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11,497,762 | null |
comment
|
RIMR
| 1,460,649,501 |
Passing a law against strong encryption will totally prevent terrorists from using it to conceal their communications. I mean, how are they going to encrypt their data if it's illegal to do so? /s
| null | 11,495,202 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,763 | null |
comment
|
wuliwong
| 1,460,649,506 |
I thought I was signing up for Kite not for Kite's email list. Pretty misleading copy. Nowhere does it say "Coming soon" or anything to that effect.<p>Also, there seems to be no confirmation email.
| null | 11,497,111 | null |
[
11498040
] | null | null | null | null | null |
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comment
|
lmm
| 1,460,649,514 |
Is she though? What measure are you using to say that Sansa is more important than Arya?
| null | 11,496,576 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,767 | null |
comment
|
f_allwein
| 1,460,649,519 |
Huh. So we haven't come a long way since Eliza in the 1960s then?<p><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ELIZA" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ELIZA</a>
| null | 11,497,691 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,766 | null |
comment
|
agumonkey
| 1,460,649,517 |
I may be an oddity but I can assure you that emotional relation through contact has significant deep sources, causes and effects on one's mind. It was like going from 2D monochromatic vision to 3D trichr. And in my case it wasn't a smooth transition and caused me deep anguish to say the least. When I see documentaries about autistic childs, the way they express anxiety and hit themselves, I can't help but to think about my own past issues. Hence my question.
| null | 11,496,485 | null |
[
11498506
] | null | null | null | null | null |
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comment
|
ant6n
| 1,460,649,550 |
This does look pretty interesting. Could maybe be a bit larger. And their website less shiny and more info.<p>I like that they are offering (by invitation only) a ios and Android app -- so much of a tool like that is the OS and interface, if you can give people a simulated version on a device they already have, that's a pretty good share-ware like onboarding experience.
| null | 11,494,937 | null |
[
11502169
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,768 | null |
comment
|
howlingfantods
| 1,460,649,528 |
tldr: Next gen 4K and VR games require GPUs and CPUs that far exceed the $300-400 price normal for a game console. Microsoft should separate the Xbox into two (or more) lines: a $150-200 media center like Apple TV with no gaming capability, and a higher priced gaming version that could potentially just be a high powered PC running an Xbox app.<p>Personally, I see his point that the price expectations of game consoles prevent them from effectively running next gen games. However, that's always been the case, with console gaming quality lagging behind PC equivalents. But maybe the advancements with VR and 4K this time around has finally broken the traditional console refresh cycle?
| null | 11,497,093 | null |
[
11498468
] | null | null | null | null | null |
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comment
|
bsaul
| 1,460,649,529 |
Could anyone here tell me why, in practice, it isn't possible to write generic algorithms such as sorting or Red/Black T using interfaces only in GO ? It seems like having interfaces such as "comparable, equatable,etc" should work in theory.<p>I've read somewhere that it was memory usage related, but i've got trouble picturing why (maybe an example would help)
| null | 11,494,181 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,773 | null |
comment
|
chris_wot
| 1,460,649,574 |
Well, I'm controversial with some - it's still against the law in many jurisdictions so it's murder. But I consider euthanasia to be hugely unethical, so I'd consider it manslaughter.
| null | 11,497,600 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,771 | null |
comment
|
aolujic
| 1,460,649,551 |
Already confirmed and published finding 5 weeks ago.
<a href="http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1600651?query=featured_home&#t=article" rel="nofollow">http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1600651?query=fea...</a>
| null | 11,492,410 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,774 | null |
comment
|
antillean
| 1,460,649,577 |
There's a lot of trust of the government here[1] and in general[2] -- though, as that Gallup link shows, it MASSIVELY depends on which arm of the government you're talking about.<p>Again, not many people live in or around the libertarian bubble. And there are lots of intelligent people who avoid it for very, very good reasons.<p>-----<p>1. <a href="http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2016/02/apple-fbi-polls/470736/" rel="nofollow">http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2016/02/apple-fb...</a><p>2. <a href="http://www.gallup.com/poll/1597/confidence-institutions.aspx" rel="nofollow">http://www.gallup.com/poll/1597/confidence-institutions.aspx</a>
| null | 11,496,125 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,779 | null |
comment
|
throwanem
| 1,460,649,613 |
Look into Dash. Even if you don't want to pay for the application (or can't run it on your platform), the docsets are free and ISTR there are some editor integrations for them that don't involve the paid app.
| null | 11,497,704 | null |
[
11498168,
11498208
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,776 | null |
comment
|
p0nce
| 1,460,649,605 |
Well in this case I would be surprised if any other programming question wouldn't reveal them.
