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reitanqild
1,460,658,250
A serious burnout is serious as well.<p>Two issues: 1. it seems lots people mix up burnout with exhaustion or lack of motivation. It is not the same.<p>2. I&#x27;m afraid, and I am not alone to think that people feel like burnout == bragging rights.<p>It is not. It is just painful and unproductive. I now say (tongue-in-cheek, admittedly) that it is far better to keep going at 95-120% for year after year than going all the way to 160 for weeks, meet the wall and needing months to fully recover. Often families and other relationships suffer as well.
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noxToken
1,460,658,276
It&#x27;s only arbitrary when using it against non-comparable stats. For example, comparing shot percentage to goal save percentage is pointless, because they measure completely different stats.<p>A quick search shows that an NHL team will generally get around 30 shots per game. If your goal save percentage is about 45%, then you&#x27;re not going to have a career much longer when the rest of the league hovers around 94%.
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bpodgursky
1,460,658,287
In that world, any publication making or costing money can be considered political speech and censored. The Sierra club newsletter could be considered politically motivated and prevented from publishing articles unless the donors stay within donation caps<p>Once you give the government a tool to restrict speech &#x2F; spending, it will be used to cut both ways.
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sammyneil
1,460,658,314
Well obviously Sam Altman is on the side of wanting the merger to go trough. He&#x27;s an investor himself and has a lot of his personal gains at stake. Please don&#x27;t make a biased post come across as unbiased.
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maxwell
1,460,658,322
Source: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;List_of_religious_populations#Adherent_estimates" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;List_of_religious_populations#...</a>
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avolcano
1,460,658,327
When I started using TypeScript a couple weeks ago I briefly tried out VS Code, but the VIM plugin was really, really bad (worse than Sublime&#x27;s was when I used it a few years ago).<p>Now I&#x27;m on Atom, which has the best VIM support I&#x27;ve ever seen (haven&#x27;t tried evil-mode, though) and seems to support a similar feature set. They felt about the same speed, too, on this 2013 Macbook Air.<p>Regardless, other than that quirk, I did really like VS Code, and I&#x27;m glad there&#x27;s more competition in the free editor space :)
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[ 11499655, 11500537, 11502088 ]
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teen
1,460,658,338
It&#x27;s almost as if you&#x27;re reinventing protobufs. XD
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Infosourcer
1,460,658,330
Geekwire announces layoffs at Seattle-based Qumulo and Chef http:&#x2F;&#x2F;bit.ly&#x2F;23yOPBI. If you were affected, Cloudera is hiring.Please check our openings here http:&#x2F;&#x2F;bit.ly&#x2F;ClouderaJobs. Good luck folks!
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1
Qumulo and Chef Layoffs-are you affected?
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teen
1,460,658,339
It&#x27;s almost as if you&#x27;re reinventing protobufs. XD
true
11,497,826
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zem
1,460,658,346
what percentage of your coding time do you spend doing things like that? rhapsodising over your text editor is a long-standing unix tradition; no reason vscode fans cannot be part of that!
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steveklabnik
1,460,658,354
It&#x27;s someone with a name &#x27;vagrant&#x27; in their git info, yes. Not the company.
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Lawtonfogle
1,460,658,341
I read it. There seems to have been a bunch of studies that reached the consensus that the laws had little impact on a trend that existed before the laws and continued afterwords.<p>&gt;The authors conclude that &quot;the hypothesis that Australia&#x27;s prohibition of certain types of firearms explains the absence of mass shootings in that country since 1996 does not appear to be supported<p>&gt;In 2006, the lack of a measurable effect from the 1996 firearms legislation was reported in the British Journal of Criminology. Using ARIMA analysis, Dr Jeanine Baker and Dr Samara McPhedran found no evidence for an impact of the laws on homicide.<p>&gt;In 2005 the head of the New South Wales Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research, Don Weatherburn,[49] noted that the level of legal gun ownership in NSW increased in recent years, and that the 1996 legislation had little to no effect on violence.<p>One of the only &#x27;wins&#x27; seems to be that people who committed suicide were less likely to use guns, but more likely to use other methods.<p>&gt;As hanging suicides rose at about the same rate as gun suicides fell, it is possible that there was some substitution of suicide methods. It has been noted that drawing strong conclusions about possible impacts of gun laws on suicides is challenging, because a number of suicide prevention programs were implemented from the mid-1990s onwards, and non-firearm suicides also began falling.<p>&gt;Most recently, McPhedran and Baker found there was little evidence for any impacts of the gun laws on firearm suicide among people under 35 years of age, and suggest that the significant financial expenditure associated with Australia&#x27;s firearms method restriction measures may not have had any impact on youth suicide.
