It compiles your code to a WASM binary and runs it alongside a custom inference stack I wrote in Rust. When you integrate LLMs in this way, your code and the model share a common context window that stays open for the duration of your program’s execution. I find many common prompting patterns become much simpler when applied in this way versus using a generic OpenAI-style inference API.<p>Some cool features:
* Tool calling: LLM has direct access to your code, just pass objects containing functions and their descriptions
* Hidden tokens: Mark certain tokens as "hidden" to recreate long-running reasoning and iterative refinement operations like gpt-4o.
* Output constraints: Use regular expressions to constrain the generated text
* Instant deployment: we can host your prompts behind an API that we scale for you<p>Tech details:
* Built on Huggingface's candle crate
* Supports continuous batching and multi-GPU for larger models
* WASM allows me to support for more prompt languages easily in the future<p>Models:
* Free tier: Llama 3.1 8b (on NVIDIA L4s, shared resources)
* Paid tier: Faster models on A100s (soon H100 SXMs)
* Llama 3.1 70b (currently gated due to resource constraints, requires 8xH100 SXMs)<p>Future:
* Vision models
* More elaborate decoding methods (e.g. beam)
* Multiple model prompts (routing/spawning/forking/joining)<p>I’m happy to discuss any of the internal/technical details around how I built this.<p>Thank you for your time and feedback! | https://www.mixlayer.com | 3 | null | 41,812,722 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,812,723 | comment | hackable_sand | 2024-10-11T19:30:14 | null | True. I do not think I have not yet met a person who is completely healthy.<p>Maybe in passing. | null | null | 41,812,465 | 41,811,263 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,724 | comment | tj-teej | 2024-10-11T19:30:17 | null | If anyone is curious, a Meta Data Scientist published a great piece about how the facts about what LLMs are actually doing (and therefore able to do) and how it's papered over by using chat bots. It's a long but very engaging read.<p><a href="https://medium.com/@colin.fraser/who-are-we-talking-to-when-we-talk-to-these-bots-9a7e673f8525" rel="nofollow">https://medium.com/@colin.fraser/who-are-we-talking-to-when-...</a> | null | null | 41,812,523 | 41,812,523 | null | [
41813204,
41813049,
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41,812,725 | comment | justinator | 2024-10-11T19:30:29 | null | Habits are great, but I'm in great shape because what I do is fun. When it's not fun I called it "training" and that's usually for some huge goal that'll at least be fun to look back at 10, 20 years down the line to marvel that I did a thing.<p>I guess what I want to express is habits are one step closer to a lifestyle change and that's what keeps one ultimately healthy (mentally, too). We can't have nightmare commutes to soul-sucking jobs to continually have people addicted to looking at screens and think that there's no fallout. Adding, "but now there are drugs!" isn't an advancement. | null | null | 41,812,643 | 41,811,263 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,726 | comment | bobajeff | 2024-10-11T19:30:44 | null | I'm addition to all the calls to switch to another browser I'd also have people consider the websites they use as potential dependencies on chrome.<p>Right now most websites don't seem to require any specific chrome feature but with Google's pushing some API's like their Web Environment Integrity proposal I'm worried sites will start to lock their site to Google Chrome and their official Mobile clients. | null | null | 41,809,698 | 41,809,698 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,727 | comment | llamaimperative | 2024-10-11T19:30:47 | null | Whatever, set the clock to the 1820s. Or the 1400s. Or the 1200s. Or 200 BCE, I don't care. | null | null | 41,812,717 | 41,811,263 | null | [
41812853,
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41,812,728 | story | geox | 2024-10-11T19:30:50 | Evolution in Real Time | null | https://ista.ac.at/en/news/evolution-in-real-time/ | 1 | null | 41,812,728 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,812,729 | comment | Ray20 | 2024-10-11T19:30:52 | null | >why it's official name was PMC Wagner, where PMC stands for, drum roll... Private Military Company.<p>Yes, and North Korea is a Democratic Republic.<p>>by all indications it was exactly that<p>There is no such indications, only name. Other than name - PMC Wagner had nothing to do with a private army. It was a government-organized, government-funded, government-chai-of-command-integrated experimental military force<p>>idea that Prigozhin was just like any other commander<p>Rather something like government-appointed director of the special service | null | null | 41,782,360 | 41,765,734 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,730 | story | seangransee | 2024-10-11T19:30:52 | Show HN: An infinite shared pixel art canvas | This is a fun project I’ve been slowly improving over the past few years. It started as a fun technical experiment and has grown into a canvas where over 300 million pixels have been placed, one pixel at a time.<p>It’s a single realtime canvas shared by everyone around the world. And when I say it’s global, I truly mean that. Communities have popped up everywhere from Germany to Japan to Azerbaijan. It even had quite the following in China before it got banned by the Chinese firewall.<p>I call it an “infinite canvas”, but of course, infinite values don’t exist in computing. See if you can find the edge ;) | https://everyonedraw.com/6/4298/8439 | 2 | null | 41,812,730 | 1 | [
