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11,498,464 | null |
comment
|
Overtonwindow
| 1,460,653,512 |
Well, few things give more attention to something than attempts to bury it.<p>Source: <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streisand_effect" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streisand_effect</a>
| null | 11,498,105 | null |
[
11499874,
11498963,
11499451
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,461 | null |
story
|
maxwell
| 1,460,653,504 | null | null | null | null |
[
11498857,
11499616,
11499207,
11500802,
11500103
] |
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1clrlqg6p9BSPYa70SX3ianQmiy2tbw9ZaFgyGYMHPII/viewform
| 6 |
Correlation between religion and programming language preference?
| null | 10 |
11,498,467 | null |
comment
|
deaddodo
| 1,460,653,554 |
Link to the Atom module?<p>I'll take a look at making something similar.
| null | 11,498,337 | null |
[
11502685
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,469 | null |
story
|
baliansa
| 1,460,653,557 | null | null | null | null | null |
http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2016/04/saudi-arabia-strips-religious-police-arresting-power-160413141418824.html
| 2 |
Saudi Arabia clips the wings of feared religious police
| null | 0 |
11,498,466 | null |
comment
|
creshal
| 1,460,653,536 |
ZIP is a <i>fun</i> file format.
| null | 11,497,648 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,470 | null |
comment
|
Overtonwindow
| 1,460,653,560 |
Duplicate: <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=11498105" rel="nofollow">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=11498105</a>
| null | 11,498,115 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,468 | null |
comment
|
Unklejoe
| 1,460,653,556 |
"... a $150-200 media center like Apple TV with no gaming capability"<p>I think "media centers" in the form you speak of are becoming more and more irrelevant with the emergence of smart TVs and those <$75 HDMI sticks that are basically fully functioning computers.<p>I can already stream video from my phone directly to my TV, which gives me full media center capabilities in a very convenient package. I can't see the average person spending $200 for such a device given the current alternatives.<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?"<p>I agree with your first two statements, but I feel like people are going to really reject a refresh cycle of less than 4 years. So rather than VR influencing the life cycle of consoles, I feel like it will be the other way around (but maybe a little of both). The pressure will get pushed all the way back to the component manufacturers, forcing them to make GPUs capable of VR for a lower cost. People have been spending ~$400 for a new console every 4-8 years for like 30 years now, so there's a lot of momentum behind it.
| null | 11,497,768 | null |
[
11500207
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,465 | null |
comment
|
david-given
| 1,460,653,534 |
If trailing commas and quotation marks are optional, then does this:<p><pre><code> foo: 4,
</code></pre>
...produce the value 4, "4", or "4,"?
| null | 11,498,077 | null |
[
11500216,
11498832
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,472 | null |
comment
|
brudgers
| 1,460,653,577 |
Because it is a regular blog post and does not offer something for users to play with or try out, it does not meet the spirit of the "Show HN" guidelines.<p>Guidelines: <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/showhn.html" rel="nofollow">https://news.ycombinator.com/showhn.html</a>
| null | 11,494,614 | null |
[
11500496
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,471 | null |
comment
|
tonyle
| 1,460,653,561 |
Lets break this down.<p>sms, not encrypted.<p>pin messages/BBM, "scrambled"<p>BBM protect, encrypted<p>BES (corporate device), encrypted with a key that BlackBerry is not suppose to be able to access.<p>Originally bb devices could send messages to other bb if you knew their pin.
The data was compressed and encrypted, but a moot point since all bb devices had the same key.
Pin messages,BBM and their bis infrastructure was never really considered secured, their main offering was BES with offered end to end security.<p>I used the term scrambled since that was the term everyone was using years ago since people get confused between encrypted, vs encrypted with shared key, vs not encrypted, etc.
It quickly becomes a pointless conversation.<p>As far as I'm concerned, This isn't really surprising if you think about it.
BlackBerry's only claim to security was BES for end to end communication.
| null | 11,496,864 | null |
[
11498527,
11500219
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,474 | null |
comment
|
demianborba
| 1,460,653,587 |
Hi @tcfunk, feel free to give it a try here: <a href="http://adobe.ly/xd" rel="nofollow">http://adobe.ly/xd</a> It's our first public preview (beta 1), so a lot of features are still being developed. Now that the solid foundation is there, you can expect more and more features with our monthly releases. There is a new release now in April. Looking forward to hearing your thoughts. @demianborba
| null | 11,496,420 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,473 | null |
comment
|
emodendroket
| 1,460,653,586 |
Even in the US, for practical purposes you need to hand your data over to private entities, state governments and, yes, even the federal government, at times.
| null | 11,497,856 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,475 | null |
story
|
ashitlerferad
| 1,460,653,587 | null | null | null | null | null |
http://seclab.cs.sunysb.edu/seclab/pubs/host16.pdf
| 1 |
A New Approach for Rowhammer Attacks [pdf]
| null | 0 |
11,498,476 | null |
comment
|
Retric
| 1,460,653,593 |
His name was on the YC application. YC requires each founder to have 10% of the company. Barring any other written agreements this is clear written evidence he had a significant share at that point.
