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11,499,288 | null |
comment
|
serge2k
| 1,460,659,022 |
It's a conversation about go, isn't being smug and/or incorrect fundamental to participating?
| null | 11,497,348 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,128 | null |
comment
|
Zyst
| 1,460,657,646 |
I use Dash everyday and I think it would be disingenuous to say that it solves the same 'problem' that Kite looks like it's trying to solve.<p>I can certainly see some degree of overlap, but they seem like quite different programs.
| null | 11,497,807 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,289 | null |
comment
|
slg
| 1,460,659,022 |
Now hypothetically, what if you divide the "government key" in half. Give half of that key to the vendor controlling the encryption and half to the legal system. As long as you don't restrict the company from speaking out about its cooperation, that would seeming prevent abuse as well as minimize damage if one key leaked.
| null | 11,499,115 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,295 | null |
comment
|
SeanDav
| 1,460,659,087 |
Not sure how accurate this, alternatively it might need different assumptions - What about: NYTimes, WSJ, GitHub, BBC, ArsTechnica, Medium etc?
| null | 11,499,120 | null |
[
11499340
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,129 | null |
comment
|
onesun
| 1,460,657,653 |
I specifically said lose fat instead of saying lose weight. I bet you are in better overall shape and your cardiovascular system is much better than if you had not ridden that 2000 miles. Weight alone is a poor measure of health, imo.
| null | 11,496,890 | null |
[
11500627
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,291 | null |
comment
|
jhasse
| 1,460,659,037 |
You're not alone: <a href="https://visualstudio.uservoice.com/forums/293070-visual-studio-code/suggestions/7752519-implement-tabs" rel="nofollow">https://visualstudio.uservoice.com/forums/293070-visual-stud...</a>
| null | 11,499,235 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,294 | null |
story
|
togetherasone
| 1,460,659,055 | null | null | null | null |
[
11500626,
11499966,
11499788,
11499596,
11501231,
11500591,
11499882,
11499962,
11500909,
11518272,
11499800,
11499541
] |
https://theintercept.com/2016/04/14/in-undisclosed-cia-investments-social-media-mining-looms-large/
| 82 |
The CIA Is Investing in Firms That Mine Your Tweets and Instagram Photos
| null | 25 |
11,499,297 | null |
comment
|
drawkbox
| 1,460,659,119 |
Comments would be nice but it is also nice to keep JSON pure and simple. There are some other json formats that use comments like jsoncpp but really not needed.<p>But, if comments really are needed, another easy way to have comments is have a file that rides to the side of any json files or docs. Sometimes we use a markdown/text file next file.json -> file.json.md / file.json.txt to describe overall or a file.meta.json that has comments per key. This is only needed sometimes for physical files. If json is from the server, commenting can be done there or in docs if needed.
| null | 11,498,126 | null |
[
11501357
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,296 | null |
story
|
edward
| 1,460,659,098 | null | null | null | null | null |
http://www.economist.com/news/science-and-technology/21696925-building-highly-detailed-maps-robotic-vehicles-autonomous-cars-reality
| 1 |
Building highly detailed maps for robotic vehicles
| null | 0 |
11,499,298 | null |
story
|
ohjeez
| 1,460,659,120 | null | null | null | null |
[
11499368
] |
http://paleofuture.gizmodo.com/the-untold-story-of-the-teen-hackers-who-transformed-th-1770977586
| 4 |
The Untold Story of the Teen Hackers Who Transformed the Early Internet
| null | 1 |
11,499,180 | null |
comment
|
rhodysurf
| 1,460,658,055 |
I didnt think Clion worked with MSVC?
| null | 11,498,850 | null |
[
11499401
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,301 | null |
comment
|
eiopa
| 1,460,659,137 |
VSCode is so good.<p>I do wish it had a global symbol search, similar to Sublime's (cmd+shift+r). It's indispensable for code navigation.