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] | null | null |
41,812,731 | comment | blackeyeblitzar | 2024-10-11T19:30:54 | null | Ok but private property is private property. This is just trying to normalize vandalism and criminality. “I don’t like it so I’ll do whatever I want and violate others.” | null | null | 41,789,228 | 41,789,228 | null | [
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41,812,732 | comment | BoorishBears | 2024-10-11T19:31:00 | null | My point is that it literally doesn't.<p>The fact your phone can identify an object doesn't inform you on the capabilities of self-driving car's vision stack. It's complete non-sequitur. | null | null | 41,811,525 | 41,805,706 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,733 | comment | ugh123 | 2024-10-11T19:31:10 | null | It's unclear on first impression of the landing page what your unique value prop is.<p>You say this: " Voiczy transforms language learning into an exciting adventure." and then you ask me to click a free trial button.<p>I think that deserves some kind of visual, either screenshots, illustrations, or demo <i>video</i> right next to that blurb.<p>Your Demo button shows a video play button, but when I click it i'm greeted with a 2-step settings process after which i'm presented with another "Start Demo" button, followed by your own pop up to "Give Microphone Access" which I click and then it pops up a system dialog for access.<p>Thats a 6-step funnel just to see what this is actually about. | null | null | 41,807,783 | 41,807,783 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,734 | comment | kuhsaft | 2024-10-11T19:31:11 | null | Separate permission for debugging only available for development essentially. <a href="https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Mozilla/Add-ons/WebExtensions/API/declarativeNetRequest#testing" rel="nofollow">https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Mozilla/Add-ons/Web...</a><p>Otherwise, you can’t really without more invasive permissions.<p><a href="https://stackoverflow.com/questions/74813523/chrome-extension-declarativenetrequest-get-notified-on-request-blocked" rel="nofollow">https://stackoverflow.com/questions/74813523/chrome-extensio...</a> | null | null | 41,812,566 | 41,809,698 | null | [
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41,812,735 | comment | vessenes | 2024-10-11T19:31:14 | null | Maybe. But on what version of FSD? Recent ones are radically better than older ones. And of course roads and situations vary. | null | null | 41,811,845 | 41,805,706 | null | [
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41,812,736 | comment | DrillShopper | 2024-10-11T19:31:17 | null | Not only that, but type 2 diabetes makes you paradoxically more hungry - your body thinks it is starving because it cannot get sugar into its cells so it makes you MORE hungry which causes you to get heavier which often causes the diabetes to get worse which makes you MORE hungry which means you eat and get heavier and...... | null | null | 41,812,218 | 41,811,263 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,737 | comment | amelius | 2024-10-11T19:31:18 | null | Not sure how to formulate this, but what does this mean in the sense of how "smart" it is compared to the latest chatgpt version? | null | null | 41,812,637 | 41,811,078 | null | [
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41,812,738 | comment | levocardia | 2024-10-11T19:31:21 | null | Well, it's about time we moved the goalposts again. All this business about trophies fitting in suitcases being the gold standard was getting pretty embarrassing. | null | null | 41,812,523 | 41,812,523 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,739 | comment | 7952 | 2024-10-11T19:31:22 | null | And there were priests who pursued science as a passion. I think it was seen as a good secure job and had time for side projects. | null | null | 41,810,759 | 41,776,631 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,740 | comment | jdgasd | 2024-10-11T19:31:25 | null | You are citing the Tiobe index for the "most popular language"? The Tiobe index just counts the searches that include "Python". Which means that beginners who search for "leftpad python" or people who search for "python sucks" are included.<p>Google is reducing its Python investment. Python is just the most marketed language.<p>Students learning Scheme learn good habits, and Scheme will not go away. | null | null | 41,812,598 | 41,811,983 | null | [