| null | 11,495,150 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,478 | null |
comment
|
x5n1
| 1,460,653,597 |
Unicorns are rarer than 1/10 and 30% of investments generally pay off, according to research, with some positive results.
| null | 11,498,329 | null |
[
11498710,
11498658,
11498545
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,481 | null |
comment
|
arrty88
| 1,460,653,609 |
What about the number of startups asking for money vs the number of startups that received funding. I don't think you can compare dollar amounts here making the assumption that there are a constant or growing number of companies requesting money.
| null | 11,497,730 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,480 | null |
comment
|
ArkyBeagle
| 1,460,653,606 |
So the real argument is whether LTO is on by default? Because if it's the source of trouble and it's <i>off</i> by default, then there's only trouble when you choose to use it.
| null | 11,497,319 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,484 | null |
comment
|
tptacek
| 1,460,653,622 |
This is just PIN-to-PIN messaging, right? Isn't PIN-to-PIN sort of morally equivalent to GSM encryption?
| null | 11,496,864 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,479 | null |
comment
|
rm_-rf_slash
| 1,460,653,602 |
-Someone you envy made lots of money on an investment you turned down and now you feel compelled to catch up.
| null | 11,498,419 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,482 | null |
comment
|
p4wnc6
| 1,460,653,618 |
I always liked Michael O. Church's way of phrasing this from his post on "the Haskell tax" (I think it's been taken down).<p>Paraphrasing, he said something like, "most jobs require you to have work experience that is exponentially better than the work experience they will give out."<p>That is a huge red flag for me. If a place is straining itself to "hire the best" and put candidates through the paces of a very difficult interview process, but then the actual job is some full-stack bullshit where your specialty or past experience is completely disregarded and you just do whatever random work happens to someone's misguided priority this week (which is almost every start-up job) it's just a bad, bad deal.
| null | 11,498,162 | null |
[
11499709,
11498648
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,483 | null |
comment
|
ZephyrP
| 1,460,653,619 |
I feel there are more promising options for a name than "Nix".
| null | 11,494,358 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,487 | null |
comment
|
slammers
| 1,460,653,652 |
Hello - one of the team members from VS Code here.<p>We built this extension sample to show the capabilities of the extension API - <a href="https://github.com/alexandrudima/vscode-vim" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/alexandrudima/vscode-vim</a>.<p>We've done some work to improve the API for the extensions. We'd love your feedback. <a href="https://github.com/Microsoft/vscode/issues/3600" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/Microsoft/vscode/issues/3600</a>.
| null | 11,498,337 | null |
[
11498760
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,477 | null |
comment
|
balls187
| 1,460,653,594 |
How many of those players are as skilled as Kobe?<p>The biggest knock people seem to have against Kobe is that unlike Jordan, he didn't elevate the game of his teammates.
| null | 11,498,370 | null |
[
11498668
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,489 | null |
story
|
rigid_airship
| 1,460,653,659 | null | null | null | null | null |
https://rukkus.com/press-portal/
| 1 |
Rukkus Announces VR for Ticket Buying (iOS)
| null | 0 |
11,498,486 | null |
comment
|
deaddodo
| 1,460,653,634 |
I have a pretty generic Lenovo running Linux. VSCode is way more responsive (as OP says, smooth as butter) than Atom on it.
| null | 11,498,447 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,488 | null |
comment
|
vinhboy
| 1,460,653,654 |
It's been a while since I've looked into these "reputation" services. Do they actually work, when not hit by the Streisand effect, or is it just snake oil?
| null | 11,498,105 | null |
[
11499399,
11498677,
11499044,
11499809,
11500253,
11499580
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,491 | true |
comment
| null | 1,460,653,673 | null | null | 11,497,753 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,490 | null |
comment
|
sghodas
| 1,460,653,662 |
Yes, they're both text editors, but they're completely different classes of text editors. MS Word is also a text editor, but it would be ridiculous to fault it for not having a CLI. It's nice that Emacs and Vim have GUI modes, but I doubt they're the primary way users use those editors. Emacs/Vim and VS Code/Sublime/Atom fulfill different needs and preferences.<p>I'm curious about your answer to this: would you argue that MS should combine Word and VS Code into one text editor?
| null | 11,498,374 | null |
[
11509490
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,494 | null |
comment
|
ajsgarage
| 1,460,653,681 |
Thank you very much for the note; yes the patent process is step one. I built a timeline graphic that's in the linked site.<p>I was also thinking like industrial or medical applications, so that doors would be hands free. As a home device, I'd like to make a really simple version - think The Clapper for lights [1] - that could help elderly or mobility impaired people in their own homes. I've had a great introduction with a Patent Attorney who will assist crafting a broad, useful patent application, which is exiting in its own right!<p>[1] <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Clapper" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Clapper</a>
| null | 11,474,880 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,496 | true |
story
| null | 1,460,653,693 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,500 | null |
comment
|
tptacek
| 1,460,653,702 |
The costs imputed to Keys in this case were under $20,000. There is absolutely no way the Tribune Corporation got a real, industry standard forensics investigation done for that sum of money.<p>I don't understand how you could impute the cost of auditing infrastructure for backdoors that could have been planted in a breach to the victim of the breach, rather than to the person convicted of causing the breach. We're not talking about having each of Trib Corp's applications <i>assessed</i> (the cost of that would be in the many hundreds of thousands of dollars, minimum).
