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11,499,763
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bsg75
1,460,663,083
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http://news.softpedia.com/news/meet-ubuntubsd-unix-for-human-beings-501959.shtml
2
ubuntuBSD
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0
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comment
zanny
1,460,663,043
Not at all. Vendors just fork the kernel at the fixed releases Android versions ship (ex, 3.4, 3.10, 3.18, etc) and then merge in all their proprietary bullshit violating the GPL nonsense into that tree, ship (and publish) that kernel source tree, but never merge back into Linus&#x27; tree.<p>As a result, the device is supported only by the kernel they provide, rather than by generic Linux. And their kernel never gets updates.
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jasonjei
1,460,663,091
Wasn&#x27;t Obama using a Blackberry device a few years ago? Granted the device he was using was likely hardened, but still raises interesting questions.
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[ 11499797 ]
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duaneb
1,460,663,002
I don&#x27;t know basketball. Are those players known for assists?
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[ 11500204, 11499849, 11499992 ]
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duaneb
1,460,663,118
Unrelated, but we have really hit a new low as a society if we are discussing the aesthetic qualities of shoe commercials.
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[ 11499833 ]
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nxzero
1,460,663,096
Google.com&#x2F;humans.txt<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=11498672" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=11498672</a>
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Retr0spectrum
1,460,663,119
A 512GB ssd costs somewhere around £100.<p>That puts the cost of 10GB at about £2.
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11,499,639
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[ 11500603, 11499898, 11499878, 11500883, 11501687 ]
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ffumarola
1,460,663,136
Seems like this is in response to competitors offering raw access to the data.<p>e.g.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;amplitude.com&#x2F;sql-queries" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;amplitude.com&#x2F;sql-queries</a><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;segment.com&#x2F;redshift" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;segment.com&#x2F;redshift</a><p>etc
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[ 11499970 ]
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omginternets
1,460,663,146
Right, so then it <i>is</i> more complex than `go build`. QED.<p>To be clear, I&#x27;m not claiming that Go is &quot;better&quot;; I&#x27;m just pointing out that this is why one would chose Go over Java. Sometimes this particular benefit doesn&#x27;t outweigh the costs relative to developing in Java, but language&#x2F;toolchain simplicity remains -- nonetheless -- the reason why people prefer one over the other.
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[ 11503102 ]
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story
cpitman
1,460,663,146
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[ 11499922 ]
https://modelviewculture.com/news/lambda-conf-fuckery-white-supremacy-under-the-guise-of-inclusion
8
LambdaConf Fuckery: White Supremacy Under the Guise of “Inclusion”
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2
11,499,773
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coroutines
1,460,663,155
I am a junior dev.<p>It is hard for me to get in that dating mentality that I should be testing to see if my interviewer and I are simpatico. I feel a lot of pressure to fill in the blanks on what I want to know without asking, so I don&#x27;t seem like I&#x27;m still deciding if I want to work there.<p>I know that sounds ridiculous.<p>The only time I do well is when interviewing for roles in faraway Australia because I feel like I have no chance of getting picked up.<p>Or maybe Australians are just great at no-bullshit interviews and put me at ease like talking to a friend? Confusing.
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[ 11500076, 11500858, 11501502 ]
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adrusi
1,460,663,179
Because this is looking at median score. Lots of people submit PG links as soon as they show up, but only one or two of those submissions will make it to the front page. If more than half of PG links have a score of 0–5, then the median will be in that range as well.
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[ 11499909 ]
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pcwalton
1,460,663,175
Well, yes, in the trivial case, but not if the induction variable and&#x2F;or loop bound come in as references (as in templated code, etc).<p>There&#x27;s also the issue of the store changing the array base, as in Chris Lattner&#x27;s example on &quot;What Every C Programmer Should Know&quot;.
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[ 11500493 ]
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sslayer
1,460,663,186
Didn&#x27;t Mark Wahlberg already do this?
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11,499,780
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TranquilMarmot
1,460,663,206
From hjson.org:<p>&quot;YAML expresses structure through whitespace. Significant whitespace is a common source of mistakes that we shouldn&#x27;t have to deal with.&quot;
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[ 11499863 ]
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SloopJon
1,460,663,189
Somewhat off topic, but docker-compose finally works on the old iMac I use at work:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;docker&#x2F;compose&#x2F;issues&#x2F;271" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;docker&#x2F;compose&#x2F;issues&#x2F;271</a>
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story
Mbab124
1,460,663,204
null
true
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[ 11499847 ]
http://www.sherbit.io
1
App allows you to see and understand all of your online data
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11,499,778
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comment
odbol_
1,460,663,192
I agree. Why would they even need to upload&#x2F;store the whole file? It seems like it&#x27;s basing the suggestions on the line you&#x27;re typing at that moment, so it doesn&#x27;t seem that hard to just throw away the history immediately, and only deal with the 1-3 lines you&#x27;re currently typing.
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[ 11501731 ]
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anton_tarasenko
1,460,663,222
Paulgraham.com is in the second hundred.
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FussyZeus
1,460,663,226
The failures of the foxconn 360&#x27;s were incredibly erratic, some died after a month, others are still working. A company that produces hardware that fails with such a range is somewhat more worrisome than one that produces it where it fails consistently.<p>And yeah I too noticed oddness with DMZ. For a long time the only way to have two in the house was to have mine in the port forward (since we used mine as a media center and it needed access to the other bits of the network) and to have the wife&#x27;s DMZ&#x27;d, but neither worked terribly well and we would run the gamut from Strict to Open with zero predictability. UPNP seems to keep them happy though, so whatever works.
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BurningFrog
1,460,663,218
Most things people do have not been proven useful scientifically.<p>That is <i>very</i> different from being proven useless.