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jo_kruger
1,460,658,366
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https://www.jc-bingo.com/search?b=Torrent%20Tracker
3
Torrent Trackers
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0
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ancap
1,460,658,378
&gt;A failing but necessary industry is one ripe for being regulated by a socialist government.<p>I would love to hear the historical case you have in mind. In my study of history the case which government lays out for their new intervention is based on twisted truths, exaggerations and most likely downright lies. This has been the case in anti-trust, social security, medicaid and many more instances.<p>The idea that an entire industry is failing to meet consumer demands is economically absurd. Why would competition not arise to match consumer demands?<p>&gt;For now, I am comfortable with the concept of a government advocating on my behalf for the purposes of improving aggregate outcomes.<p>Are you one of the lucky 20% (perhaps less) of the population which your candidate of choice won the election? Did that candidate match all of your ideas, or was he or she the least-rotten of the bunch? Is that candidate really &quot;advocating on [your] behalf&quot; when they get into power? What of the other 80% of the population who were unhappy with the outcome of an election? How do you measure these &quot;aggregate outcomes&quot;? Is the $4 trillion (on the books) spending of the US government all necessary to accomplish these improved aggregates?<p>&gt;Certainly, governments may fail or do poorly, but I do not think it is a pointless effort. It sounds like you disagree.<p>I&#x27;m not sure I would say &quot;pointless&quot;. I may not agree with what is going on, but certainly some people are getting rich with the trillions of dollars being squandered. Some people are benefiting by regulations which strangle out their competition. Some people feel good about having their morals forced upon others. Some people like having positions of dominion and power which they exercise violence over others. Some people make a pretty penny from blowing up people in far off lands. I may think there&#x27;s a better way, but I wouldn&#x27;t say its pointless.
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pklausler
1,460,658,448
Sorting on all three fields in priority order is what I had in mind, and that&#x27;s trivial in Haskell by adding &quot;deriving(Ord)&quot; to the data type definition and then just using the standard &quot;sort :: Ord a =&gt; [a] -&gt; [a]&quot;.<p>If you&#x27;re always going to sort them based on some (other) relation between the fields, make your type a custom instance of Ord, e.g. &quot;instance Ord Machine where compare = compare `on` name&quot;.<p>To sort the same type with distinct comparators, you&#x27;ll obviously need to distinguish them, as in e.g. &quot;osSort = sortBy (compare `on` os)&quot;.
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ams6110
1,460,658,391
There&#x27;s also the phenomenon that people have an inherent tolerance of risk, so the &quot;safer&quot; you make something, the more reckless people tend to be.<p>When traction control and antilock brakes became mainstream, one result was that some people started driving faster on snowy roads, up until their risk tolerance was the same as before.<p>If you understand that a typo can destroy your business, you&#x27;ll be careful to not log in as &quot;root&quot; on a routine basis and double check everything you do and keep good backups. On the other hand if you expect the system to prevent you from doing anything really damaging, you might be more careless about your approach.
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[ 11499558, 11499323 ]
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brudgers
1,460,658,399
In what way is a login a requirement?<p>I did not feel it was necessary when I tried the demo.
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[ 11499554 ]
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dperfect
1,460,658,415
humans.txt:<p><pre><code> everyone: don&#x27;t poke around &#x2F;admin don&#x27;t look in &#x2F;cgi-bin don&#x27;t put javascript into the form fields don&#x27;t make your username look like valid SQL users: don&#x27;t try to access IDs that you don&#x27;t own always trust emails that appear to be from us don&#x27;t look at &#x2F;pricing#fine_print hackers and security researchers: please stay away lawyers: don&#x27;t look too closely at &#x2F;eula employees: don&#x27;t look at other companies&#x27; job postings don&#x27;t talk about your salary competitors: don&#x27;t copy us don&#x27;t undercut the prices listed at &#x2F;pricing potential investors: don&#x27;t look in &#x2F;forum or &#x2F;complaints don&#x27;t look at &#x2F;user_stats look at &#x2F;pricing#most_expensive_plan</code></pre>
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[ 11499284, 11499307 ]
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rdl
1,460,658,380
Yeah, in retrospect I&#x27;d probably not be so definitive.