| null | 11,498,000 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,302 | null |
story
|
gk1
| 1,460,659,143 | null | null | null | null | null |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Chicken_and_the_Pig
| 1 |
The Chicken and the Pig
| null | 0 |
11,499,299 | null |
comment
|
neves
| 1,460,659,126 |
VSCode knockouts Atom in a dispute for becoming a developer editor in a corporate computer.<p>Sure, you all have root password in your computer. Unfortunately, I belong to a lower race: the corporate developer. I work in a Windows 7 machine, don't have root password and there's a big wall called proxy around me.<p>I didn't know about VSCode before this HN post, but I was trying to use a new editor instead of Notepad++. In my 5 minutes comparison match between Atom and VSCode, Atom was knocked out in the first minute. To quickly test a new general code editor I just want 3 "simple" things: column selection, regexp search and replace, and a python mode.<p>Atom: got the regex, must install a column mode extension, need to install a ntlm proxy authentication downloaded from (argh!) Sourceforge, configured it after some google searches, failed to install the extension because it needs a compiler. Ops, just spent 30 min for my 5 min test. Can't spend more time playing with a code editor, must go back to work.<p>VSCode: Download the portable version <a href="https://code.visualstudio.com/docs?dv=winzip" rel="nofollow">https://code.visualstudio.com/docs?dv=winzip</a> and unpack it. Just works.<p>You've got a new fan VSCode!
| null | 11,498,000 | null |
[
11499968,
11501204,
11500478,
11500994,
11501723,
11500747,
11499911,
11502598,
11500687,
11501185,
11503920,
11499629
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,306 | null |
comment
|
Aleman360
| 1,460,659,178 |
Silverlight is actually a descendant of WPF.<p>WPF > Silverlight > UWP<p>All your skills are transferable.
| null | 11,499,240 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,182 | null |
story
|
ymse
| 1,460,658,060 | null | null | null | null |
[
11499706,
11501149,
11499686,
11502969,
11499374,
11501261,
11501513,
11501373,
11503847,
11500624,
11499563,
11500187,
11500468,
11500500,
11499598,
11499546
] |
https://copperhead.co/android/
| 190 |
CopperheadOS: A hardened open-source operating system based on Android
| null | 103 |
11,499,304 | null |
story
|
vikasgulati
| 1,460,659,160 |
I am looking to create an ML model for recognizing types of apparel in am image. I need to label data (1m+ per day for some time) to train my model.<p>Tasks involved<p>- Marking the relevant portion of the image with bbox
- Tagging the marked portion with relevant apparel name<p>Looking for something like MTurk but simpler to use & great in quality?<p>Other relevant discussion thread https://www.quora.com/unanswered/How-to-label-a-million-images-per-day-to-train-an-ML-model-for-visual-recognition
| null | null | null |
[
11499321
] | null | 1 |
How to label 1m+ images per day to train an ML model for visual recognition?
| null | 0 |
11,499,305 | null |
comment
|
fiatjaf
| 1,460,659,170 |
Why? Do you have so much spare time to waste on things like this?
| null | 11,498,672 | null |
[
11499906,
11499322
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,177 | null |
comment
|
grey-area
| 1,460,658,049 |
It depends, did a company even exist prior to yc? If not, the claim for equity is pretty shaky as there was no equity at the time.
| null | 11,495,586 | null |
[
11500048
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,303 | null |
comment
|
rossta
| 1,460,659,154 |
This doesn't account for the possibility that his teammates have a higher percentage <i>because</i> Kobe is the biggest threat to take a shot and the opposing team sets up to defend accordingly.
| null | 11,498,024 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,184 | null |
comment
|
ocschwar
| 1,460,658,065 |
And from RISKS 29.46:<p>Incidentally, my testimony in the second session that day is at
<a href="http://www.csl.sri.com/neumann/judiciary.html" rel="nofollow">http://www.csl.sri.com/neumann/judiciary.html</a>, along with my answers to
subsequent written questions from Senators Thurmond, Grassley, Leahy, and
Feinstein. At the end of the first session. Senator Feinstein excused
herself to go to another hearing, but remarked that if FBI Director Freeh
said he needed access to essentially everything, we'd better give it to him.
| null | 11,498,507 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,307 | null |
comment
|
em3rgent0rdr
| 1,460,659,179 |
google.txt: don't be evil.
| null | 11,499,232 | null |
[
11499334
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,308 | null |
comment
|
steveklabnik
| 1,460,659,181 |
Regarding BSDs: <a href="https://users.rust-lang.org/t/psa-rustc-cargo-can-now-be-installed-on-arm-linux-netbsd-and-freebsd-using-rustup-multirust/5383" rel="nofollow">https://users.rust-lang.org/t/psa-rustc-cargo-can-now-be-ins...</a><p>We are still working on musl as a host, it's not there yet, in my understanding. Cross-compiling to it should be easy, but that doesn't help much if you're on Alpine.