| null | 11,496,182 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,772 | null |
comment
|
desdiv
| 1,460,649,563 |
Wikipedia lists the Eastern box turtle as "vulnerable"[0].<p>[0] <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_box_turtle" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_box_turtle</a>
| null | 11,497,619 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,778 | null |
comment
|
Roboprog
| 1,460,649,611 |
That was my thought: First, a text box to make entry POSSIBLE, then, if time allows, a select/option list to constrain to meaningful answers, then, the "other-with-text" option to allow the long tail of never before seen but valid answers.<p>And so on, as time allows.
| null | 11,496,017 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,777 | null |
comment
|
pierrebai
| 1,460,649,605 |
I fail to see by what mechanism what you describes occurs. Do you constantly query your occupant of pay raises? Why would every raise be siphoned by rent? Poor people have problem making ends meet for clothes, food, etc. Sure, more money put inflationary pressure, but it's not a magic direct correlation and instant feedback. If the government is serious and declares that it will adjust basic income to match the market price for basic goods and regulate their prices, including building low-rent lodging, then the inflationary pressure will have to subsides into only unregulated items.
| null | 11,497,430 | null |
[
11497833,
11497844
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,781 | null |
comment
|
ph0rque
| 1,460,649,619 |
<i>It's a great concept for a tool, but I could never get it to fly at work.</i><p>Not windy enough for flying a kite? ;)
| null | 11,497,511 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,775 | null |
story
|
growthcommunity
| 1,460,649,590 | null | true | null | null | null |
http://bit.ly/22x7Qyu
| 1 |
IoT investment bulks up in 2nd best quarter ever
| null | null |
11,497,782 | null |
comment
|
zbjornson
| 1,460,649,619 |
I was wondering about this, but the data can remain encrypted and compliant as long as it's ultimately accessible by court order. I then assume the existing laws regarding courts accessing private health data apply.
| null | 11,497,491 | null |
[
11498012
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,780 | true |
comment
| null | 1,460,649,617 | null | null | 11,497,111 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,787 | null |
comment
|
ikeboy
| 1,460,649,677 |
Reminds me of <a href="https://archive.is/9R2j8" rel="nofollow">https://archive.is/9R2j8</a><p>(Original thread has been deleted.)
| null | 11,496,947 | null |
[
11498224,
11498009
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,794 | null |
comment
|
strommen
| 1,460,649,703 |
Well the defensive player guarding Kobe better be positioned next to Kobe!<p>Really, all the positioning is dictated by the offense.
Defense ends up just inside the 3-point line because the offensive player sets up just <i>outside</i> the 3-point line, not the other way around.<p>Kobe (and pretty much all basketball players) are continuously planning how they will get open and where they will shoot from.
Part of that plan is the knowledge that an almost-but-not-quite-3-pointer is a really dumb shot.
So they'll usually catch the ball at the 3-point line and either shoot or dribble substantially closer to the basket.
| null | 11,495,620 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,786 | null |
story
|
gloves
| 1,460,649,675 | null | true | null | null | null |
http://bit.ly/PRODUCTMANAGEMENT
| 1 |
Free, live, online product management surgery
| null | null |
11,497,783 | null |
comment
|
slg
| 1,460,649,637 |
This is a very good video that gives you insight into both sides of the debate, but I'm not sure it will change many minds because the central idea of the video isn't really supported by anything. The entire thing rests on on argument, "There is no way to build a digital lock that only angels can open and demons cannot." However, there is nothing in the video to back up why that argument is true now and/or will continue to be true in the future. That is where Clinton's whole "Manhattan Project of Encryption" idea comes from that she mentioned a few months back.<p>It also makes the entire debate black and white which isn't the case in the rest of our legal system. Nothing there is 100% accurate. There are guilty people who get off and innocent people who are convicted. If we could devise a lock that keeps out nearly all demons and lets in most angels, would that satisfy both sides of the debate?
| null | 11,496,325 | null |
[
11498020,
11499258,
11497887,
11498384,
11497904
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,788 | null |
comment
|
inflagranti
| 1,460,649,678 |
We have countless examples of capitalism failing too. But the argument that socialism is against human nature is obviously wrong, as humans are social animals. However, as any animal, if you corner them and put them in survival mode, things can get ugly.<p>The purpose of modern states is exactly to provide security in multiple ways, one of them being shared financial security, to remove the need of constant struggle for survival and allow the social side of humanity to flurish.<p>As an example on a smaller scale: There were enough articles recently for instance about Amazon, as an extreme example of hiper competitive anti-social environment that encourages people to backstab each other and play politics to advance. Pure survival mode. Compare that for instance with companies like Google, that spoil everyone and even give you 20% time for free. So far they haven't collapsed. Now you can argue that companies are not countries, but I don't see how such learning don't apply. That exactly is the human behaviour argument.<p>Sorry in advance for the ad-hominem, but that supposedly intelligent people even here on Hacker News keep reiterating old tropes about socialism and human nature unreflected, while any research in that regard or simple observations as illustrated above are contradictory to it, is baffling.