| null | 11,498,346 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,498 | null |
comment
|
sievebrain
| 1,460,653,695 |
I admire your dedication to optimisation!<p>But I think your conclusion is not quite right. I said above that pointer overhead is only one source of Java memory consumption, and pointed to (hah) strings as another source. You replied and said no, it's all pointers, followed by "I never even started using strings". Do you see why that approach will lead to a tilted view of where the overheads are coming from?<p>If your application is so memory sensitive that you can't use basic data structures like maps or strings then yes, you really need to be using C++ at that point.<p>In theory, especially once value types are implemented, it would be possible for a Java app to have better memory usage than an equivalent C++ app, as bytecode is a lot more compact than compiled code and the JVM can do optimisations like deduplicate strings from the heap (already). Of course how much that helps depends a lot on the application in question. But the sources of gain and loss are quite complex.
| null | 11,498,166 | null |
[
11499179
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,493 | null |
comment
|
kmkemp
| 1,460,653,679 |
I think historical comparisons like this are just generally nostalgia. In general, players get better over time. There is more competition for a limited amount of slots, so the competition is more fierce. Players start training with better intelligence from an earlier age. They push harder. All things being equal (they seem to be on paper), the more recent team would have the advantage.
| null | 11,497,562 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,485 | null |
comment
|
oldmanjay
| 1,460,653,622 |
It was hard to think about, it should be hard to read
| null | 11,498,245 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,503 | null |
comment
|
ArkyBeagle
| 1,460,653,733 |
I'd say that staying an uninformed outsider is an excellent choice.
| null | 11,498,037 | null |
[
11502510
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,505 | null |
comment
|
Analemma_
| 1,460,653,749 |
I have a gut feeling that this is in fact the plan. People keep asking "When can we have Visual Studio on OS X/Linux?", but I don't think that's ever going to happen: VS is so tightly coupled with COM and Win32 that they'd basically have to write it from scratch, or write an entire Windows emulation layer. But what they <i>can</i> do is gradually add features to VSC until it does most of the things you wanted full VS for: Intellisense, deploy-anywhere frameworks and debugging being the main ones. Doing it that way will probably be more performant too.
| null | 11,498,408 | null |
[
11498836
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,502 | null |
comment
|
rgrove
| 1,460,653,729 |
This was a fantastic post and might save me a lot of headaches in the near future. Thanks for sharing what you learned!
| null | 11,491,452 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,499 | null |
story
|
nikolay
| 1,460,653,702 | null | null | null | null |
[
11498509
] |
http://groupon.github.io/codeburner/
| 2 |
Codeburner (by Groupon) – Security-Focused Static Code Analysis for Everyone
| null | 1 |
11,498,495 | null |
comment
|
demianborba
| 1,460,653,682 |
Sorry to hear that @ryanSrich. We built Adobe XD from the ground up, with a brand new (and fast) rendering engine. You can have hundreds of artboards with no issues whatsoever. Let us know what you think if you have a chance. Thanks, @demianborba
| null | 11,497,146 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,506 | null |
comment
|
restalis
| 1,460,653,750 |
The autistic condition forms a spectrum. Children that you might have seen in the documentaries could have had a severe form. For what I care, anxiety is not something necessarily related to autism as emotional people feel anxious too.<p>That being said, I have to admit that autism gets somewhat easier with age because of increased general tolerance and endurance in individuals. Small children need close contact and may even die (in the first days of life) without, even with the basic needs taken care of.
| null | 11,497,766 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,492 | null |
comment
|
x5n1
| 1,460,653,673 |
massage speech.
| null | 11,496,211 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,504 | null |
comment
|
thewhitetulip
| 1,460,653,734 |
These days when I have to send the :thumpsup: smiley on IMs I am presented with a list of 6 different coloured smileys, I end up not using smileys at all, it is rather annoying to have race/sex/colour to a smiley. Come on they are cute little pieces of graphics, don't put a sex/race/colour to it! It all started with whatsapp, they'll say in the future.
| null | 11,495,324 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,497 | null |
comment
|
gnopgnip
| 1,460,653,694 |
Job seekers who currently have a job are not available for multiple days. Many of the best job seekers are currently employed.
| null | 11,498,434 | null |
[
11498663
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,501 | null |
comment
|
ctangent
| 1,460,653,714 |
I'm a longtime Emacs user and I dabble with atom and code. The main thing that I get out of GUI editors is that extensions generally <i>just work</i>. I spent a lot of time debugging emacs extensions to the point that I kind of expected extensions to not work right when I install them - especially ones related to autocompletion. Nowadays I use spacemacs to keep my package management sane, but it's inflexible and complicated.<p>I miss things from Emacs sometimes so I keep it around. I miss macros, I miss some of the more stellar Emacs packages (Tuareg for OCaml and Cider for Clojure in particular) but I do a lot of editing nowadays in Atom and Code.