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sntran
1,460,658,468
As much as I love trying VSCode, the lacking of tabs prevents me from keeping it open longer than 1 minute. I&#x27;m just not used to not having tabs.
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[ 11499291, 11500417, 11499524, 11501992 ]
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jagger27
1,460,658,452
Sublime Text has GoSublime as well.
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maxerickson
1,460,658,487
That comic is irritating. Most people are far more concerned with lost devices and opportunistic theft than they are worried about targeted theft or malicious actors with wrenches. Encryption reduces the pain of the lost or casually stolen device, it doesn&#x27;t have to resist a wrench to be useful.
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wl
1,460,658,513
I&#x27;m surprised that the chancellor wasn&#x27;t forced to resign after the release of the Kroll and Reynoso reports about the pepper spray incident. The police action against the protestors was illegal and the police department knew it. They only went forward because of Katehi&#x27;s mistaken insistence that the occupiers were not members of the campus community and needed to be removed before the weekend lest these outsiders rape students. Had the police department handled the situation the way they wanted to, they would have removed the tents at night (when the laws against camping were clearly being violated) and when there weren&#x27;t large crowds around.
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[ 11499539 ]
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andwaal
1,460,658,576
One of the things people does not seem to mention is the great debugging support you have in VSCode. The possibility to easy setup debugging with support for breakpoint, step through, inspection and so on. For react-native VSCode is the only IDE I have found which enables this. Previously one had to open Chrome and debug your apps from there, to have it inside the IDE makes it so more convenient. The same goes for Node(which you also can do in Webstorm, but not free and open source) and as far as I can tell the only IDE you debug Go probably. As an developer preferring solid IDE`s like VS and Eclipse with full debugging support it always feels like a step backwards when working with an language where this does not exists.
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paloaltokid
1,460,658,539
Right, but that isn&#x27;t really the discussion we&#x27;re having. My own experience has been that the folks Practicality and I are thinking of are walled off both at work and in their private lives from meaningful human contact. And, since we spend so much time at work, it&#x27;d be a shame not to have at least a few of our human needs met there.
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entee
1,460,658,564
There are actually ways to make it so it will in fact stop when contact with one&#x27;s hand (for saws but you could see an analogous system for a drill press):<p><a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.sawstop.com&#x2F;why-sawstop&#x2F;the-technology" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.sawstop.com&#x2F;why-sawstop&#x2F;the-technology</a><p>Just because people should use something responsibly doesn&#x27;t mean one shouldn&#x27;t try to improve its inherent safety.
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[ 11499950, 11499719 ]
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Rayearth
1,460,658,574
Even WinForms is still around somehow, though in a &quot;cannot be killed&quot; legacy Form as opposed to WPF having a direct descendant in UWP.<p>Silverlight, though...
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shmerl
1,460,658,578
Steam Machines are already pushing console manufacturers in that direction. Incumbent consoles won&#x27;t be able to lag with their slow refresh cycle anymore. They&#x27;ll learn to compete.
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moviuro
1,460,658,610
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https://store.google.com/category/nexus_live_case
1
Make your own Live Case
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0
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comment
ktRolster
1,460,658,622
Currently gcc uses -Ofast for &#x27;dangerous&#x27; optimizations.<p>Maybe I remembered the history wrong. There are definitely cases of people using -O4 <a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.larcenists.org&#x2F;Twobit&#x2F;KVW&#x2F;kvwbenchmarks.html" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.larcenists.org&#x2F;Twobit&#x2F;KVW&#x2F;kvwbenchmarks.html</a> .<p>There are definitely optimization options which are (or have been) available that are not turned on by -O3. For example:<p>-ffast-math<p>-funroll-all-loops<p>-fstrict-aliasing<p>Are not turned on (for good reasons: unrolling loops often slows a program down).<p>So there&#x27;s no reason UB optimizations need to be turned on by default, or with -O3. You could throw them in -Ofast or use -Oub, or use optimization specific flags (they should have optimization specific flags in any case) and that was my main point.
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Bahamut
1,460,658,646
It&#x27;s probably the easiest way to get an interview for most companies.
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walrus01
1,460,658,595
I would be surprised if CSE and CSIS don&#x27;t have their own staff embedded inside Blackberry, either with or without the company&#x27;s knowledge. They don&#x27;t have nearly the budget that NSA does but they&#x27;re not stupid.