| null | 11,497,595 | null |
[
11497978
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,796 | null |
story
|
guifortaine
| 1,460,649,717 | null | null | null | null | null |
https://github.com/yujiosaka/js-mind
| 2 |
Js-Mind: A Deep Learning Library Written in ES2015
| null | 0 |
11,497,791 | null |
comment
|
mindset
| 1,460,649,697 |
Yes, much like the stock market responds to news, mostly faster than msnbc can discuss these. The issue this app solves is the ephemeral nature of the betting data. A simple scheduling feature allowed me to have historical data easily. Otherwise, go deal with a server, scheduled jobs, etc. Not impossible, just discouraging for many people that can develop, but don't want to deal with the overhead for every little application.
| null | 11,496,323 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,803 | true |
comment
| null | 1,460,649,769 | null | null | 11,497,753 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,790 | null |
comment
|
AzzieElbab
| 1,460,649,693 |
Wow this is personal. The 4 trillions dollars empire strikes back
| null | 11,490,733 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,797 | null |
comment
|
drumdance
| 1,460,649,721 |
I have a friend who is an energy healer. I personally think that kind of thing is nonsense, but her origin story makes me pause.<p>Throughout her teens and twenties she really struggled emotionally because she had this unconscious ability to absorb other people's emotional states. Then she went to an energy healer herself, discovered she had a gift and finally developed the coping mechanism not to let other people's energy affect her so much. Now she uses her ability to help people instead of just flailing around.
| null | 11,497,640 | null |
[
11498430,
11498271
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,784 | null |
comment
|
ghshephard
| 1,460,649,639 |
Right - that's the part that I have a really hard time believing. Even having a single decryption key <i>per device</i> seems insane - isn't it pretty standard practice to frequently rotate your session key? I'm wondering if this was something that Blackberry was doing back in the early 90s, and, as the state of the art advanced, they never upgraded their systems.<p>It really sounds terribly insecure to me.
| null | 11,497,718 | null |
[
11497921,
11498046,
11498269
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,801 | null |
story
|
6stringmerc
| 1,460,649,751 | null | null | null | null | null |
http://motherboard.vice.com/read/a-very-uncool-cooler
| 1 |
A Very Uncool Cooler - An Update on The Coolest Cooler
| null | 0 |
11,497,800 | null |
story
|
erikdoze12
| 1,460,649,743 | null | true | null | null | null |
http://futebolnota10.com/gol-de-griezmann-atletico-de-madrid-2x0-barcelona/
| 1 |
Gol de Griezmann – Atlético de Madrid 2×0 Barcelona
| null | null |
11,497,795 | null |
comment
|
maxerickson
| 1,460,649,705 |
Yes, I agree that housing markets suck.
| null | 11,497,738 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,799 | null |
comment
|
ronyeh
| 1,460,649,733 |
Go seems to be much harder to type than Python. Would be nice if each single player level linked out to a docs page that could teach me the syntax that I was typing out. I wasn't familiar with the function* syntax in JavaScript for example.
| null | 11,496,124 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,793 | null |
story
|
malingo
| 1,460,649,699 | null | null | null | null | null |
http://fivethirtyeight.com/features/the-new-science-of-hitting/
| 1 |
The New Science of Hitting a Baseball
| null | 0 |
11,497,798 | null |
story
|
nradov
| 1,460,649,731 | null | null | null | null | null |
http://www.npr.org/2016/04/13/474120877/stanford-physicist-embarks-on-mission-to-improve-undergraduate-teaching
| 1 |
Stanford Physicist Embarks on Mission to Improve Undergraduate Teaching
| null | 0 |
11,497,802 | null |
story
|
DarkLinkXXXX
| 1,460,649,761 | null | null | null | null | null |
https://krustykrab.restaurant/w3.htm
| 1 |
The W3C has been hacked
| null | 0 |
11,497,785 | null |
comment
|
rlpb
| 1,460,649,653 |
In other words, he didn't have backups. A live copy of a running system available to that running system is not a backup.