| null | 11,498,393 | null |
[
11504205
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,509 | null |
comment
|
nikolay
| 1,460,653,753 |
Source code: <a href="https://github.com/groupon/codeburner" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/groupon/codeburner</a>
| null | 11,498,499 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,507 | null |
comment
|
mceachen
| 1,460,653,751 |
Sources please. I did a research on her legislation and voting record back then, expecting to find horrible things, and found her work to be thoughtful and helpful to the populous.<p>Things have dramatically changed since then, unfortunately. It'd be fascinating to uncover what caused this marked phase change.
| null | 11,496,730 | null |
[
11499184,
11498869
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,508 | null |
comment
|
mtgx
| 1,460,653,752 |
Indefinite gag orders are definitely unconstitutional, and it has been proven before in Court. There should be an <i>automatic</i> limit as well for when the gag orders expire, like say 1-3 months, or whatever is considered "reasonable" for an investigation. After that, the government should have to get extensions every 3 months from a judge. After 2 or 3 years, the extension should be obtained only from a federal judge.<p>And it goes without saying that the gag orders should only be given in very specific scenarios, not for <i>all data requests</i>, or anytime the government wants to give one.
| null | 11,497,970 | null |
[
11498665,
11499592
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,510 | null |
comment
|
zellyn
| 1,460,653,753 |
Visual Studio Code is built on Electron, the same node.js+webUI system built for Atom.<p>So I believe it's a jab at both.
| null | 11,498,244 | null |
[
11502821
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,511 | null |
comment
|
demianborba
| 1,460,653,754 |
Hi @emehrkay, you can find more XD videos on Youtube: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLD8AMy73ZVxXvBQcZAnOcu57JCFxLi7bQ" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLD8AMy73ZVxXvBQcZAnOc...</a>
@demianborba
| null | 11,497,070 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,512 | null |
comment
|
klenwell
| 1,460,653,762 |
<i>White did not respond to messages left for her last month or Wednesday, but a résumé posted for her on LinkedIn cites her experience handling “a successful 6 month long strategic SEO (search engine optimization) and online reputation management campaign for the University of California, Davis, and Chancellor Linda Katehi.”</i><p>Culminating with a lengthy feature in the Sacramento Bee. Mission accomplished.
| null | 11,498,105 | null |
[
11499093
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,513 | null |
comment
|
sievebrain
| 1,460,653,766 |
No. If you want to use vim then you would just use Gradle or Maven as your build system, instead of Make.
| null | 11,497,488 | null |
[
11499771
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,514 | null |
comment
|
manaskarekar
| 1,460,653,768 |
Anyone know of any real world applications using Rust?<p>EDIT: <a href="https://github.com/kud1ing/awesome-rust" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/kud1ing/awesome-rust</a><p>I'm loving the pace of the release cycle! I don't think I can hold off the temptation to try it out - it's too shiny!
| null | 11,498,426 | null |
[
11498573,
11499545,
11498868,
11500699
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,515 | null |
comment
|
superbaconman
| 1,460,653,768 |
I'm surprised to see so many negative comments. I haven't had major problems with my Xbox One in a while. Generally just restarting apps fix any problem you'll run into. I don't use wireless though, so I'm sure I'm avoiding a crap load of problems right there. I believe most of the issues I personally have stem from Xbox Live.<p>I've heard rumors of this kind of thing recently so it's not a surprising. The Xbox and PC are slowly becoming one, and I'm guessing most games will run on both next generation. Honestly though, as long as their Halo games stay on point I don't really care how the hardware strategy shakes out.
| null | 11,497,093 | null |
[
11498690
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,519 | null |
comment
|
graham1776
| 1,460,653,795 |
A great post with non-technical related questions and discussion on questions to ask an employer:<p><a href="http://www.theladders.com/career-newsletters/it-s-not-about-me--it-s-about-you----the-20-questions-you-need-to-ask-in-a-job-interview-June-2013" rel="nofollow">http://www.theladders.com/career-newsletters/it-s-not-about-...</a>
| null | 11,496,962 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,516 | null |
comment
|
nickpsecurity
| 1,460,653,770 |
Congratulations. Particularly, I think the Tier 1 i686 might get Rust more adoption by Windows C/C++ crowds in commercial sector. Improvements for large files in Linux might aid adoption in backup/archive and streaming servers. Just curious, did Dropbox's feedback have anything to do with that?
| null | 11,498,426 | null |
[
11502988
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,517 | true |
comment
| null | 1,460,653,792 | null | null | 11,498,371 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,524 | null |
story
|
kenerwin88
| 1,460,653,816 | null | null | null | null | null |
https://www.devopslibrary.com/lessons/jenkins-jobs
| 1 |
Jenkins Jobs Tutorial (CCJPE Lesson #3 – DevOpsLibrary)
| null | 0 |
11,498,523 | null |
comment
|
distances
| 1,460,653,812 |
Sure, now that you mention him. And I'm sure I'd recognize some other old names upon hearing/googling, too. Just not in my active memory as basketball is a bit fringe sport around here.