| null | 11,499,281 | null |
[
11500125,
11499547,
11499561,
11500168
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,315 | null |
comment
|
ArtDev
| 1,460,659,216 |
Doesn't this implementation actually undermine the whole point of humans.txt? This is the equivalent of a robots.txt file consisting only of comments.<p>The whole point is to list who is behind the website. A LinkedIn list of people currently working for Google might suffice.<p>This is the best example of humans.txt:
<a href="http://nest.com/humans.txt" rel="nofollow">http://nest.com/humans.txt</a>
| null | 11,498,672 | null |
[
11499496
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,181 | null |
story
|
tankenmate
| 1,460,658,058 | null | null | null | null | null |
http://www.itnews.com.au/news/how-airbus-defends-against-12-big-cyber-attacks-each-year-418131
| 1 |
How Airbus defends against 12 big cyber attacks each year
| null | 0 |
11,499,185 | true |
comment
| null | 1,460,658,070 | null | null | 11,498,653 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,310 | null |
comment
|
AnimalMuppet
| 1,460,659,199 |
> >Generics would not make our codebase significantly better, more maintainable, or easier to understand.<p>> Generics are literally a form of abstraction. You might as well be arguing that abstraction doesn't help.<p>You missed one word: "significantly". Sure, abstractions help. That wasn't the claim. The claim was that, in a million lines, the lack of that particular way of doing abstractions did not <i>significantly</i> hurt.<p>Would it have helped? Sure. Would it have helped enough to matter "very much"? No (by NateDad's standards, which may differ from yours).<p>67 implementations of sort.Interface? Sure, I don't like it, but in a million lines, you've got <i>much</i> bigger things to worry about.
| null | 11,498,552 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,311 | null |
comment
|
danielweber
| 1,460,659,199 |
They should have. He also should not have given out the password.<p>A failure to change the locks does not mean you have created an attractive nuisance to former employees.
| null | 11,497,161 | null |
[
11499861
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,312 | null |
comment
|
andrewfromx
| 1,460,659,200 |
this is a complete mind shift for the process. Step 1, people currently employeed and happy with their job get permission to work from anywhere. i.e. a Self Contained Tech Worker. I work from any coffee shop I want to, my employeer is happy with my work. Step 2. I start crashing offices and working else where, still working for my current employeer. They don't care where I work, coffee shop, or some other office. Step 3. Over time as I work at new places I'll get to know new people. Leads to my next job when I'm looking for a switch.
| null | 11,499,052 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,309 | null |
comment
|
kuschku
| 1,460,659,188 |
> so it's not like it's an abandoned app.<p>The AOSP version is.<p>> Is your complaint that Google is letting AOSP apps languish? In which case I'd agree, but it's not like you're short on alternatives<p>Well, I am short on open source alternatives.<p>I always have ideas of features I’d want, and wish to integrate them into the apps I’m using – like integrating with the local phone book data for reverse caller lookup, as that has far better data than Google or OSM.<p>But I can’t do this with the closed apps.<p>Sure, I <i>could</i> replace everything now by installing other apps, but when all of them use SecureNet to prevent me from tinkering with anything, then I honestly prefer the good old days where I could just mod anything.<p>> Get a different launcher? For eg, Nova Launcher (paid, but does not have any dependancy on Play Services) is basically Launcher3 (in terms of looks/functionality) with a ton of extra features.<p>This is the very same issue.<p>I want a minimalistic launcher, with some special features I wrote myself already for Launcher2, but the AOSP Launcher3 is totally broken, and Nova Launcher is not even close to anything I’d want – minimalistic, not "accidentally swiped over an icon and half my screen is full of menus".<p>Since Google continued to drop work on AOSP apps, I’ve had to spend more and more time.<p>By now I have to maintain my own apps for music, notes, etc, now Launcher and SMS are becoming an issue, too. Sure, I’m a student, but my time is limited, too, and I’d like to not spend it rebuild things Google took from the community.
| null | 11,497,890 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,313 | null |
story
|
fezz
| 1,460,659,202 | null | null | null | null | null |
http://www.engadget.com/2016/04/14/gopro-launches-a-developer-program-to-make-its-cameras-do-more/
| 1 |
GoPro launches a Developer Program
| null | 0 |
11,499,317 | null |
comment
|
littlegreenb18
| 1,460,659,222 |
It's coming soon. The aspnet team demoed coreclr debugging in VSCode earlier this week. It was all done on nightlys, but it worked.