| null | 11,496,985 | null |
[
11498360
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,789 | null |
comment
|
harryf
| 1,460,649,688 |
I believe those variables were not handled by the shell but rather in an Ansible "playbook" - see <a href="http://docs.ansible.com/ansible/playbooks_variables.html" rel="nofollow">http://docs.ansible.com/ansible/playbooks_variables.html</a><p>i.e. the variables where happening in a Jinja template and because undefined, rm -rf {foo}/{bar} was transformed by the template engine into rm -rf /
| null | 11,497,590 | null |
[
11497939,
11497906,
11499276
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,792 | true |
comment
| null | 1,460,649,698 | null | null | 11,497,511 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,804 | true |
comment
| null | 1,460,649,780 | null | null | 11,496,948 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,811 | null |
story
|
rmason
| 1,460,649,823 | null | null | null | null | null |
https://medium.com/swlh/vr-is-a-dud-a96470bb6455#.n450mehae
| 2 |
VR is a dud
| null | 0 |
11,497,806 | null |
comment
|
agumonkey
| 1,460,649,789 |
You never hugged someone you missed to death ? I bet it wasn't for sensorial pleasure. There's something more when you can let down on someone else and somehow 'talk' by skin / closeness.
| null | 11,496,297 | null |
[
11498416
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,807 | null |
comment
|
bluetidepro
| 1,460,649,794 |
I don't want undermine the value of this product, but this seems like something that I've (and many others) sort of already solved by using products like Dash [1] and Alfred [2] together. You can easily and quickly find all info on docs while working right in Sublime Text, or while also using an IDE to read into functions throughout your project. And maybe I'm missing more what this product does, but that's just what I noticed based on the video.<p>[1] <a href="https://kapeli.com/dash" rel="nofollow">https://kapeli.com/dash</a>
[2] <a href="https://www.alfredapp.com/" rel="nofollow">https://www.alfredapp.com/</a>
| null | 11,497,111 | null |
[
11499128,
11497896
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,808 | null |
story
|
nature24
| 1,460,649,795 | null | true | null | null | null |
https://www.quantamagazine.org/20160414-diphoton-in-theory-video/
| 1 |
Video: Has the LHC discovered a new particle?
| null | null |
11,497,805 | null |
comment
|
innertracks
| 1,460,649,785 |
How interesting. I'm learning about healthy emotional boundaries. In the past there have been times I've been so synced up with another person's emotional state I thought their emotions were my own! Practicing dialing down my sensitivity has been a big help.
| null | 11,497,375 | null |
[
11498068,
11505108
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,813 | null |
comment
|
bitwize
| 1,460,649,830 |
Well, then, it's your responsibility to make sure that your application can cope with data pasted in from Excel, since that's obviously a critical part of the users' workflow.
| null | 11,497,601 | null |
[
11499355
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,809 | null |
story
|
OWaz
| 1,460,649,806 | null | null | null | null | null |
https://github.com/cmeiklejohn/PMLDC/
| 2 |
Programming Models and Languages for Distributed Computing
| null | 0 |
11,497,810 | null |
comment
|
jimmies
| 1,460,649,815 |
Well except for you cann't have everyone agreeing on what fonts to include in their app. J
| null | 11,497,087 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,812 | null |
comment
|
mindset
| 1,460,649,823 |
Nah, the title has little to do with the app, more with my failed attempt at brevity. But an app that could stop a baby from crying would be awesome.
| null | 11,495,646 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,814 | null |
comment
|
seldo
| 1,460,649,837 |
I do work at npm, and you're right, that's why we do it. The same Docker-based installer (from a company called Replicated) installs on all our customers' many operating systems, so it was easiest to do the same thing to create our AMI.<p>We should look at ECS though. Are you more likely to deploy if something is in ECS than if it's a straight AMI?
| null | 11,497,574 | null |
[
11503570
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,817 | null |
comment
|
api
| 1,460,649,868 |
I highly recommend a book called Season of the Witch by David Talbot. It's a great history of SF in the 50s-80s with a strong focus on the 60s and the counterculture. It's some amazing history that many people don't know much about.<p>If the 60s counterculture and the rest of America had been geographically segregated like the South and the North in the 1860s, you'd have had secession and civil war.
| null | 11,496,349 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,816 | null |
story
|
edroche
| 1,460,649,855 | null | null | null | null | null |
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/15/technology/microsoft-sues-us-over-orders-barring-it-from-revealing-surveillance.html?_r=0
| 5 |
Microsoft Sues U.S. Over Orders Barring It from Revealing Surveillance
| null | 0 |
11,497,815 | null |
comment
|
bejar37
| 1,460,649,853 |
> Kotlin has things Scala doesn't, like efficient optionality in the type system<p>Honest question - what is it that makes Scala's optionality inefficient compared to Kotlin? I'd never heard of this before.