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dopeboy
1,460,657,395
I made the switch to linux in 2005. There&#x27;s always been two tools I&#x27;ve sorely missed since that transition: excel and visual studio. Glad to see the latter finally come.
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capote
1,460,657,355
Indeed to the latter bit. I&#x27;m completely okay with it; otherwise I wouldn&#x27;t have signed the contract. Kind of irritating that someone downvoted me too.<p>Thanks to the good Samaritan who gave my point back :)<p>Also, it&#x27;s totally reasonable for some companies to have restrictions like this. At my company, for example, the primary business is some really smart math guys coming up with market models. By programming these models, a programmer will get algorithms and ideas which belong to the company in their mind. Depending on the nature of a personal&#x2F;open source project, one could even inadvertently use the company&#x27;s ideas--putting the company&#x27;s property out in the open and potentially benefiting competitors.
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oldmanjay
1,460,657,386
Tell that to the silly mistakes I&#x27;ve made a career out of fixing (many of them mine!)
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dnetesn
1,460,657,396
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http://nautil.us/issue/35/boundaries/no-you-cant-feel-sorry-for-everyone
1
No, You Can’t Feel Sorry for Everyone
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0
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pcwalton
1,460,657,356
&gt; because it was approached from a performance perspective the idea that sometimes we want to change the state of the memory, even though it has no affect on a correctly functioning program, isn&#x27;t considered.<p>A lot of dead stores happen because of post-inlined, post-constant-propagated (etc.) code. Nobody writes that code by hand; it occurs due to inlining and other aggressive types of optimizations. You need those optimizations for performance; IPO is a huge win.<p>It&#x27;s like the old joke: &quot;Who writes that kind of code? Macros do.&quot;
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scrumper
1,460,658,663
I&#x27;m not sure that addresses the question; likely I&#x27;m missing something. Why does it need to send the user&#x27;s entire codebase over? If it&#x27;s a question of needing to analyze a given source file to infer types so query results are relevant, then why not do that inference work client side and ship back just the type information to the server where the query is run?<p>Even if that is a step too far, you could strip out string literals (e.g. API keys), and obfuscate variable, method, type, and file names while retaining a map on the client side so results line up.
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bashinator
1,460,657,389
I would like to point out that requiring `set -u` at the top of all your production bash scripts will prevent this kind of disaster - the script will fail if unassigned variables are referenced.
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killa_kyle
1,460,657,429
I think that&#x27;s just being human.
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SeanDav
1,460,657,373
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http://arstechnica.com/gaming/2016/04/the-making-of-runescape/
2
From MUD to MMOG: The Making of RuneScape
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0
11,499,093
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comment
SilasX
1,460,657,373
So ... do they get a refund? I&#x27;m guessing the consultants&#x27; contract covered them here, as they can&#x27;t do much about a legit info request.
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goda90
1,460,657,376
Reminds me of the guy who chose the Xbox Live gamer tag &#x27;XBOX TURN OFF&#x27;
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_delirium
1,460,658,772
There are a variety of anti-Citizens-United positions, but the strongest (and most problematic) one is that corporations are not people, and the Bill of Rights secures rights only to people, therefore the First Amendment is inapplicable to corporations. That would, at the very least, require a revision in important precedents like <i>New York Times Co. v. Sullivan</i> [1], which assume that the First Amendment is applicable to corporations&#x27; publishing activities.<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;New_York_Times_Co._v._Sullivan" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;New_York_Times_Co._v._Sullivan</a>
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[ 11500027 ]
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cb18
1,460,658,775
<i>the central idea of the video isn&#x27;t really supported by anything.</i><p>You missed the point of the video.<p>Thinking of encryption as a &#x27;lock&#x27; is only a metaphor, it isn&#x27;t actually a &#x27;lock&#x27;.<p>There aren&#x27;t 2 sides to this &#x27;debate.&#x27; There is no debate here.<p>Something is either encrypted or it isn&#x27;t. There is no in between.<p>If you want to take an opposing side in a debate, you would have to say something like &quot;encryption is a bad idea and shouldn&#x27;t be allowed to exist, we must wipe it from the face of the earth.&quot;<p>Yeah... good luck with that.<p>Not only would attempting such a task be futile and foolhardy, but the vast majority of political will would be aligned against attempting such an idea since so much of the modern world rests upon encryption.<p><i>in the rest of our legal system. Nothing there is 100% accurate.</i><p>Our legal system doesn&#x27;t rest on the absolutes of mathematical thinking in the way that encryption does.<p>2+2 = 4 is &#x27;100% accurate&#x27;
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mfoy_
1,460,658,780
After a scare like that I&#x27;ll bet she never makes that mistake again and makes sure to triple check for typos in dangerous commands.