But honestly, since these are all extensions, I don't see any reason 1.0 would need to be tied to these features.
| null | 11,498,693 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,318 | null |
comment
|
stcredzero
| 1,460,659,223 |
One place where I worked had a rule that you couldn't invoke DRY until something had been repeated at least 3 times. Empiricism wins in the end when the goal is to seek truth.
| null | 11,498,910 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,121 | null |
comment
|
ams6110
| 1,460,657,594 |
Nothing. She continued to work there until after I moved on.
| null | 11,498,918 | null |
[
11499259
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,314 | null |
comment
|
nxzero
| 1,460,659,208 |
Do you have any suggestions how to practice algorithms?
| null | 11,499,126 | null |
[
11499468,
11499838
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,300 | null |
comment
|
HNaTTY
| 1,460,659,134 |
<a href="http://grahamshortart.com/" rel="nofollow">http://grahamshortart.com/</a> He has this website which hasn't been kept up to date but shows some of his work
| null | 11,495,743 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,316 | null |
comment
|
SolarNet
| 1,460,659,219 |
But remember what they are saying they are trying to find here is the main character, not the main character in the universe. You actually argue against your own point. You say this is a popularity contest, and then say no one in universe would remember it that way. But if his impact, and hence relationship to the actual story, is what this measures.
| null | 11,497,474 | null |
[
11500215
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,319 | null |
comment
|
cmdrfred
| 1,460,659,244 |
Could you not wrap it all in a div and do something like:<p><pre><code> #ascii-art {
font-size: 2vw;
overflow: hidden;
white-space: nowrap; }</code></pre>
| null | 11,495,391 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,320 | null |
comment
|
koube
| 1,460,659,246 |
I'm noticing a lot of Reddit posts showing up here that don't seem all too related to tech. Perhaps Hacker News is just growing to that size where it starts to get off topic sometimes.
| null | 11,496,692 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,321 | true |
comment
| null | 1,460,659,252 | null | null | 11,499,304 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,322 | null |
comment
|
IanCal
| 1,460,659,295 |
Spare time wasted on what? Me reading the three sentences or someone else writing three sentences?
| null | 11,499,305 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,324 | null |
comment
|
cowpewter
| 1,460,659,305 |
Agreed. "Robot on autopilot" sounds far more like depression than ASD to me.
| null | 11,494,491 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,325 | null |
comment
|
serge2k
| 1,460,659,309 |
Not the distributed secret sauce though.<p>> Does Bazel require a build cluster?
Google's in-house flavor of Bazel does use build clusters, so Bazel does have hooks in the code base to plug in a remote build cache or a remote execution system.
The open source Bazel code runs build operations locally. We believe that this is fast enough for most of our users.
| null | 11,498,084 | null |
[
11508257
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,323 | null |
comment
|
shadeless
| 1,460,659,297 |
That theory is called Risk Compensation: <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Risk_compensation" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Risk_compensation</a>
| null | 11,499,230 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,187 | null |
comment
|
throwanem
| 1,460,658,109 |
Considering that, if this isn't a troll, he wiped out his entire business with a single command, I think you're giving him too much credit here.
| null | 11,498,587 | null |
[
11499438
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,326 | null |
comment
|
soccerdave
| 1,460,659,317 |
Really enjoyed your post. I had a question about your usage of ProxySQL.<p>1) Do you have to update the ProxySQL configuration on your application servers when you do a slave promotion or is that handled automatically?<p>2) I didn't fully understand how you know which database host has a shard (i.e. shard 22). Is that also part of your ProxySQL configuration?
| null | 11,491,452 | null |
[
11500880
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,329 | null |
comment
|
agentgt
| 1,460,659,359 |
That is what I'm saying (I think we agree). It seems like a focus of Go's simplicity is to improve compilation speed and yet there are languages like Ocaml that do have generics (and a whole lot more) that seem to compile faster.
| null | 11,499,154 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,327 | null |
comment
|
csours
| 1,460,659,325 |
<a href="http://www.gm.com/humans.txt" rel="nofollow">http://www.gm.com/humans.txt</a> I never would have guessed it.<p>Disclaimer: I work at GM. It's probably not as terrible as you imagine. Any opinions are my own.