| null | 11,497,241 | null |
[
11498164
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,820 | null |
story
|
ch4ch4
| 1,460,649,923 | null | true | null | null | null |
http://www.rutherford.org/publications_resources/john_whiteheads_commentary/fleecing_the_american_taxpayer_the_profit_incentives_driving_the_police_sta
| 1 |
Fleecing the American Taxpayer: The Profit Incentives Driving the Police State
| null | null |
11,497,819 | null |
story
|
phildougherty
| 1,460,649,899 | null | null | null | null | null |
http://techcrunch.com/2016/04/14/containership-raises-2-41m-seed-round-for-its-cloud-automation-platform/
| 12 |
ContainerShip raises $2.41MM for it cloud automation platform
| null | 0 |
11,497,818 | null |
comment
|
empath75
| 1,460,649,878 |
I think probably the right way to go after this bill is not to tell people that they need to protect their secrets from the government, but that they need to protect their secrets from 'criminals'.<p>Point out all the times that government databases have been hacked, and that if their secrets are swept up in government dragnets, it's only a matter of time before blackmailers and identity thieves get hold of them.
| null | 11,496,593 | null |
[
11498281
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,821 | null |
comment
|
ceeK
| 1,460,649,925 |
Fantastic idea. Disappointed I can't use it now! I'll be waiting for use with Swift.
| null | 11,497,139 | null |
[
11497992
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,822 | null |
comment
|
Retric
| 1,460,649,937 |
I think suggestions reduce low income tax breaks and other social welfare programs while introducing a BI. ~11k per year could be close to net tax neutral.<p>EX: A flat tax at the highest rate would adds ~2,745$ to everyone above of the first tax bracket $9,275/yr, next tax bracket is hands out 6,980$, together that's a 9,725$ benefit for everyone making over $37,650/yr already being baked into the tax code.<p>On top of that you get things like HUD, education grants etc. Not to mention the 60+ million people getting Social Security.<p>PS: Not that I think the odds are good in the US any time soon. But, we are facing a lot of systemic issues which could promote a huge range of reforms.
| null | 11,497,675 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,827 | null |
comment
|
simonswords82
| 1,460,649,970 |
At first I thought your comment was a bit harsh but actually now I think about it the Xbone is buggy as fuck compared to the 360.<p>I'm hopelessly addicted to COD3, and if I had a quid for every time that game has crashed on me I'd have a lot of pound coins. The OS is indeed slow, and the network setup I've had to create for games to work reliably is less than ideal. The OS is clearly trying to do a lot, but does all of it slowly and unreliably.
| null | 11,497,577 | null |
[
11498157
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,823 | null |
story
|
thomson
| 1,460,649,945 | null | null | null | null | null |
http://andrewberls.com/blog/post/introducing-overseer--data-pipeline-management-in-clojure-pt-1
| 6 |
Overseer – data pipeline management in Clojure
| null | 0 |
11,497,824 | true |
comment
| null | 1,460,649,959 | null | null | 11,497,190 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,825 | null |
comment
|
mdlowman
| 1,460,649,962 |
This reminded me of In the Reign of Harad IV[1].<p>[1]: <a href="http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2006/04/10/in-the-reign-of-harad-iv" rel="nofollow">http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2006/04/10/in-the-reign-of...</a>
| null | 11,495,743 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,826 | null |
story
|
56k
| 1,460,649,964 | null | null | null | null |
[
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11498333,
11499223,
11500263,
11499478
] |
http://hjson.org/
| 257 |
Hjson, the Human JSON
| null | 213 |
11,497,829 | null |
comment
|
neil_s
| 1,460,649,975 |
This is awesome! I was going to build something similar, just for the terminal, but extending it to code editors as well makes total sense. And what an all-star team!
| null | 11,497,111 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,828 | null |
comment
|
cgy1
| 1,460,649,970 |
An article from 2011? Really?
| null | 11,497,531 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,833 | null |
comment
|
VincentEvans
| 1,460,650,016 |
I certainly don't "constantly query", but somehow there's always a feedback of what is a successful economic model.<p>I have so many examples of this. For instance due to terrible public schools - private schools cost roughly what it would cost you to move to a good neighborhood with good public school.<p>Day care - costs around what the government contributes as day care assistance.<p>Etc...