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11,499,260
true
comment
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1,460,658,785
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howeman
1,460,657,467
Either sort.Interface or a type that implements sort.Interface
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11,499,108
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Kristine1975
1,460,657,470
Type punning in unions is best done using memcpy. Compilers know what it does and optimize it: <a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;blog.regehr.org&#x2F;archives&#x2F;959" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;blog.regehr.org&#x2F;archives&#x2F;959</a><p>As for integer overflow at least gcc and clang have built-in functions that generate optimal code by checking the CPU&#x27;s overflow flag: <a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;clang.llvm.org&#x2F;docs&#x2F;LanguageExtensions.html#checked-arithmetic-builtins" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;clang.llvm.org&#x2F;docs&#x2F;LanguageExtensions.html#checked-a...</a> and <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;gcc.gnu.org&#x2F;onlinedocs&#x2F;gcc&#x2F;Integer-Overflow-Builtins.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;gcc.gnu.org&#x2F;onlinedocs&#x2F;gcc&#x2F;Integer-Overflow-Builtins...</a>
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11,498,916
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[ 11502079 ]
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comment
azinman2
1,460,657,454
I wouldn&#x27;t say Xcode is providing this... kite looks to be going much further in providing examples, alternatives, etc with a diff screen real estate philosophy. I welcome it.
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11,499,089
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[ 11499195 ]
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comment
irq11
1,460,657,404
You folks have a big team, and have been working on this for two years now. Promising another language in the future doesn&#x27;t mean the title is right.
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11,498,952
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[ 11503326 ]
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11,499,261
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comment
vbezhenar
1,460,658,794
He destroyed his company not with one line. He destroyed his company with extremely wrong setup. That one line just nailed it.
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11,498,263
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[ 11501112, 11500349, 11499824, 11501362 ]
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nekopa
1,460,658,798
The lower paying get jobs will have to start paying more.<p>If, all of a sudden I don&#x27;t need your $4 per hour job, I quit. If everyone else also doesn&#x27;t need it they quit.<p>Then you as an employer need to pay more to get people to work for you, or use self driving mopeds to deliver the pizzas.
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comment
jabl
1,460,658,801
I don&#x27;t think it&#x27;s realistic for friendly C to replace the current C outright. At best I guess one would get -std=friendly or -Ofriendly or such. And HPC users could continue using tbaa, loose fp semantics etc. as before.
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story
steveklabnik
1,460,658,809
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https://lwn.net/Articles/682591/
3
Redox: A Rust based microkernel
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0
11,499,265
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comment
vinchuco
1,460,658,834
We tend to think of the human species landing on the moon as an isolated species achievement.<p>The human view of our future is usually of us colonizing space independently, not of us wanting to spread earthly life forms across the universe.
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story
stared
1,460,657,547
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http://worldbirthsanddeaths.com/
2
Visualizing World Births and Deaths, Simulated in Real-Time
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0
11,499,109
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story
driscollis
1,460,657,493
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null
http://www.blog.pythonlibrary.org/2016/04/14/python-201-whats-a-deque/
2
Python 201 – What’s a deque?
null
0
11,499,125
null
comment
hackaflocka
1,460,657,635
Sadly, not surprising.<p>This is the state of most of the industry.<p>Mostly, only companies with cushy government contracts with unlimited time and expense accounts on their hands (think defense) don&#x27;t want to fire their customers.
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11,499,006
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[ 11499899 ]
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11,499,116
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comment
woliveirajr
1,460,657,562
But then he, knowing the all-complex-password he&#x27;s forced to create, can also make those others miserable too. Just because he is known doesn&#x27;t mean he can&#x27;t broke everything.<p>So, the problem is with the service, not with his weak password. It&#x27;s just a matter if someone will be easily &#x2F; hardly &#x2F; not at all blamed.
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comment
reitanqild
1,460,657,579
Pretty sure parent was sarcastic (or something).