| null | 11,498,672 | null |
[
11500022,
11499662
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,328 | null |
comment
|
jhasse
| 1,460,659,345 |
It's buggy. Plugins break all the time.<p>Also: Doesn't ask me to save my unsaved files when I close the editor. Sublime Text called this feature "hotexit", but in Atom there's no way to disable it.
| null | 11,498,591 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,331 | null |
comment
|
nihonde
| 1,460,659,367 |
Any script that includes rm -rf followed by variables in a path is an accident waiting to happen. Mounting the backup volumes is just icing on the cake for this extremely incompetent web hosting provider.<p>It made me nervous to type rm -rf in this comment form. Those letters are dark magic.
| null | 11,496,947 | null |
[
11499987
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,332 | null |
story
|
tortilla
| 1,460,659,373 | null | null | null | null | null |
http://espn.go.com/nba/story/_/id/15047018
| 15 |
How Nike Lost Stephen Curry to Under Armour
| null | 0 |
11,499,330 | null |
comment
|
groundCode
| 1,460,659,364 |
I had a similar question - One of the things I appreciate about Atom and Sublime is the ability to add folders to current "project" even if they are at different hierarchical levels of the folder structure. Other than that VSCode was pretty cool.
| null | 11,499,124 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,333 | null |
story
|
joabj
| 1,460,659,377 | null | null | null | null | null |
http://thenewstack.io/synchronous-rest-turns-microservices-back-monoliths/
| 1 |
How REST Turns Microservices Back into Monoliths
| null | 0 |
11,499,334 | null |
comment
|
nxzero
| 1,460,659,378 |
Funny, that was deleted years ago, now returns:<p>"404: File not found."
| null | 11,499,307 | null |
[
11499456
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,194 | null |
comment
|
vkou
| 1,460,658,142 |
Filing a false DMCA claim is perjury. However, not a single person has ever been prosecuted for this.
| null | 11,499,067 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,201 | null |
comment
|
tom_mellior
| 1,460,658,201 |
Ah, thanks for this. Yes, I agree, this page has examples that really are the same person. I find those more striking.
| null | 11,493,083 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,335 | null |
comment
|
vr3690
| 1,460,659,383 |
For the 2nd point, is googling not helpful? As in, can't the user just Google for that stuff and buy it from eBay or whatever?
| null | 11,478,722 | null |
[
11500726
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,203 | null |
comment
|
akavi
| 1,460,658,225 |
Does all of that have to be implemented every time you want to sort by a new predicate?<p>If so, that seems like quite a lot of boilerplate, no?
| null | 11,499,136 | null |
[
11499586
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,193 | null |
comment
|
Practicality
| 1,460,658,131 |
Thanks. I agree strongly. Having both sides adds real depth to life.
| null | 11,498,798 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,190 | null |
comment
|
ralmeida
| 1,460,658,118 |
It's already a thing (<a href="http://humanstxt.org/" rel="nofollow">http://humanstxt.org/</a>), and Google's has had the file for quite a while now.<p>It's currently used mostly as a "painting's signature", a point of pride for the team behind the site. Looking through all the comments in this thread you will see many other examples.
| null | 11,499,076 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,336 | null |
comment
|
collyw
| 1,460,659,388 |
This sounds more like Python dictionaries. I don't see more bugs when I am using those over JSON, and I find them a lot easier to work with.
| null | 11,498,348 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,198 | null |
comment
|
ultramancool
| 1,460,658,171 |
Yeah, but point is, it wasn't released until 2015. Which is the part that matters. Who cares if they started developing something tangentially related to it 2 years earlier. Atom came out to the public first, and that's what matters in terms of plugins and such. I never heard anything about people making Monaco plugins, did you? VSCode was basically released because Electron came out. From the Atom devs. So while Monaco may have come first, VSCode certainly did not. And Monaco didn't offer the sort of things that VSCode and Atom focus on - namely community plugins.
| null | 11,498,851 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,337 | null |
comment
|
GuiA
| 1,460,659,412 |
i was cofounder at a startup a long time ago, and wrote most of the backend code.<p>i put a humans.txt in there, and updated it every time we had a new employee.<p>then the CEO fired all the best engineers, and I decided to leave shortly after because sometimes in life you gotta let go.<p>the company is still (miraculously) around these days, although all of the original engineers are long gone.<p>the humans.txt is still accessible on their domain as it was on my last day, with all the names of the founding team for the first ~2 years inscribed in there - looks like their newer engineers never stumbled upon it.<p>sometimes when i get nostalgic i like to hit that URL and look at it
| null | 11,498,672 | null |
[
11500838,
11499375,
11499605,
11501124,
11499354
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,338 | null |
comment
|
baq
| 1,460,659,423 |
last time i tried to do serious work with go and mssql, i ran away screaming. maybe situation isn't that dire now (this was almost a couple of years ago), but it's hard to beat java in db connectivity.<p>for the record, i ran to python.