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41,812,741 | comment | zarathustreal | 2024-10-11T19:31:26 | null | There is absolutely virtue in spending willpower to make your body do something it doesn’t want to do - maintaining and developing self control and autonomy. Imagine if there was no way to develop self-discipline, you’d be at the whims of your environment and the world would be nothing but chaos. | null | null | 41,811,912 | 41,811,263 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,742 | comment | bnkamalesh | 2024-10-11T19:31:27 | null | interesting, will check out | null | null | 41,811,489 | 41,809,262 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,743 | comment | bnkamalesh | 2024-10-11T19:31:35 | null | ?? | null | null | 41,811,486 | 41,809,262 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,744 | comment | donclark | 2024-10-11T19:31:36 | null | If we can get this as the default for all the newly posted HN articles please and thank you? | null | null | 41,810,507 | 41,810,507 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,745 | comment | mbauman | 2024-10-11T19:31:40 | null | Atavising was new to me. From <a href="https://nbickford.wordpress.com/2012/04/15/reversing-the-game-of-life-for-fun-and-profit/" rel="nofollow">https://nbickford.wordpress.com/2012/04/15/reversing-the-gam...</a> :<p>> First of all, while I said “Predecessorifier” in the talk, “Ataviser” seems to be the accepted word, coming from “Atavism”, which the online Merriam-Webster dictionary defines as “recurrence of or reversion to a past style, manner, outlook, approach, or activity”. | null | null | 41,786,067 | 41,786,067 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,746 | comment | pvaldes | 2024-10-11T19:31:42 | null | Just for the record, Mnemiopsis is a cannibal species. | null | null | 41,774,062 | 41,774,062 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,747 | comment | feoren | 2024-10-11T19:31:44 | null | > That's not considered to be one of the standard logical fallacies as far as I know<p>I don't really care whether it's on The Official List of Logical Fallacies™ or not, and in fact caring too much about this list is itself a bit of a fallacy. Nor do I necessarily consider "I could have told you that!" necessarily a <i>logical</i> fallacy; more like an <i>emotional</i> fallacy. (But humans use emotions when trying to understand things!) I consider a fallacy to be something which is an "attractive but wrong" step in an argument or rationale. There are two reasons why I consider it a "fallacy" by that definition:<p>1. Humans dramatically over-estimate the obviousness of an idea after they've already heard it. Once you know the answer, you basically become immediately unable to estimate how obvious that answer was beforehand. This is highly evident in mathematical proofs, e.g. when "obviously right" things turn out to be wrong, often with an "obvious counterexample". Both sure feel completely obvious, depending on what you know!<p>2. Even obvious things are worth testing. Plenty of things that seemed obvious have turned out to be wrong. This is not evidence of wasted funding. Obvious things can also be related to less obvious things. Your 3rd example shows this: there's a 2nd related hypothesis they're testing: "men would believe that women would find a more muscular shape more attractive than women actually report". So men tend to want to be more muscular, and also men tend to think women find high muscularity more attractive than they actually do (or they think women's "ideal muscularity" is higher than it actually is). This may be an example of "overturning our intuitions" whose understanding could improve outcomes -- if it replicates, anyway. Hardly an example of a pointless study.<p>That being said, humans actually do seem pretty good at being able to "tell you that" beforehand. There are some fun quizzes you can take [1, 2] to see if a study replicates beforehand, and you'll probably do pretty well on them. But that doesn't necessarily mean that we shouldn't do the tests anyway! We can still be surprised.<p>> Academics purge any conservatives they find<p>This is extremely dependent on the department and institution, and in general is way overblown. Yes, this can be a problem in some departments in some of the social sciences. On the other hand, in economics departments, it can be <i>liberal</i> ideas that are verboten. There are fads and politics everywhere, but mostly science is doing OK at considering ideas on their actual merits -- eventually. Meanwhile a lot of people lob angry criticisms at academia for rejecting their bad ideas because they're bad and wrong, assuming<p>> psychologists recently started discovering that stereotypes are usually accurate<p>I suspect this is <i>way</i> too strongly worded for what's actually being found (and replicated). Citations would be very much appreciated. Be wary that slight changes in the mean of a population can be detected in tests with p < whatever epsilon you, and also have oversized effects on the tail ends (e.g. professional sports), but give you almost no predictive power for individuals you meet on the street. If "stereotypes are usually accurate" means "population X is slightly more likely to do Y with near-certainty", that <i>does not</i> mean "most X do Y" nor even "a random member of X is significantly more likely to do Y than a random member of not-X". One of the reasons these kinds of studies are considered problematic is in how easily they can be misconstrued to justify racism.