| null | 11,497,514 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,520 | null |
comment
|
HeyLaughingBoy
| 1,460,653,800 |
Not quite that cheap, but I found land at $89/acre in west Texas in about 2 minutes of searching. The price likely drops rapidly if you want 1,000 acres or more.<p><a href="http://www.landwatch.com/Hudspeth-County-Texas-Land-for-sale/pid/1268061" rel="nofollow">http://www.landwatch.com/Hudspeth-County-Texas-Land-for-sale...</a>
| null | 11,496,621 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,521 | null |
comment
|
alexflint
| 1,460,653,810 |
1. Yeah, I agree. It's hard, and it's something we continue to iterate on. How would you feel about a global keyboard shortcut that would show/hide the overlay that was a separate application?<p>2. I love Rust. We <i>will</i> get to it even though it's (sadly) not at the top of our list right now.
| null | 11,498,216 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,518 | null |
comment
|
ajsgarage
| 1,460,653,792 |
For those who may not click the link, I would like to note that I performed an ~8 minute presentation in my garage to get a more personal introduction to me as a potential founder. I've looked through quite a few entries thus far and pretty sure it's a unique approach, at least it's a custom video for this opportunity. It's not terrible if you don't mind thought out, rehearsed pitches!
| null | 11,458,781 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,526 | true |
story
| null | 1,460,653,828 | null | true | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,527 | null |
comment
|
x5n1
| 1,460,653,828 |
The take away from each one of these is that corporations can not be trusted with your data not to divulge it to the government, or even to secure it well enough that it is not compromised. However, most corporations do not have the resources in terms of technical know-how and labor to do much better in terms of not being compromised.
| null | 11,498,471 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,528 | null |
comment
|
sremani
| 1,460,653,845 |
Here is a theory, Software as a Culture and Info vehicle is pretty much mature, the social, the news, etc. An average 20 year old is not well equipped with deep domain knowledge, a good example is flexport, I do not know much about founders but its a business, you need to have a deeper understanding where a 30+ would usually have. So, you will see start-up coming from much older people at the helm and not the younger people. May be this is my bias, but Software fed a cultural need, a communication and information need, we are moving into different realms. Realms which are distributed across the country and world and over all need DEPTH(in Domain) rather than horizontal trends.
| null | 11,497,730 | null |
[
11499725,
11499075,
11498560,
11499989
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,522 | null |
comment
|
anonymfus
| 1,460,653,811 |
>You have to store games on a hard drive, but you still need the DVD to play it.<p>That's that fans wanted and that PS4 also does. There was a huge backslash when MS announced original plans for Steam-like DRM.<p>The culture of accepting DRM exists because piracy is hard, and piracy is hard because it's illegal and DRM is widespread. To break the vicious cycle more people should stop buying games and other content and start to help each other to pirate instead with a goal to bankrupt content producers to stop them from influencing laws and technology.<p>Consoles exists because hardware manufacturers can make bigger profits when they also control software distribution with DRM. Don't buy consoles.
| null | 11,498,014 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,529 | null |
story
|
curtis
| 1,460,653,848 | null | null | null | null | null |
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/abandoned-ship-the-mary-celeste-174488104/?all?no-ist
| 1 |
A century after the Mary Celeste's crew went missing, a scenario is emerging
| null | 0 |
11,498,530 | null |
comment
|
alpsgolden
| 1,460,653,854 |
It doesn't seem like the author of the original article knows what they are using the credit facility for, note the "maybe":<p><i>This new credit line means two things. First, DigitalOcean is sill investing heavily in its infrastructure. Maybe existing users will get a performance upgrade with new servers replacing existing servers. Or maybe DigitalOcean will expand its product offering.</i><p>And if they have to take out a credit line simply to upgrade existing customers, without bringing in new revenue, that is bad news. That means they are losing money simply to maintain their current position.
| null | 11,498,443 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,533 | null |
comment
|
mjt0229
| 1,460,653,867 |
Really? VSCode has <i>already</i> transformed the way code was written on Unix/Linux? I beg to differ. 10 years ago (when I discovered Eclipse, not sure when it was originally released), Eclipse was a staggering leap forward for Java programming. I'm no Eclipse fan, but I don't think that VSCode has already changed the world in the way that Eclipse did, and certainly not in its short lifespan.
| null | 11,498,462 | null |
[
11498607
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,534 | null |
comment
|
justinhj
| 1,460,653,869 |
I'm an emacs user but I often use a GUI IDE when it makes sense. I find I'd rather use JetBrains products (PHPStorm, PyCharm and IntelliJ) even though the actual text editing part is nowhere near as powerful and efficient as my Emacs setup. Sometimes if I need to do some repetitive or monumental editing task that I could script in emacs or use the macro system, I'll switch over for a moment. The benefits of being in an environment with a debugger and many other tools as well as project management and auto-completion that is consistent across the languages I use outweigh the cons of leaving emacs.