| null | 11,498,848 | null |
[
11500058
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,339 | null |
story
|
andrewmlevy
| 1,460,659,431 | null | null | null | null |
[
11500714
] |
https://www.apteligent.com/developer-resources/the-complete-guide-to-function-mangling-in-ios/?partner_code=GDC_hn_functionnamemangleios
| 12 |
The Complete Guide to Function Mangling in iOS
| null | 1 |
11,499,216 | null |
comment
|
st3v3r
| 1,460,658,313 |
It's a dedicated tool for designing layout. You're not going to do the same thing you used to do with photoshop and websites.<p>Not to mention that, at least on the Android side, their UI designer is absolutely atrocious. Like, to the point where a company like Google should be utterly mortified that they let something out that was that bad, and the developers of it probably should commit seppuku in order to preserve the honor of their families.
| null | 11,495,176 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,217 | null |
comment
|
Practicality
| 1,460,658,313 |
I would like to say pretty normal. I had two brothers so it was a little male-heavy. I admired my dad like most kids and my mom was a little protective, but nothing crazy.<p>However, the one brother was seriously sick all the time and all the drugs he had to take (prescription) turned him into quite the jerk. So to some degree it may be that I just wanted to make sure I was nothing like him.
| null | 11,498,940 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,343 | null |
comment
|
ArtDev
| 1,460,659,467 |
Without a single name listed, Google is doing it wrong.<p>So for me this is a negative reflection of the Google brand.
| null | 11,498,998 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,340 | null |
comment
|
anton_tarasenko
| 1,460,659,445 |
These websites have the low median score. That is, many submissions, many of them not relevant, so the median is low.
| null | 11,499,295 | null |
[
11499397,
11499459
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,342 | null |
comment
|
danieljp
| 1,460,659,461 |
old
| null | 11,498,672 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,202 | null |
comment
|
steveklabnik
| 1,460,658,209 |
<a href="https://users.rust-lang.org/t/psa-rustc-cargo-can-now-be-installed-on-arm-linux-netbsd-and-freebsd-using-rustup-multirust/5383/7?u=steveklabnik" rel="nofollow">https://users.rust-lang.org/t/psa-rustc-cargo-can-now-be-ins...</a>
| null | 11,499,169 | null |
[
11499283
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,341 | null |
comment
|
IkmoIkmo
| 1,460,659,457 |
I wonder if we'll ever see a maverick player perform well because he's taking these shots, trains for them, specialises in them, positions for them, in a world where defenders train supposing you'll position differently, and reposition rather than take the shot if you happen to receive a ball in a deep two position.
| null | 11,497,336 | null |
[
11500841,
11501067,
11499406
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,344 | null |
comment
|
mixedCase
| 1,460,659,473 |
It is the norm for PC games that have settings to have pre-tuned config settings (Low, Normal, High and Maxed, usually called Ultra) which make it easy to find something according to your hardware's power and age.
| null | 11,498,176 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,346 | null |
comment
|
xlm1717
| 1,460,659,490 |
One take-away from this is that it's probably better to save your backups somewhere where you can't delete them. Make sure that nothing using rm touches your database backups. Also, try to keep them backed up in multiple places. For example, store backups on a server you own, and on a cloud server, like on S3.
| null | 11,496,947 | null |
[
11499395
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,345 | null |
comment
|
plorg
| 1,460,659,477 |
Elsewhere the article described him buying up "1-kilogram" bars. I don't know where you would get such a thing (I'm not in the gold market), but this does make more sense with the figure of $20M dollars (although it still works out to gold at $1800/troy oz.).<p>It's still a great deal of mass, and I definitely wouldn't put it in the trunk of a cab, but it sounds at least almost plausible, especially if the taxi is a van or SUV.