<p>[1] <a href="https://mru.org/teacher-resources/active-learning/will-it-replicate-student-activity" rel="nofollow">https://mru.org/teacher-resources/active-learning/will-it-re...</a><p>[2] <a href="https://80000hours.org/psychology-replication-quiz/" rel="nofollow">https://80000hours.org/psychology-replication-quiz/</a> | null | null | 41,807,571 | 41,780,328 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,748 | comment | yborg | 2024-10-11T19:31:45 | null | Vivaldi team does not respond to any comments asking about ongoing v2 manifest support; safe to assume it's gone as soon as it's out of Chromium upstream. Given Tetzchner's continual messaging on how important user privacy is to Vivaldi it seems like a strange decision, but I don't know how much effort would be required to maintain the support. They're a small team, so it would be understandable if they would just say it's too hard, but instead they have avoided the topic entirely, which suggests they agree with the direction. | null | null | 41,812,473 | 41,809,698 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,749 | comment | nahnahno | 2024-10-11T19:31:50 | null | This is so stupid.<p>If you want to not be fat, exercise and eat fewer calories. Full stop.<p>The fact that a certain group of individuals don’t have that self control is just evidence that education and public health have a place. Drugs won’t solve that.<p>These drugs are needed for people with metabolic disorders caused by years of food abuse or poor genetics. It’s not a population wide solution. | null | null | 41,812,254 | 41,811,263 | null | [
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41,812,750 | comment | NotPractical | 2024-10-11T19:31:54 | null | After some reflection I'm not too proud of this comment :) | null | null | 41,777,636 | 41,769,657 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,751 | comment | PeterisP | 2024-10-11T19:31:58 | null | I'd argue entirely opposite, that a dead man's switch should 100% rely <i>only</i> on someone else's services and should avoid any dependencies on your stuff, as something happening to you is correlated to something happening to things you run or own, and the whole point of such a switch is that it should function properly when e.g. all your stuff burns down or gets confiscated or whatever. | null | null | 41,811,259 | 41,809,879 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,752 | comment | neild | 2024-10-11T19:32:00 | null | Returning a channel avoids questions of what happens if sending to a caller-supplied channel blocks. DoChan returns a channel with a single-element buffer, so a single send to the channel will always succeed without blocking, even if the caller has lost interest in the result and discarded the channel.<p>DoChan doesn't close the channel because there isn't any reason to do so. | null | null | 41,811,336 | 41,809,262 | null | [
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41,812,753 | comment | soulbadguy | 2024-10-11T19:32:11 | null | As every conversation with weigth management/obesity treatment, there are still people thinking that just more willing power / better habits is what's needed.<p>To those people I suggest you run an experiment : what ever your current body weigth is right now. Try loosing and keeping off 20%. | null | null | 41,811,263 | 41,811,263 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,754 | comment | detourdog | 2024-10-11T19:32:16 | null | I generally never mention downvotes but I really wish whoever has different ideas share them.<p>This domain of human inquiry is definitely large enough for all ideas and I find the downvotes on this comment anti-social not because they have other ideas but their inability to articulate them. | null | null | 41,810,863 | 41,776,631 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,755 | comment | adventured | 2024-10-11T19:32:19 | null | Both things are true.<p>There was a far more vicious shaming culture 50-70 years ago about things like being obese. And culturally it's still looked down upon to be obese, it's just not as acceptable to be vicious about it (and of course sometimes people still are).<p>Today however there is a lot more "always on" pressure: social media is a huge component to social, social acceptance, socializing, social learning & sharing, getting to date people, et al. That's a form of individually focused media pressure that didn't exist back then. And sure you can turn it off, not partake, but there are usually serious consequences especially for younger people.<p>That's the context. | null | null | 41,812,664 | 41,811,263 | null | [