| null | 11,497,777 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,830 | null |
comment
|
nickpsecurity
| 1,460,649,980 |
Another great, fun write-up by Ratliff. I'm surprised by by a number of things which I'll comment on in a disorganized way. :) One is how often Israeli commandos turn up in these organizations. In parallel, there's their well-known effectiveness plus the risk of Mossad connections that can burn you. Mexican cartels, Colombian, Paul Le Roux... they all buy them up. Cheap, too. I'd like to hear their logic on that.<p>That he was still producing 200kilos out of thin air was interesting. Operations are still going somewhere with possibly millions moving. Either his that are still running autonomously or others with him just having 3rd parties that can pull a huge transaction at once.<p>His OPSEC sucks. I mean, I'm amazed that he didn't get caught earlier in some unrelated investigation using his real name and emails on all kinds of shady stuff. Many I know are too paranoid to do that thinking someone would connect dots. He did it and nobody connected dots until piles of high risk crimes added up with benefit of easy tracing. Even police said a little more obfuscation would've thrown them. This means we've overestimated the police's ability to connect dots on suspicious items. Just don't know how much.<p>Spamhaus says a quarter of stuff came from this company. I read much in INFOSEC but never heard them connect it to something like this. Another "under the radar" aspect that's amazing. Plus, owning a registrar for spam cover is excellent example of subversion at protocol level.<p>$200-400 million a year could buy tons of INFOSEC and OPSEC. He could've rebranded under a new company to move his name further from the transactions. He could've potentially paid his Israelis to straight up break in and steal/alter records. He could've dropped a few mil strategically in Brazil on key people to spot legal and financial risks along with strats people use to dodge or buy cops. Before he went there. Far as Liberian deal, he should've sent one of his well-paid, experienced people to negotiate that. At his level, he should never leave protection or associate himself with something that's tainted. And when busted, getting immunity to flip is a rational option in his situation but admitting to murders was just stupid.<p>How about "An arrogant way of living?" Haha.
| null | 11,496,782 | null |
[
11498003,
11497891
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,832 | null |
comment
|
alanwatts
| 1,460,650,010 |
>who says this has to involve decreasing IT security?<p>Which type of system would you feel safer guarding all of your most personal information in? Keep in mind that the system doesn't care if you're a "bad guy" or a "good guy":<p>1. A system which was designed to be "unbreakable"<p>2. A system which was designed to be breakable<p>Without encryption there is no IT security (if there even was such a thing).<p>Love me some AOE btw.
| null | 11,497,734 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,831 | null |
comment
|
oftenwrong
| 1,460,650,006 |
I feel the same way. Like many people who would agree, I use a highly configurable tiling window manager. I have convenient hotkeys for switching and re-arranging windows. I don't want to have to switch into my browser, and then switch mental modes to a different set of controls for switching and re-arranging tabs.<p>I have not tried any tabless setups yet, though. For a browser I use iceweasel/firefox with pentadactyl, so I can hit `b` and switch tabs by number or search by tab title.
| null | 11,487,662 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,835 | null |
comment
|
j_s
| 1,460,650,026 |
Can link to / provide additional detail on the Windows 7 issues? How weird that an OS simply doesn't work on a processor!
| null | 11,493,621 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,836 | null |
comment
|
AnimalMuppet
| 1,460,650,039 |
"Inability to control himself"? Sorry, I'm in the US, and I consider a free press to be a <i>right</i>, not something that you're supposed to "control yourself" to avoid "misusing" somehow.<p>I'll insult whom I please, in public. If I have a job in the media, and that isn't part of my job, I may get fired for it (free speech does not mean that my employer <i>has</i> to give me a platform). Also, others may view me negatively. Other than that, I'll say what I please without fear of consequences.
| null | 11,493,855 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,834 | null |
comment
|
thefastlane
| 1,460,650,020 |
your point is well taken. software engineers are often subject to the whims of PMs and execs, and aren't always able to pursue the level of excellence they (the engineers) might prefer.
| null | 11,497,666 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,837 | null |
comment
|
brazzledazzle
| 1,460,650,042 |
I mean from a system level perspective. The trouble is that they have policies that are optimized for people shopping on a site with a money back guarantee not for hosting critical infrastructure.
| null | 11,494,958 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,845 | true |
comment
| null | 1,460,650,112 | null | null | 11,497,366 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,840 | null |
comment
|
FiloSottile
| 1,460,650,081 |
That does not nearly have the same security level. Signing a tag in git is like signing a commit. A commit is nothing else than a reference to a tree SHA1 (and parent, message and author). That tree SHA1 contains SHA1 of the files and trees in the directory.<p>Even assuming your client checks all the SHA1 and does not just trust the server (which is not the default), and that you are verifying the git tag signature correctly (which is harder than just checking a tarball), SHA1 collisions are considered practical.
| null | 11,495,188 | null |
[
11498653
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,841 | null |
comment
|
libeclipse
| 1,460,650,081 |
Funnily enough, I've never used auto-completion. I've even gone through the trouble of deactivating it in Atom, but disdain is a strong word.<p>Also, it just occurred to me that Kite is basically a keylogger. Every keystroke is sent to their servers. That requires a lot of trust.