| null | 11,497,847 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,349 | null |
comment
|
achompas
| 1,460,659,535 |
Great catch. What you're observing is the effect of a new trend (or a nonstationary distribution, if you prefer) wrt. shooting tendencies, as it affects the coaching and strategy of one (star) player. Your suggestion that<p>> [the] extra point outweighs the increased likelihood of missing as an overall statistic<p>is a relatively-recent discovery for people in the NBA: the expected point value of a three-point shot is much higher than the expected point value of a very very long two-point shot.
| null | 11,498,323 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,348 | null |
comment
|
codeTheWorld
| 1,460,659,528 |
Who's on the couch?
| null | 11,497,470 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,350 | null |
story
|
joezimjs
| 1,460,659,538 | null | true | null | null | null |
http://www.joezimjs.com/uncategorized/unixstickers-review/
| 3 |
UnixStickers Review: Where to Fulfill Your Geeky Needs
| null | null |
11,499,347 | null |
comment
|
allannienhuis
| 1,460,659,520 |
I didn't downvote, but you can easily answer your question about what's interesting/exciting about it by simply reading the other comments here. It's pretty clear this scratches the itches of more than a few devs.
| null | 11,499,038 | null |
[
11500015
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,353 | null |
comment
|
0xffff2
| 1,460,659,562 |
>Also I think people are way too worried about their code.<p>I don't think anyone in this thread is worried about <i>their</i> code. The problem is that most of us work somewhere where we write code that isn't <i>ours</i>, and as such continued employment is contingent on us following the policies of the company. This generally include not sharing proprietary code.
| null | 11,498,701 | null |
[
11499520
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,352 | null |
comment
|
YeGoblynQueenne
| 1,460,659,551 |
<i>404. That’s an error.</i><p><i>The requested URL /cats.txt was not found on this server.</i><p><i>That’s all we know.</i><p>I am so disappointed :(
| null | 11,498,672 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,356 | null |
comment
|
malkia
| 1,460,659,600 |
week_ptr<T> - keeps a pointer for a week.
| null | 11,499,049 | null |
[
11501573
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,355 | null |
comment
|
collyw
| 1,460,659,596 |
It was a "temporary solution".<p>"Yes, you can built a web form with proper validation to replace it next month after you complete this URGENT feature".<p>If it can be replaced by a web form then Excel isn't a "critical part of the workflow". Getting data into the database was the critical part of the workflow. The users actually preferred the web forms that I did manage to replace Excel sheets with (more checkboxes, and far less cut and paste).<p>Anyway after 3 years of complaining about the same issues I realised it was time to leave.
| null | 11,497,813 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,354 | null |
comment
|
trump2016chalk
| 1,460,659,567 |
I think that the fact they haven't found it is a statement about the new team as well and what their priorities are... Or aren't
| true | 11,499,337 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,351 | null |
comment
|
surfaceTensi0n
| 1,460,659,547 |
That's interesting. I guess I just assumed the user would have to add the bots. Otherwise how would they know what the meta-bot is capable of doing? Also, discovery of bots, especially ones that aren't "mainstream" (I'm thinking less utilitarian and more art/fun, here) or part of specific bot networks/marketplaces, would be harder. Allowing users to at least also add their own seems like it would be a useful feature.
| null | 11,493,275 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,360 | null |
comment
|
nucleardog
| 1,460,659,616 |
They were removed because people started trying to use them to hold additional parsing directives and other meta-information which would have destroyed interoperability and defeated the entire purpose of a simple interchange format. See: <a href="https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/json/conversations/topics/156" rel="nofollow">https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/json/conversations/topic...</a><p>If you want to annotate JSON in documentation, I say "go ahead and just use //". Any programmer reading it will understand that those lines are taken to be comments and they shouldn't type them in their final request.
| null | 11,497,860 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,358 | null |
comment
|
Amezarak
| 1,460,659,615 |
That's true for fruits (in the botanical sense), not roots (carrots), fungi (mushrooms), or cabbage and lettuce. You're killing or injuring the organism and not helping perpetuate it in any way.
| null | 11,498,741 | null |
[
11499785,
11499806
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,366 | null |
comment
|
Kinnard
| 1,460,659,639 |
Pomotodo!
| null | 11,499,105 | null |
[
11499475
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,357 | null |
comment
|
ChuckMcM
| 1,460,659,604 |
It is interesting that law enforcement doesn't draw the connection between the abuse of a capability with the people making it harder to abuse. I don't think there would be any outrage or pushback if such requests were in the 10's a month rather in the 1000's a month.