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41,812,756 | comment | deegles | 2024-10-11T19:32:24 | null | I think "LLMs hallucinate facts less often than people" is a strong stance to take at the moment. | null | null | 41,710,375 | 41,709,510 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,757 | comment | cynicalpeace | 2024-10-11T19:32:36 | null | Yes- but raises an interesting problem of nuclear energy. Might be very important/useful in space.<p>The book series "The Expanse" does an amazing job of showing what a war in space would look like, and the role of nuclear energy.<p>Interestingly, nukes become small fry compared to slinging asteroids at planets. | null | null | 41,812,627 | 41,807,681 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,758 | comment | crooked-v | 2024-10-11T19:32:39 | null | > Impossibly unrealistic to change zoning to disincentivize car-dependent urban design?<p>Those zoning issues are the same reason for any number of other problems, including housing prices that are supposedly the #1 concern for a huge number of voters, and yet voters in many cities have only doubled down over time on making it harder and harder to build in efficient and high-density ways. "Impossible" seems like a fair way to put it. | null | null | 41,812,354 | 41,811,263 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,759 | comment | dokyun | 2024-10-11T19:32:46 | null | That the video is entirely monochrome while also extremely fluid and intricate makes for an interesting duality when applying it to a technical problem, and that it's also a very pleasing and impressive work of art in of itself, I would think gives it many of the qualities that demosceners in particular appreciate. | null | null | 41,812,294 | 41,798,369 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,760 | comment | hit8run | 2024-10-11T19:32:47 | null | It’s such a shit show put on by a bunch of sycophants.
Barrack Obama and Yasser Arafat are also peace prize winners | null | null | 41,807,681 | 41,807,681 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,761 | comment | krona | 2024-10-11T19:32:53 | null | Doesn't HiDPI "Retina display" prove the point; ClearType won when it comes to rendering. Due to patents, the solution was to quadruple the number of pixels, making subpixel hinting and anti-aliasing mostly redundant. | null | null | 41,812,639 | 41,812,358 | null | [
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41,812,762 | story | rmason | 2024-10-11T19:33:18 | New images show remarkable state of preservation of Ernest Shackleton's ship | null | https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/oct/10/images-remarkable-preservation-ernest-shackleton-ship-endurance | 2 | null | 41,812,762 | 0 | null | null | null |
41,812,763 | comment | littlestymaar | 2024-10-11T19:33:26 | null | > The readme seems to indicate that it expects pytorch alongside several other Python dependencies in a requirements.txt file<p>That's only if you want to convert the model yourself, you don't need that if you use the converted weights on the author's huggingface page (in “prepared-models” table of the README).<p>> From the git history, it looks like the username of the person who posted this here is someone who has contributed to the project but isn't the primary author.<p>Yup that's correct, so far I've only authored the dioxus GUI app.<p>> If they could elaborate on what exactly they mean by saying this has "zero dependencies", that might be helpful.<p>See my other response: <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41812665">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41812665</a> | null | null | 41,812,628 | 41,811,078 | null | [
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41,812,764 | comment | lupire | 2024-10-11T19:33:33 | null | That's an obsolete definition that definea reasoning as a simplistic mechanical task explicitly encoded by humans.
What LLM is attempting is far beyond that. It's a automated process for creating its own reasoning method. | null | null | 41,812,447 | 41,808,683 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,765 | comment | hackinthebochs | 2024-10-11T19:33:35 | null | Hard to pin down a single citation of that point. But some good places to start are:<p><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Critical_brain_hypothesis" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Critical_brain_hypothesis</a><p><a href="https://journals.aps.org/pre/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevE.79.041118" rel="nofollow">https://journals.aps.org/pre/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevE.79.04...</a> (on sci-hub) | null | null | 41,811,949 | 41,810,753 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,766 | comment | klooney | 2024-10-11T19:33:37 | null | Studying pre agriculture societies doesn't say anything about agriculture labor in the 1940s, which is what the grandparent comment was about.<p>That said, modern farmworkers in my town are mostly overweight, for the same reasons as everyone else. | null | null | 41,812,521 | 41,811,263 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,767 | comment | vessenes | 2024-10-11T19:33:37 | null | Agreed. Don't forget they're spending on next-gen versions of these too -- Novo is testing a pill form that's apparently twice as effective as semaglutide(!) right now. It's easy to imagine that becomes part of many people's January routine -- stop drinking, take your pills, go to the gym for a month, slowly put the weight back on during the year, no problem. | null | null | 41,811,587 | 41,811,263 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,768 | comment | Dig1t | 2024-10-11T19:33:39 | null | You could substitute "LLMs" -> "Humans" and the statement would also be true. | null | null | 41,812,523 | 41,812,523 | null | [