I'm considering switching to Visual Studio just for a React Native project I'm working on because it seems to handle Javascript/JMX much better than anything else I've tried.
| null | 11,498,393 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,537 | null |
comment
|
seivan
| 1,460,653,872 |
YC has changed, for the worse. That's for sure. You're on spot here.
| true | 11,497,899 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,532 | null |
comment
|
adaml_623
| 1,460,653,865 |
If you ask the question: "Where do you fall on the spectrum of "Do it right" to "Get-R-Done"?" then do be aware that might be flipped back to you.<p>Certainly I wouldn't describe both ends of the spectrum with those words. Maybe "Hack it together" vs "Precisely assemble" is less judgemental
| null | 11,496,962 | null |
[
11499176,
11500792,
11498791
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,536 | null |
comment
|
seivan
| 1,460,653,871 |
YC has changed, for the worse. That's for sure. You're on spot here.
| null | 11,497,899 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,538 | null |
comment
|
roblabla
| 1,460,653,874 |
I'm still living in vim-wonderland, but GUI editors are more flexible in what they can show you. Underline invalid code, auto-complete, ctags pane, file view pane, etc... are all things that tend to work better in a GUI. Other things are plain impossible in TUI, such as minimap view of the file[0], or bracket's contextual popups[1][2][3]<p>What I'm really looking for is something like Atom's Neovim Mode [4], allowing me to use Atom's flexible UI (hey there, CSS) with vim's modal editor, wealth of plugins, and my config (keybindings, etc...).<p>[0] <a href="http://33.media.tumblr.com/1e4bed4a5154bf363e7f24c40eb2177c/tumblr_inline_mg4gtgJGHa1rd1y3n.png" rel="nofollow">http://33.media.tumblr.com/1e4bed4a5154bf363e7f24c40eb2177c/...</a><p>[1] <a href="http://home.aubg.edu/students/PAE120/Brackets/samples/root/Getting%20Started/screenshots/quick-edit.png" rel="nofollow">http://home.aubg.edu/students/PAE120/Brackets/samples/root/G...</a><p>[2] <a href="http://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/adobe-brackets-live-edit-and-preview.png" rel="nofollow">http://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/adobe-...</a><p>[3] <a href="https://helpx.adobe.com/creative-cloud/help/extract-for-brackets/_jcr_content/main-pars/image_6.img.png/008.png" rel="nofollow">https://helpx.adobe.com/creative-cloud/help/extract-for-brac...</a><p>[4] <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FTInd3H7Zec" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FTInd3H7Zec</a>
| null | 11,498,393 | null |
[
11498844
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,539 | null |
comment
|
pitchka
| 1,460,653,879 |
sorry, it is a fad when you put it under a name of keto, or paleo, and try to scientifically prettify it.<p>funny you should state the following, I practice all three. veganism isn't a diet, it never was. if it killed people to be a vegan it wouldn't fit into the same category as paleo or keto. incomparable.<p>these kinds of diets promote an unhealthy relationship with food (orthorexia). this is not some mumbo-jumbo divine philosphy, it is orthorexic to avoid any food if you have no health reason to do it.<p>one can lose weight eating any kind of foods.<p>avoiding modernity, embracing nature, it's all illogical and unscientific. there's nothing wrong with a hamburger, or a chocolate shake, or apples.<p>sugar never kills anyone, sugar never makes anyone obese.<p>it's excessive carbs, fat and sugar that make anyone fat. try eating more calories than you need on paleo, or keto, you'll get fat. now try to eat less calories, be it fast-food be it anything else, you'll lose weight. that's it.<p>anything more scientific you're stepping into the realm of pseudoscience.<p>what happens most of the time is that people who had unhealthy relationship with food find a new unhealthy relationship, but a much healthier diet and then think it's the all-cure pure-science, when it's just a fad.<p>it's unbelievable that this community believes in fad diets (keto, paleo, lchf, atkins, etc.), that it is afraid of food, afraid of sugar.
| true | 11,498,307 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,535 | null |
comment
|
mlvljr
| 1,460,653,870 |
This Scala maintainer disagrees, as we know:<p><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TS1lpKBMkgg" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TS1lpKBMkgg</a>
| true | 11,495,224 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,525 | null |
comment
|
maxxxxx
| 1,460,653,823 |
True . It's a valid way to stimulate the economy :-). My point was that people who do something more will resent the people who just watch TV.
| null | 11,498,398 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,541 | null |
comment
|
ArkyBeagle
| 1,460,653,886 |
I think the best way to approach this question is the see CAR Tony Hoare's "Billion Dollar Mistake" talk.<p>A fellow stands up at the end and says, in detail, something that can be summarized as "it's all golden until you invoke the I/O monad."
| null | 11,498,222 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,540 | null |
comment
|
demianborba
| 1,460,653,883 |
Hi @greenspot, oh yeah! We have a team dedicated to a Windows version to land later in the year. Performance is treated as a main feature of Adobe XD, that's why we picked the multi-platform approach, instead of cross-platform. Both Mac and Windows versions are first class citizens, taking the best of each OS. @demianborba
| null | 11,494,567 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,547 | null |
comment
|
jschwartzi
| 1,460,653,934 |
This is why you should never run rm -r with the -f switch the first time. -f says yes to all warnings, including the ones that confirm that you really mean to erase root. I see this constantly in SO and other answers, and it's a really really bad practice to do it without thinking.