| null | 11,497,665 | null |
[
11498184,
11498086
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,846 | true |
comment
| null | 1,460,650,114 | null | true | 11,444,284 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,847 | null |
comment
|
nxzero
| 1,460,650,117 |
Weight of 342 bars of gold would be 4255-kg (9381-lb)...<p>...find it hard to believe the carrying capacity of an average taxi would support this.
| null | 11,496,782 | null |
[
11498183,
11498008,
11497911,
11499345
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,838 | null |
comment
|
ewindisch
| 1,460,650,068 |
Absolutely, but the bill does nothing to prevent users from installing hardware or software that has been built without a backdoor. You will still be able to use Veracrypt, if you'd like, without backdoors. I do not see in this bill provisions which prevent vendors building equipment that can run arbitrary code, use arbitrary devices, or arbitrary mechanisms. (However, I'll look again)<p>The assumption of liability is on vendors. Vendors are expected to sell you broken goods. Developers of VeraCrypt in the above example would be expected to provide a backdoor. If they're foreign, then it will be largely unenforceable, although those developers will likely face difficulties visiting the USA.<p>Where users are restricted is wherein they become vendors or providers of software or services. Running a Tor server may require being prepared to provide keys or offer a backdoor, for instance. I think the bill as written could have trouble with distributing VM and container images as well, although a case may be made that they are not operating as "software manufacturers" and are simply distributors, with the liabilities reaching back to Canonical, RedHat, Microsoft, etc.
| null | 11,497,360 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,842 | null |
comment
|
sardonicbryan
| 1,460,650,093 |
Swiftkey has this, and it really changed the game for me because it baked emoji discovery directly into my typing flow.
| null | 11,497,238 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,839 | null |
comment
|
ancap
| 1,460,650,078 |
Just around my home I could easily hire a few people to do various jobs at any given time, but it is not cheap enough for me to justify doing that. Automation comes at a cost, and often humans laborers can do the job cheaper. The thing that will be pushing people out of a job is minimum wage, not the automation which often results in reaction to minimum wage.
| null | 11,497,725 | null |
[
11498555,
11498639
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,843 | null |
comment
|
NateDad
| 1,460,650,097 |
I work on juju (<a href="https://github.com/juju/juju" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/juju/juju</a>), which all told is about 1M LOC. In my almost 3 years on the project, I have not been bothered by lack of generics, basically at all (and I worked for 10 years in C# on projects that used a lot of generics, so it's not like I don't know what I'm missing).<p>Do we have 67 implementations of sort.Interface? Sure. Is that, by any stretch of the imagination, a significantly difficult part of my job? No.<p>Juju is a distributed application that supports running across thousands of machines on all the major clouds, on OSes including CentOS, Ubuntu, Windows, and OSX, on architectures including amd64, x86, PPC64EL, s390x... and stores data in a replicated mongoDB and uses RPC over websockets to talk between machines.<p>The difficult problems are all either intrinsic to the solution space (e.g. supporting different storage back ends for each cloud), or problems we brought on ourselves (what do you mean the unit tests have to spin up a full mongodb instance?).<p>Generics would not make our codebase significantly better, more maintainable, or easier to understand.
| null | 11,494,181 | null |
[
11502361,
11498100,
11498552
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,844 | null |
comment
|
codeismightier
| 1,460,650,103 |
Housing is, to a certain extent, a positional good. People want to live in safe, friendly neighborhoods, surrounded by well educated, middle to upper class people. Even if everyone got more money, it's not easy for more people to live in desirable neighborhoods (at least without changing the character of those neighborhoods).
| null | 11,497,777 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,850 | null |
comment
|
tim_nuwin
| 1,460,650,142 |
He's also using Windows. I find Sketch pretty stable on OSX
| null | 11,494,256 | null |
[
11498992,
11500756
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,856 | null |
comment
|
rpgmaker
| 1,460,650,175 |
His point is that the government asks for this information, maybe as a requirement in order to procure official documents needed for everyday life and business. There's not much to do when the government of your country makes your giving of certain information a requirement. Sure, you <i>could</i> fight it in court but it's very likely that that will not get you very far or produce the official documents you may need. Not all governments were founded with the same libertarian strain as the US.
| null | 11,497,506 | null |
[
11498546,
11498473
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,857 | true |
comment
| null | 1,460,650,178 | null | null | 11,491,504 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,848 | null |
comment
|
midnitewarrior
| 1,460,650,135 |
I'd rather have my PC turn into an Xbox.
| null | 11,497,093 | null |
[
11500604
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,852 | null |
comment
|
lolidaisuki
| 1,460,650,147 |
As long as it doesn't clash with something in the same field. The problem isn't lack of good names, it's people wanting 3 letter names for all of their projects.