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41,812,769 | comment | alex-titarenko | 2024-10-11T19:33:43 | null | I don't rely on any external framework like Capacitor to make hybrid apps, all of the bridging between web and native part is done by myself. | null | null | 41,810,837 | 41,808,943 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,770 | comment | r00fus | 2024-10-11T19:33:53 | null | So this ship exists, but the funding for the expeditions have been cancelled from the NSF (US).<p>The wrinkle at the end seems to posit the China challenge - and possibly that's for the best as the US seems to have given up on non-military seafaring ventures. | null | null | 41,785,543 | 41,785,543 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,771 | comment | alex-titarenko | 2024-10-11T19:33:56 | null | No | null | null | 41,810,287 | 41,808,943 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,772 | comment | mike_richards | 2024-10-11T19:33:59 | null | The browser will happily render text files, but +1 for it shouldn't require js. =)<p><a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/84/pg84.txt" rel="nofollow">https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/84/pg84.txt</a> | null | null | 41,810,896 | 41,808,569 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,773 | comment | vundercind | 2024-10-11T19:34:01 | null | I think fourish decades was enough time to see if we’d get our shit together on the pile of problems that need to be fixed to solve this the #1 way. We haven’t, even a little.<p>So no, I’m thrilled to see #2 show up to <i>maybe</i> get our healthcare system to limp along for at least a couple decades longer than it was looking like it would. | null | null | 41,812,691 | 41,811,263 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,774 | comment | dmonitor | 2024-10-11T19:34:08 | null | From a platform perspective, Microsoft's Xbox has been playing third fiddle to Nintendo and Sony for nearly a decade now. They are likely to phase out the hardware division.<p>Windows, on the other hand, is a very strong platform, but Valve has been chipping away at it recently by supporting efforts like Proton to play Windows games natively on Linux. Shipping a game on PC is synonymous with shipping on Windows, Mac is an afterthought, and Linux is a pipedream. Microsoft doesn't directly profit off gaming on Windows by charging a platform fee at the moment, but they have tried in the past and could in the future at the drop of a hat.<p>Windows's hold on gamers at this point is less about playing the games themselves and more about secondary applications, like Discord, having subpar Linux support.<p>On the publishing side of things, Microsoft just recently became the third largest gaming publisher in the world by buying the fourth largest gaming publisher in the world. Microsoft owns World of Warcraft, Overwatch, Call of Duty, and (for a while now) Minecraft. They own an absurdly large portion of the gaming market despite creating not a single successful franchise in-house. | null | null | 41,794,089 | 41,784,287 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,775 | story | squircle | 2024-10-11T19:34:08 | null | null | null | 1 | null | 41,812,775 | null | null | null | true |
41,812,776 | comment | andrewla | 2024-10-11T19:34:11 | null | Maybe? I don't think we all know this. And some research, especially into people with unusual metabolism (but not necessarily known metabolic disorders) indicates that even with these restrictions, they need to operate at a significant calorie deficit simply to maintain a healthy weight. [1]<p>It might be that they are already exposed to enough processed food and pesticides that simply getting those things out of their diet is not sufficient, but I think it's clear that there's more going on here than a simple answer.<p>And, I think, most damningly, there are many people who maintain a healthy weight with no active efforts to maintain that weight, including a lack of exercise and consumption of processed food. It might be that a significant fraction of people are resistant to this effect or might just not enjoy the taste of processed food so naturally gain the benefits of avoidance.<p>[1] <a href="https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4989512/" rel="nofollow">https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4989512/</a> | null | null | 41,812,381 | 41,811,263 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,777 | comment | highwayman47 | 2024-10-11T19:34:16 | null | Why can’t there be a drug for chronically underweight | null | null | 41,811,263 | 41,811,263 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,778 | comment | grayhatter | 2024-10-11T19:34:20 | null | So if understanding the equation about how humans can obtain and maintain a healthy diet/weight is as simple as you present here. Why doesn't everybody just do that?<p>You say yourself, it couldn't not work. And yet there's hundreds of thousands of people that say it didn't work. Explain them, are they lying?<p>I'd assert, the oversimplified explanation is misleading. It's only true in the same way that drinking cold water will help you lose more weight than warm water. True or not, reality seems to strongly suggest it's irrelevant | null | null | 41,812,663 | 41,811,263 | null | [