| null | 11,497,970 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,362 | null |
comment
|
wfunction
| 1,460,659,624 |
Maybe they meant biennial rather than biannual?
| null | 11,498,557 | null |
[
11500116,
11500874
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,363 | null |
story
|
growthcommunity
| 1,460,659,625 | null | true | null | null | null |
http://bit.ly/22xynvB
| 1 |
SensorUp: IoT therapist for your dysfunctional device family
| null | null |
11,499,246 | null |
comment
|
mrweasel
| 1,460,658,620 |
I really wanted to use VS code with Python so I could use the debugger, but configuration see magical. I really want to like it. In the end it seems that my Django project is configured to kill VS Code when it starts up, even the menu hangs.<p>It might be nice editor, but it hide to much information for my taste. "You need to setup a launch.json file", well fine, but at least be a little more helpful than that, don't just open an empty file. Starting the debugger either crashed the editor or do nothing, but never informs me as to what the issue might be.<p>At this point Vim and shell is easier to get started with.
| null | 11,498,393 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,359 | null |
story
|
DS12DataScience
| 1,460,659,616 | null | true | null | null | null |
http://education.datascience.com
| 1 |
New LA-Based Residency Delivers Functional Data Science Education
| null | null |
11,499,365 | true |
comment
| null | 1,460,659,627 | null | null | 11,498,225 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,364 | null |
comment
|
anamoulous
| 1,460,659,625 |
I'm chuckling (not in a bad way!) at the emacs user that prefers vi keybindings expressing optimism about a Microsoft editor written in a statically typed variant of Javascript. Progress is cool.
| null | 11,498,770 | null |
[
11500252,
11500000,
11500609,
11500574
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,245 | null |
story
|
wslh
| 1,460,658,617 | null | null | null | null | null |
http://phys.org/news/2016-04-argentina-court-uber-tracks.html
| 2 |
Argentina court stops Uber in its tracks
| null | 0 |
11,499,368 | null |
comment
|
fallingfrog
| 1,460,659,659 |
I found this quote pretty poignant: "When I went to Santa Monica to meet Bill, I was pretty sure I’d hear a story about how the FBI had ruined his life. But I left believing that it hadn’t. The world ruined Bill’s life—a world that couldn’t quite find a place for his particular talents, faults, and petty mistakes." Makes you a little more sympathetic to homeless people, doesn't it? I mean, I could have easily ended up in his position with just little less luck or different choices. And I think it's totally true that there are some people that just don't fit in to our current social/economic system, and that really isn't their fault.
| null | 11,499,298 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,255 | null |
comment
|
dghughes
| 1,460,658,721 |
> I feel like if you use `rm -rf` particularly `--force` with privileges, it shouldn't be the job of Unix to stop you.<p>I agree, that's what's so good Unix and GNU-Linux the freedom of root to do anything even major mistakes.
| null | 11,498,732 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,361 | null |
comment
|
goodJobWalrus
| 1,460,659,617 |
I was thinking many times how it would be great to have that available.
| null | 11,480,999 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,499,249 | null |
comment
|
kbenson
| 1,460,658,646 |
I understand, I'm not really taking a stance. The question, really, is <i>should</i> the compiler be responsible for making sure your unused bits and ends of memory that are provably irrelevant to the functioning of the program that is being compiled stay exactly as you left them? I think it's interesting because the situation is a bit untenable on both ends of the spectrum.<p>If we disallow all those optimizations, we end up with hugely wasteful programs in the current C ecosystem. Enforcing this is useless, the market will route around your best intentions, because no company that's making money will be willing to cede a huge performance gap to their competitors.<p>If we require code be annotated to bypass optimizations, we run afoul of the fact that it's impossible to know what optimizations might be developed in the future that will affect portions of our code that might be security sensitive.<p>The problem is insidious and deep. Imagine an architecture that allows specialized instructions to speed up zeroing chunks of memory, but does so by hardware mapping different pages around behind the scenes (to swap in a pre-zeroed page for a filled page). Correctly detecting that the architecture has an efficient method for zeroing large chunks of space could be detected and used by the compiler, but the hardware is working against us because the original memory may still be accessible to an external actor. C is ensuring the memory addresses you requested are zeroed, it's just not ensuring that the data that existed within them is no longer anywhere on the system.
| null | 11,499,092 | null |
[
11502439
] | null | null | null | null | null |
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