| null | 11,497,590 | null |
[
11499959,
11502813
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,544 | null |
comment
|
ultramancool
| 1,460,653,908 |
They should probably change their terminology away from "RFC" for referring to Rust RFCs rather than IETF ones. Maybe RRFCs or REPs something?<p>In this document is a perfect example of the problem, they list several Rust RFCs by RFC number, then talk about IP RFC based loopback detection, expecting everyone to know that RFC 6890 refers to an IETF one and not a Rust one. I mean, most of us can infer that just by length of the number, but it is pretty ambiguous especially when they're used in the same document like this.
| null | 11,498,426 | null |
[
11498700,
11498996,
11500186,
11498895,
11500601,
11508897
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,531 | null |
comment
|
dasher225
| 1,460,653,857 |
I believe git-town solves at least part of your problem, although not all of. The command `git sync` may be useful to you. In its basic usage (without a fork), it synchronizes a feature branch, by pulling the main branch (from `origin`) and then merging in those changes into the feature branch. If you have a remote named `upstream` it first syncs your main branch with its courterpart in that repo. This was specifically designed around github forks, although under the assumption that you would only need to synchronize the main branch.<p><a href="http://www.git-town.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.git-town.com/</a>
| null | 11,495,779 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,548 | null |
comment
|
haberman
| 1,460,653,944 |
Ok let's look at a specific example then.<p><pre><code> // foo.c
#include <stdlib.h>
typedef struct { int x; } s;
s *make_s() {
s *ret = malloc(sizeof(*ret));
ret->x = 5;
return ret;
}
void free_s(s *val) {
free(val);
}
// bar.cc
// This class is standard-layout and matches "s" from C.
class C {
int getX() { return x_; }
private:
int x_;
}
extern C* make_s();
extern void free_s(C* c);
int main(void) {
C* c = make_s();
int ret = c->getX();
free_s(c);
return ret;
}
</code></pre>
C++ says you can only call a method on an object whose lifetime has begun. Can C begin the lifetime of a C++ object?
| null | 11,498,405 | null |
[
11498669,
11498768
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,549 | null |
comment
|
yunong
| 1,460,653,948 |
we talkin' bout practice?!!
| null | 11,496,564 | null |
[
11500278
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,546 | null |
comment
|
nxzero
| 1,460,653,932 |
First, not going to assume that's what the comment meant, but happy to address your comment as is.<p>Basically my position is that I agree it's complex, but I believe possible to address the issue in a way that for all parties (individual,government,3rd-party) that more value is created and less risk exists; this applies universally in my opinion.<p>Any rate, unclear how responding to my question with questions addresses my question other than to assume that the lack of an answer means that there are no startups that address this issue; meaning any solution I've seen requires a central authority to be involved.
| null | 11,497,856 | null |
[
11498745
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,542 | null |
comment
|
x5n1
| 1,460,653,888 |
I use Visual Code for Golang, for everything else Linux has other stuff that's better imo. Like Netbeans and PyCharm. Seems like I should be using it for TypeScript.
| null | 11,498,462 | null |
[
11499175
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,550 | null |
comment
|
mike_hearn
| 1,460,653,965 |
Luckily JVM languages mostly interop with each other very well and the question is just convenience and efficiency.<p>For instance, Kotlin is using the same collections library as Java. So there are no adapters or conversions needed. Scala has its own collection library instead.<p>Scala has some constructs that can make it impossible or very difficult to call code from Java. Kotlin doesn't.
| null | 11,497,329 | null |
[
11507744,
11500290,
11500287
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,551 | null |
comment
|
roadbeats
| 1,460,653,971 |
oh man, you're confused. AMD was originally a CommonJS compiler in its very early days. The guy who wrote it invented its own standard (AMD) way later than CommonJS.
| null | 11,493,414 | null |
[
11508304
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,552 | null |
comment
|
d4rkph1b3r
| 1,460,653,974 |
>Do we have 67 implementations of sort.Interface?<p>Hahaha. This has to be satire right?<p>>Generics would not make our codebase significantly better, more maintainable, or easier to understand.<p>Generics are <i>literally</i> a form of abstraction. You might as well be arguing that abstraction doesn't help. Why do you even have subtype polymorphism then? Why not just reimplement everything? That's not a significantly difficult part of your job as you said.<p>One of the best things about Go is it seems to be a strong signaler of the type of engineering team I avoided.
| null | 11,497,843 | null |
[
11498612,
11498846,
11499310,
11498705
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,543 | null |
comment
|
zxcvcxz
| 1,460,653,905 |
How do people put up with VS Code and laggy text input though? I used it on Win10 and Linux and both occasions there is noticeably lag when typing.I look at the screen while I type most of the time and this lag makes coding impossible for me because I like to see what I'm writing in real time.<p>I've noticed this happen especially on big projects/files.<p>Also, sometimes the auto complete popup is very slow to appear and causes lag.<p>I don't use many GUI text editors and have not compared VS to Atom/sublime, but for me this is just unacceptable.