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41,812,779 | comment | woopwoop | 2024-10-11T19:34:21 | null | My argument is not that slippery problems are unimportant or extraneous, it's that this paper does not convincingly demonstrate that these models are actually especially bad at this kind of reasoning. | null | null | 41,811,554 | 41,808,683 | null | [
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41,812,780 | comment | dahart | 2024-10-11T19:34:22 | null | Oh I think so, but I’m certainly not the most expert of CUDA users there is. ;) Still, you will often see CUDA try to alloc local and smem space for at least 3 blocks per SM when you configure a kernel. That can’t possibly always be true, but is for kernels that are using modest amounts of smem, lmem, and registers. In general I’d say desynced mem ops are harder to make performant than highly homogeneous workloads, since those are more likely to be uncoalesced as well as cache misses. Think about it this way: a kernel can stall for many many reasons (which Nsight Compute can show you), especially memory IO, but even for compute bound work, the math pipes can fill, the instruction cache can miss, some instructions have higher latency than others, etc. etc. Even a cache hit load can take dozens of cycles to actually fill. Because stalls are everywhere, these machines are specifically designed to juggle multiple blocks and always look for ways to make forward progress on <i>something</i> without having to sit idle, that is how to get higher throughput and hide latency. | null | null | 41,811,590 | 41,808,013 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,781 | comment | exe34 | 2024-10-11T19:34:23 | null | can confirm, I learnt scheme and it allows me to do things in python that real software engineers find impressive. | null | null | 41,812,740 | 41,811,983 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,782 | comment | btilly | 2024-10-11T19:34:23 | null | I partly agree. A conceptual breakthrough always rests on a foundation to which many contributed. All of whom, in some sense, contributed. But my reading of history says that the reconceptualization that leads to intellectual breakthroughs themselves usually only involve small numbers of people.<p>If you've read <i>The Structure of Scientific Revolutions</i>, what I'm saying is that new paradigms are usually created by very small numbers of people. But they have both a foundation and their further success from the contributions of many.<p>I'm very much not offering an opinion on a great man theory of history in fields outside of science. Your example of the American Revolution is entirely off topic.<p>I'm also very much not saying that who will contribute what is in any way predictable. At best, the necessary collision of circumstances to make the breakthrough possible is chaotic, and therefore cannot be predicted. Nor did anyone else. The original point a few posts up was that, even if though there might be a haystack of clearly wasted effort, there may still be a needle powerful enough to make up for the rest. | null | null | 41,812,127 | 41,808,127 | null | [
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41,812,783 | comment | RicoElectrico | 2024-10-11T19:34:48 | null | All these AI buzzwords to arrive at a 13 TOPS NPU which is way short of 45 TOPS for Copilot+ spec. | null | null | 41,812,333 | 41,812,333 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,784 | comment | mdelias | 2024-10-11T19:34:56 | null | "all the b̶i̶t̶c̶o̶i̶n̶ land"<p>"Bitcoin is Land" (2013) - 8 points <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=7494583">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=7494583</a> | null | null | 41,789,228 | 41,789,228 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,785 | comment | tyingq | 2024-10-11T19:35:06 | null | That's remotely hosted code...also a problem, but you can inject code that's not remotely hosted. | null | null | 41,812,211 | 41,809,698 | null | [
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41,812,786 | comment | bartread | 2024-10-11T19:35:07 | null | This trope of proclaiming some critical flaw in the functioning of LLMs with the implication that they therefore should not be used is getting boring.<p>LLMs are far from perfect but they can be a very useful tool that, used well, can add significant value in spite of their flaws. Large numbers of people and businesses are extracting huge value from the use of LLMs every single day. Some people are building what will become wildly successful businesses around LLM technology.<p>Yet in the face of this we still see a population of naysayers who appear intent on rubbishing LLMs at any cost. To me that seems like a pretty bad faith dialogue.<p>I’m aware that a lot of the positive rhetoric, particularly early on after the first public release of ChatGPT was overstated - sometimes heavily so - but taking one set of shitty arguments and rhetoric and responding to it with polar opposite, but equally shitty, arguments and rhetoric for the most part only serves to double the quantity of shitty arguments and rhetoric (and, adding insult to injury, often does so in the name of “balance”). | null | null | 41,812,523 | 41,812,523 | null | [