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11,498,692
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[ 11499454 ]
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11,499,120
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story
anton_tarasenko
1,460,657,594
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[ 11499783, 11499402, 11501487, 11500176, 11499572, 11500021, 11499158, 11499549, 11499295, 11499701, 11501549, 11499981, 11502364, 11500605, 11499414, 11500778 ]
https://github.com/antontarasenko/smq/blob/master/reports/hackernews-top-domains-by-median.md
134
Websites That Feed Hacker News: Top Sources of Submissions by Median Score
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48
11,499,112
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comment
balls187
1,460,657,523
I wonder if on some forum for Basketball fans somewhere, some folks are sitting around discussing PG&#x27;s impact on technology and startups.
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11,498,656
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[ 11499206, 11500093 ]
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11,499,266
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comment
stcredzero
1,460,658,854
Your comment is illustrative of a lack of awareness of context. You don&#x27;t specify the context, but it seems like you&#x27;re stuck in this academic&#x2F;language theory mindset. From that standpoint, I rather like generics. It&#x27;s clear to see how they can enable DRY if used judiciously. (Clear from even a freshman CS undergrad perspective.)<p>However, as a professional who gets paid to wrangle C++, I find the &quot;Tragedy of the Commons&quot; that results from every bright-eyed recent grad wanting to leave their mark on a system...tiresome. I recently fixed a bug caused by a small find-replace mistake, where a static_cast&lt;int&gt; was left out, resulting in an int() operator being generated by a confluence of preprocessor macros, inlined functions, and composed templates, where the call breaking in the stack trace was expressed <i>nowhere</i> in the code-base. It&#x27;s one thing to DRY, but taking it one step too far to &quot;Don&#x27;t State Yourself In The First Place&quot; is way too implicit. Abstractions have a cost, and sometimes the cost is epiphenomenal and gets paid years afterwards.<p><i>An argument from ignorance isn&#x27;t much of an argument.</i><p>The decision of the Go team to not include generics is conservative and pragmatic. The context they consider is across an entire language community, and their decision is informed by observations made on code-bases at Google and elsewhere. How many 500k+ line code bases that have been around more than a decade have you worked on? I&#x27;m on something like my 4th. My conclusion from that is that we programmers as a group are mostly too anxious to be &quot;clever&quot; and biased towards doing too much when they evaluate the cost-benefit of &quot;clever.&quot;<p>Do you have good data&#x2F;experience on the epiphenomenal harm done by many, many &quot;clever&quot; programmers over years?
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11,498,774
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[ 11500140 ]
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11,499,267
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comment
pwenzel
1,460,658,861
The Tumblr choose your own adventure is amazing.
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11,499,254
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11,499,269
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story
edward
1,460,658,876
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null
http://www.economist.com/news/briefing/21696928-children-rich-world-are-far-more-likely-be-diagnosed-autism-past-why
1
The rise of autism: Spectrum shift
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0
11,499,268
null
story
kushti
1,460,658,866
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null
null
http://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2016/04/13/474059310/u-s-coal-giant-peabody-energy-files-for-bankruptcy
3
US Coal Giant Peabody Energy Files for Bankruptcy
null
0
11,499,271
null
comment
jhasse
1,460,658,885
Yes, you can using `ssh -X` (except for the &quot;in a terminal&quot; part)
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11,498,837
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11,499,270
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comment
thinkmoore
1,460,658,885
As part of my PhD research, I developed a shell scripting language (shill-lang.org, previously on hn: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=9328277" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=9328277</a>) with features that provide safety belts against this sort of error. From speaking to administrators and developers, we believe these types of errors cause take much more worry and time than they are worth.<p>Now that I&#x27;m graduating, we&#x27;ve started the process of refining Shill into a product that we can offer to administrators and developers to make their lives simpler. If this sounds like a tool you wish you had (or if you wish a similar tool existed for your platform of choice), we&#x27;d love to hear from you.
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11,496,947
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11,499,272
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story
shawndumas
1,460,658,896
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https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=vscodevim.vim
1
Vim – Visual Studio Marketplace
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0
11,499,273
null
comment
c3534l
1,460,658,904
It&#x27;s nice to see when two big corporations compete over each other over who fights harder for the civil liberties of it&#x27;s users. You one-up those Apple bastards, MS!