| null | 11,498,462 | null |
[
11498618,
11499450,
11499083
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,545 | null |
comment
|
rm_-rf_slash
| 1,460,653,911 |
Ok so my numbers aren't exact but you are right, the aggregate return of VC investments tend to be positive. Same with the stock market.<p>However, VCs are in more of a position to influence the growth of their investments. There is nonstop hype for companies that make zero profit because of the hope that it will enable bigger funding rounds, a buyout, or an IPO.<p>The only difference between overhyped no-profit startups and a Ponzi scheme is that the latter knows the investment is a bust, while the former isn't sure.
| null | 11,498,478 | null |
[
11500038
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,553 | null |
comment
|
baldfat
| 1,460,653,989 |
> It always amazes me how many people have opinions about the Torah without studying the Talmud in it's entirety<p>Well my reading in Seminary was anywhere from 2,00-14,000 pages per class. There is NO WAY I could read the complete Talmud (What length is it? At LEAST 5,000 pages and it is difficult to get the order right with the writing)<p>Time - Well I would place it from what 200 BCE to 500 CE and that is way out of from the writing of the Torah.<p>Big Error - We treat writing from ANE with the eyes and genres of 21th century people. We try to fit them into our mold. There would be no concern what so ever about the authorship being true or not just like how Pseudepigrapha works were also very much accepted with the full knowledge that another author wrote that work. Clearly Enoch didn't write the Book of Enoch but that didn't keep people from reading it and accepting it. Heck The Book of Enoch is quoted in Jude.
| null | 11,490,960 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,554 | null |
comment
|
stcredzero
| 1,460,653,995 |
<i>Too often I've seen [X] lead to complexity and abuse which greatly outweigh their utility.</i><p>Programmer hubris is a problem. There was a widely acknowledged problem in Smalltalk with the overuse of #doesNotUnderstand: and other esoterica to do "clever" stuff which then makes it difficult for new programmers to debug and understand the system.<p>There is a reason why certain methodologies emphasize "the simplest thing that could possibly work." As a group, we programmers sometimes waste our own and other's time being too clever by half...an order of magnitude. (Is it any wonder why our estimates are often off by that much?)
| null | 11,498,100 | null |
[
11498910,
11500014
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,555 | null |
comment
|
mercutio2
| 1,460,654,002 |
Great! Then you should be strongly in favor of a basic income, because part of the logical construction of BI is the abolition of minimum wage.<p>Minimum wage is a collective agreement to avoid people working below subsistence wages. Once subsistence is guaranteed covered by BI, there will be much less need for low end wage distortions.<p>Admittedly, many wealthy people seem to prefer having subsistence not guaranteed, it makes negotiating for low wage low skill servants much easier. I suspect once we have BI, it will be much more expensive to pay someone to come clean your house.
| null | 11,497,839 | null |
[
11498800
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,557 | null |
comment
|
tshtf
| 1,460,654,032 |
Amazon promised bi-annual transparency reports here:<p><a href="https://blogs.aws.amazon.com/security/blog/tag/Transparency+report" rel="nofollow">https://blogs.aws.amazon.com/security/blog/tag/Transparency+...</a><p>However only one report (covering a 6-month period) has was issued and posted in the initial blog post on June 2015. None have followed:<p><a href="http://d0.awsstatic.com/certifications/Information_Request_Report.pdf" rel="nofollow">http://d0.awsstatic.com/certifications/Information_Request_R...</a>
| null | 11,498,142 | null |
[
11499930,
11499421,
11499362
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,556 | null |
comment
|
exabrial
| 1,460,654,014 |
No worries, I went back and read what I wrote and realized it could have been perceived that way.
| null | 11,492,545 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,558 | null |
comment
|
CoryG89
| 1,460,654,044 |
The first amendment does not guarantee the right to privacy. Most Americans would be surprised to know that the Constitution does not guarantee privacy at all.<p>The closest you get is the 4th amendment which only protects against unreasonable search and seizure (without a warrant).<p>Some argue that the 3rd amendment implies a right to privacy and was the intent of the amendment, but alas it only protects against being forced to house soldiers.<p>Disclaimer: IANAL
| null | 11,497,680 | null |
[
11498678
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,559 | true |
comment
| null | 1,460,654,045 | null | true | 11,497,680 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,560 | null |
comment
|
philrapo
| 1,460,654,047 |
The average founder is (or was) already 30+:<p><a href="https://hbr.org/2014/04/how-old-are-silicon-valleys-top-founders-heres-the-data/" rel="nofollow">https://hbr.org/2014/04/how-old-are-silicon-valleys-top-foun...</a>
| null | 11,498,528 | null |
[
11498601
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,562 | null |
comment
|
moron4hire
| 1,460,654,054 |
Not suck at plugin management
| null | 11,498,299 | null |
[
11498766,
11498812
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,498,561 | true |
story
| null | 1,460,654,052 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
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