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41,812,787 | comment | bambax | 2024-10-11T19:35:10 | null | But... what could possibly be the point of using a chromium based browser that is not Chrome, if not for MV2 support? | null | null | 41,812,473 | 41,809,698 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,788 | comment | cosmotic | 2024-10-11T19:35:11 | null | This article also points a finger at macos for having bad rendering too. | null | null | 41,812,704 | 41,812,358 | null | [
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41,812,789 | comment | ajb | 2024-10-11T19:35:14 | null | FWIW I would not consider my post above evidence of a bug. At the time I was suffering from a lack of sleep and other stressors. | null | null | 41,796,135 | 41,778,139 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,790 | comment | eightysixfour | 2024-10-11T19:35:25 | null | Mere addition, as mentioned by the other user is the primary one I was referring to, but breaking different approaches to utilitarianism only requires one to take them to their extremes.<p>If average welfare of humans is all that matters, then one happy human living alone in the universe is the equivalent of a million happy humans.<p>If sum of "welfare" is all that matters, then you can argue an exceptionally large number of people being tortured indefinitely is better than a happy person. | null | null | 41,811,924 | 41,811,263 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,791 | comment | maccard | 2024-10-11T19:35:25 | null | One of the major problems approach with this is that you need to run the compile before you can generate this database. | null | null | 41,812,676 | 41,784,263 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,792 | comment | rybosworld | 2024-10-11T19:35:41 | null | > Explain them, are they lying?<p>Yes. | null | null | 41,812,778 | 41,811,263 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,793 | comment | stronglikedan | 2024-10-11T19:36:02 | null | > I don't know what is so different about having the drug help me<p>Likely the placebo effect<p>> I've kicked the habit from daily to occasionally on weekends. I've started walking 2-3 miles a day, 2-3 days a week regularly, in addition to eating less and being more motivated to calorie count.<p>This would have done the same without the drug<p>That said, perception is reality. Keep up the good work! Glad you're getting healthy. | null | null | 41,812,493 | 41,811,263 | null | [
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41,812,794 | comment | KerrAvon | 2024-10-11T19:36:03 | null | the article describes pretty specific failures that humans of even below-average intelligence do not make | null | null | 41,812,768 | 41,812,523 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,795 | comment | sillywalk | 2024-10-11T19:36:05 | null | I'm still hoping to find a more detailed article about modern X86-64 NonStop, complete with Mackie Diagrams.<p>The last one I can find is for the NonStop Advanced Architecture (on Itanium), with ServetNet. I gather that this was replaced with the NonStop Multicore Architecture (also on Itanium), with Infiniband, and I assume x86-64 is basically the same but on x86-64, but in pseudo big-endian. | null | null | 41,811,298 | 41,811,298 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,796 | comment | alkh | 2024-10-11T19:36:08 | null | I've recently discovered sshfs and learned about needing to have FUSE as a dependency for OS X, which spiked by interest. The code looks very clean and easy to understand, so thanks for that!
Is there any guide/course you would recommend for the introduction to FUSE? It looks like all you have is to provide implementations to certains functions your filesystem will use but it's hard without knowing the details(ex. I wouldn't know I had to implement readdir without your code, and so on) | null | null | 41,811,983 | 41,811,983 | null | [
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41,812,797 | comment | SkiFire13 | 2024-10-11T19:36:11 | null | The difference would be using GCC frontend + GCC backend vs rustc frontend + GCC backend. You don't really use "more" compilers with rustc_codegen_gcc, except in name only. However I do realize that people often care about these little details. | null | null | 41,811,036 | 41,805,288 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,798 | comment | cynicalpeace | 2024-10-11T19:36:15 | null | That's my point | null | null | 41,812,280 | 41,807,681 | null | null | null | null |
41,812,799 | comment | cogman10 | 2024-10-11T19:36:23 | null | Pretty much nothing was missing from the J1772 protocol, that's why NACS by and large speaks it and CCS1/2.<p>That's pretty much the answer to all your questions, it's a different plug standard using other SAE standards for communication.<p>As to why it won out in the US, pretty much solely due to the fact that Tesla is basically the only national charge network that gives a damn about their charge network. It's a crap shoot for basically every other charge location and the actual coverage is pitiful compared to the Tesla network. | null | null | 41,812,420 | 41,811,646 | null | null | null | null |
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