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11,497,970
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11,499,274
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comment
bsharitt
1,460,658,914
I&#x27;m a long time vim user who&#x27;s switched mostly to Atom(at least for bigger projects, vim is still my &quot;quick fix&quot; editor). Last time I tried VS Code(6ish months ago?), I liked it all right, but stuck with Atom because at the time the availability of vim like bindings was weak and ruby support was lacking.
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11,498,000
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[ 11499973 ]
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11,499,275
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comment
djejjehje
1,460,658,923
Not to mention more restrictions to come via the various secret international trade pacts being made.<p>People must understabd this, to disagree is to be disingenuous on the face of mountains of evidence. The American people have zero say on policy, the laws the government wants the government will get, it may take a few more years but it will happen.<p>The system cannot be reformed, it&#x27;s very core is corrupt, those who disagree are for the status quo of the police state and they are our enemy and the enemy of justice.
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11,498,727
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11,499,276
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comment
draetheus
1,460,658,930
Another lesson to be learned is that it&#x27;s exceptionally bad practice to use Ansible to push out shell scripts that can be handled by native Ansible modules: <a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;docs.ansible.com&#x2F;ansible&#x2F;file_module.html" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;docs.ansible.com&#x2F;ansible&#x2F;file_module.html</a>
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11,497,789
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11,499,124
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comment
wildpeaks
1,460,657,635
The one thing that prevented me from switching to VSCode last time I tried it was the lack of projects management (e.g. a project remembers what files were open, what folders are associated with it, and you can quickly switch between projects, like the CTRL+ALT+P list in Sublime Text).<p>Is there such a feature now?
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11,498,000
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[ 11502488, 11499330 ]
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11,499,139
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comment
ams6110
1,460,657,731
It was the 1990s, not that it&#x27;s an excuse but TDD wasn&#x27;t a &quot;thing&quot; yet, nor was version control (at least not in that shop). For every change to a program we printed the diff, attached a cover memo, and filed it in a cabinet.<p>Yes, there were test systems and programers were supposed to test all their changes, but they also were the ones who deployed their own changes to production so there were ways for this to happen pretty easily.
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11,498,870
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11,499,158
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comment
anton_tarasenko
1,460,657,869
A brief motivation for the parameters:<p>1. Sorting by the median. The mean is not very informative for the quality of the source. Most sources provide low-scored content with eventual hits that drive the mean up. The median fixes this problem.<p>2. Cutting off at 10 submissions. An arbitrary minimum to exclude pure luck from the results.<p>In the end, this ranking excludes websites like github.com and youtube.com, but it features some less known sources.
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11,499,120
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[ 11499914 ]
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11,499,130
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comment
SolarNet
1,460,657,656
He also had other assets like gems.
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11,498,008
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11,499,122
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comment
pmlnr
1,460,657,597
Nearly done the same thing once by messing up ordering of flags. Thankfully this was before devops tools were present, so a ctrl-c stopped wiping before it got too deep, but a Friday afternoon dowtime is still bad.<p>Tape&#x2F;blu-ray disk backups can come really handy in these cases, not being easy to wipe them.
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11,496,947
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11,499,131
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MrQuincle
1,460,657,658
Seems a bit exaggerated. I now have a Yoga 900 running 4.4.0-18-generic. It&#x27;s fine to work through the entire day (6 hours).<p>The only thing that&#x27;s still causing hiccups is the combination of Wifi and Bluetooth on the same chip which doesn&#x27;t play nice if I for example stream spotify to my bluetooth speakers. However, that has nothing to do with Skylake.
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11,492,070
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11,499,126
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hal9000xp
1,460,657,641
The best meritocratic way (i.e. not dependent on your CV too much) to get invited to an interview with Google is to be top 1000 in Google Code Jam.<p>Study algorithms a lot, practice on CodeForces and TopCoder. If you work hard on it, in some year you will be on top of Google Code Jam.<p>Recommendations is good to have but it won&#x27;t help you to be successful on the interview.<p>Practice algorithms a lot, ... I mean literally A LOT.<p>P.S. I had recommendations from Google employees. I screw up Google interview. Now, I&#x27;m preparing with algorithms and participate on coding contests including Google Code Jam (right now).
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11,498,959
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[ 11500008, 11499314, 11500030 ]
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11,499,278
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comment
maxwell
1,460,658,958
Thanks, added Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, Anglican, and Restorationism &amp; Nontrinitarianism.