| true | 11,497,081 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,855 | null |
story
|
baodi46
| 1,460,650,162 | null | true | null | null | null |
http://www.androfull.com/2016/04/htc-10-lifestyle-design-remains-not.html
| 1 |
HTC 10 Lifestyle: design remains, Not Performance
| null | null |
11,497,849 | null |
comment
|
phamilton
| 1,460,650,138 |
Apples to apples shot percentage is a great stat.<p>My biggest complaint with Kobe is that he scored a lot of points because he took a lot of shots. Last night for example, he took ~60% of shots from the field for his team which accounted for ~55% (ignoring FTs). In other words, the expected return on his shot was lower than the rest of his team. Now, FTs change that story a bit, but even in the best case scenario he breaks even with his team.<p>Kobe was a great leader on the court, which is what allowed him to get away with shooting more shots than the rest of his team combined on a regular basis. He also had this "The Lakers are built around Kobe" team structure that made that the expectation.
| null | 11,497,084 | null |
[
11498650,
11497908
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,851 | null |
comment
|
rootlocus
| 1,460,650,145 |
How about offering an on-site solution, where the client can deploy the Kite service on their own machines?
| null | 11,497,761 | null |
[
11497972,
11497952
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,854 | null |
comment
|
WorldMaker
| 1,460,650,161 |
The systems we have today are the compromise results of such a "progressive system" where system income depends on need (age [Social Security, Medicare], circumstance [Unemployment, Social Security Disability, SNAP, Welfare], etc) and based on "commensurate effort" (previous wages, complicated forms, layers and layers of proofs, ...).<p>Have you had to file for Unemployment "Insurance" yet, in your lifetime? It's a complicated circus to get back money that you "paid in". You have to prove, and then re-prove, your past earnings and tax amounts that had paid into the programs (plural if working across state boundaries); you have to "be actively seeking work" and prove, every single week, that fact with somewhat embarrassing forms to fill out to get the money that you already set aside for this already embarrassing situation...<p>These systems treat you as "guilty-by-default" and we've let the worry of possible fraud, however unlikely, turn these systems into giant theaters of "fraud reduction" and complicated terror on the individuals dealing with the system.<p>Basic Income, by expecting to be unqualified and guaranteed to all regardless of need or effort, is intentionally about simplicity and about avoiding the giant red tape spaghetti that is our current "entitlement" systems. If everyone gets it, equally, then you don't need to worry about "fraud" and you don't need to worry about "proof".
| null | 11,497,408 | null |
[
11505130
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,853 | null |
comment
|
gedy
| 1,460,650,156 |
Agreed. Yes the housing situation is basically a must to move away from expensive housing near work.
| null | 11,497,592 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,858 | null |
comment
|
natch
| 1,460,650,181 |
Thanks for sharing. I do have some questions, probably ones coming out of almost unfathomable ignorance, but hope you can answer.<p>Any plans for supporting Swift output? Or is that question completely missing the point of this tool (like, maybe with Swift its support for immutable value objects is already so good you don't need this?)<p>What is a .ts file?<p>Could this have been done instead with a new mogenerator template, or what is the limitation of mogenerator that would have prevented that?<p>Could this help with creating code for attributes with the Transformable data type?<p>I see there is a tiny bit in the readme about the workflow, but nothing about how that fits in to the usual Xcode workflow for working with models and their associated classes (in Xcode the word model refers to the xcmodel file(s) I believe, not the code, but you're using it in a more general way). What would be the Xcode workflow for using this, starting from an empty project with no xcmodel file, and proceeding until it's done?
| null | 11,492,450 | null |
[
11501580
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,859 | null |
comment
|
finnn
| 1,460,650,187 |
You mean like a Knox Box[0]?<p>[0]: <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knox_Box" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knox_Box</a>
| null | 11,497,189 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,860 | null |
comment
|
kennell
| 1,460,650,192 |
It has always bothered me that the JSON standard does not allow for comments. Especially when you want to annotate some sample response/request.
| null | 11,497,826 | null |
[
11499360,
11498056,
11497999,
11497948
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,497,863 | null |
story
|
known
| 1,460,650,206 | null | true | null | null | null |
http://www.huffingtonpost.in/2016/04/14/discontinued-google-produ_n_9436180.html
| 1 |
6 Popular Google Products Which No Longer Exist
| null | null |
11,497,861 | null |
comment
|
Karunamon
| 1,460,650,194 |
Experts Exchange (or ExpertSexChange - poor URL choice) had their lunch eaten by Stack Overflow. I'd argue the login requirement wasn't as much of a problem as their payment requirement...
| null | 11,497,703 | null |
[
11497934
] | null | null | null | null | null |
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