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unoti
1,460,658,944
&gt; editing a file that&#x27;s a few hundred megabytes big? As long as that&#x27;s not possible it&#x27;s not even a contest ;)<p>I usually try to keep my source files and config files smaller than a few hundred megabytes. Sounds like you might need more specialized tools for your unusual approach to editing source code.
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11,498,837
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[ 11499717 ]
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11,499,279
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comment
x5n1
1,460,658,968
netbeans
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11,499,175
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11,499,280
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comment
MarcScott
1,460,658,972
And when you died, the machines would still exist.
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11,497,333
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[ 11500485 ]
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11,499,281
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comment
cm3
1,460,658,976
Any word on linux-musl builds so that you can use official rust builds on alpine or void linux? Same question for FreeBSD builds.
null
11,498,426
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[ 11499308 ]
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11,499,282
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comment
beachstartup
1,460,658,978
i do hiring. limit it to 15 minutes.
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11,498,441
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[ 11500390 ]
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11,499,145
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comment
pram
1,460,657,773
I used Sublime for 6 years (I migrated when TextMate was obviously dead) and am just recently attempting to switch to Atom. The package manager is fantastic, and the git integration is very nice as well. It&#x27;s much better now than when it first came out. It can be very sluggish though.<p>That said, it&#x27;s missing two very important features from Sublime that I used constantly. First, you can&#x27;t use it like a scratch pad like Sublime. In Sublime you can open a file, write stuff to it, and it will be persistent. Atom seems to have an option to save your current work, but can&#x27;t be used this way from my experience. The second is it doesn&#x27;t have multi-select like Sublime. You can&#x27;t drag your mouse and have a bunch of different carets. That was TextMate&#x27;s killer feature imo, and Sublime as well.
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11,493,711
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11,499,284
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nxzero
1,460,658,998
dogs,cats: don&#x27;t pretend to be human<p>robots: don&#x27;t pretend to be human<p>google(self): do pretend to be human
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11,499,283
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comment
6d65
1,460,658,991
Yep. That&#x27;s exactly what I was thinking about. Rust just keeps getting better and better.
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11,499,202
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11,499,285
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comment
twic
1,460,659,005
I&#x27;m not a Scala developer, and I don&#x27;t think I&#x27;d ever heard of HOCON. Has it seen much adoption outside the Scala community?
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11,498,283
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story
brahmwg
1,460,659,009
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https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/04/160414114147.htm
1
Plants force fungal partners to behave fairly
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0
11,499,137
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comment
profmonocle
1,460,657,705
And the question is tagged centos 7, which is from 2014 - far too recent to not have --no-preserve-root.
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11,497,986
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[ 11503606 ]
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11,499,143
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story
ViktorKunovski
1,460,657,752
null
true
null
null
null
https://diamond-leadership.com/2010/11/20/why-asking-questions-is-a-must-for-a-modern-leadership/
1
Why is asking questions a must for a modern leadership?
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11,499,290
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comment
ewindisch
1,460,659,022
I hadn&#x27;t considered DH, but if this bill would be used as basis for a court order to decrypt data obtained via a wiretap, then yes, it would be problematic for PFS cryptosystems. :(
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11,498,644
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11,499,287
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comment
b_emery
1,460,659,020
On an etymological side note, I love the origin of the word ginormous:<p>ginormous |jiˈnôrməs, jī-| adjective informal, humorous extremely large; enormous:<p>ORIGIN 1940s (originally military slang): blend of gigantic and enormous .
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11,495,381
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11,499,164
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the_economist
1,460,657,939
When you shoot from directly in front of the basket, if the shot hits the rim it can bounce off the rim, hit the backboard, then bounce back into the rim. This is actually pretty common.<p>When you are shooting from the side and miss, the ball will be much more likely to bounce off the backboard to the side.
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11,499,293
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comment
OJFord
1,460,659,055
<a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;humanstxt.org&#x2F;humans.txt" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;humanstxt.org&#x2F;humans.txt</a>
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11,499,253
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story
edward
1,460,659,048
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http://www.economist.com/news/special-report/21696790-much-hangs-mobile-money-move
1
Financial technology: Much hangs on mobile money
null
0
11,499,132
null
comment
cmdrfred
1,460,657,670
So in a word where money != speech, speech is impacted negatively?
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11,498,987
null
[ 11499527, 11499257, 11499215, 11499197 ]
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