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danso
1,460,663,223
This is a pretty good example of how certain metrics aren&#x27;t always relevant to reality, or, at least match the headline. The word &quot;feed&quot; implies that HN depends on the contributions from&#x2F;links to these sites, but most users of HN would argue that domains such as github.com, github.io, nytimes.com, etc. are far more prevalent and important to HN than virtually any of the domains listed here. HN depends on daily, traffic...It&#x27;s not that the sites with high medians aren&#x27;t <i>good</i>, but they don&#x27;t &quot;feed&quot; HN...Median score in this context is a trivial metric. Number of top stories, daily, by domain would be far more relevant in showing what &quot;feeds the beast&quot;, as they say in the media business.
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11,499,120
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[ 11500032, 11499917 ]
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duaneb
1,460,663,289
I would hope Kobe himself would easily beat it with no players opposing him on the court.
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marssaxman
1,460,663,274
Because I don&#x27;t need them, and would rather focus my attention on the part of the job I actually care about. The simplest tool which doesn&#x27;t waste my time is the best. I have found that I would rather use a simple editor with no features that I never have to think about, and automate repetitive tasks using the same tools I already use for automating repetitive tasks: programming languages.
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11,499,433
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[ 11500996, 11499872 ]
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11,499,787
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story
shawndumas
1,460,663,236
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[ 11500427 ]
https://web.archive.org/web/20151221082425/https://michaelochurch.wordpress.com/2014/06/06/why-programmers-cant-make-any-money-dimensionality-and-the-eternal-haskell-tax/
5
Why programmers can’t make any money
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1
11,499,789
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comment
merb
1,460,663,254
Actually Scala 2.12 will have more Java 8 Interop than Kotlin. Scala will hit soon while I don&#x27;t see Kotlin Java7&#x2F;Java8 soon not even a Milestone release yet.
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11,499,030
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[ 11500703, 11507703 ]
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11,499,792
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Rusky
1,460,663,263
The return value is going to stay in a register the whole time anyway, so a char won&#x27;t save you anything.<p>But regardless, the point of that sentence is nothing to do with memory usage, but with semantics. Whether you or the compiler packs all the information into 3 bits or 3 words, that&#x27;s fine, as long as the language helps you distinguish the parts.
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story
ShaneBonich
1,460,663,255
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http://www.vocativ.com/308540/meet-the-king-of-sports-conspiracy-theories/
2
Meet the King of Sports Conspiracy Theories
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0
11,499,791
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comment
yarrel
1,460,663,257
One day a student came to Moon and said: “I understand how to make a better garbage collector. We must keep a reference count of the pointers to each cons.”<p>Moon patiently told the student the following story:<p><pre><code> “One day a student came to Moon and said: ‘I understand how to make a better garbage collector...</code></pre>
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[ 11500678 ]
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11,499,786
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breischl
1,460,663,234
Could be they found it but just never changed it. Maybe they thought it was amusing, or just didn&#x27;t want to deal with it in code review.
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cloudjacker
1,460,663,244
I&#x27;m pretty sure that was the whole purpose of the Twitter Streaming API
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11,499,797
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peeters
1,460,663,293
What interesting questions does it raise?
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[ 11500519 ]
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11,499,795
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vonmoltke
1,460,663,277
The exact wording of the code:<p>&quot;When a wheelchair accessible vehicle is requested, the operating authority must provide a wheelchair accessible vehicle, <i>or cause one to be provided</i>, without unreasonable delay.&quot;<p>Highlighted for emphasis. The cab company does not need to own or operate the vehicle. They just need to make sure the customer is provided with one at the same rate they would charge a customer who did not require one. This is not the same as what was originally stated above.
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[ 11500716 ]
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11,499,793
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cloudjacker
1,460,663,274
wut
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11,499,466
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11,499,798
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odbol_
1,460,663,296
That seems possible with a strongly-typed language, but for something like Python, they&#x27;d basically have to recompile the code on every keystroke, right?
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11,499,251
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[ 11500043 ]
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11,499,799
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imtringued
1,460,663,344
Not everyone has the entire unicode spec in their head.
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[ 11503199 ]
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11,499,785
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comment
mitchtbaum
1,460,663,234
When a human harvests those organisms and replants their seeds among compost, it seems awfully similar to me. (Yes, I understand they each have some level of awareness similar to a mammal and bird. Here, we seem to focus on the meaning of killing. Perhaps our frame of reference which would call one yes and one no limits our ability to understand what happens in these processes.)<p>Tangent hidden in Mahamrityunjaya: If your unit of analysis of Life consists of one body of directly wired cells, then death for it would seem to occur when it stops nourishing itself or starts nourishing another body of directly wired cells. If on the other hand your unit of analysis for Life is Life, then replanting its seed is its continuation, afaict. This opens a paradox... If eating a head of lettuce seems fine while a new crop grows, then why not a head of cow while its calves grow too?<p>People can get trapped in their heads by paradoxes, so I like to go by my gut and my heart (don&#x27;t worry, they&#x27;re connected to my brain and they have <i>a lot</i> of neurons, see peripheral nervous system[0]) and econophysics[1](?linked document seems to have changed a lot). So, basically cold, hard calculation in a warm, soft body. If I can run my home on cow meat and feel good about it then bravo, but I can&#x27;t for two reasons: 1) I love Life and want to maximize and respect it 2) eating cows is horrendously inefficient, for example you can get 6x as much meat from the same exact inputs of feed and water from meat rabbits.<p>Meat rabbit production seem like a very good investment right now and a potential focal point for planning my near-term food sources. They can also eat the grain stalks and inedible carrot leaves etc, and their poop works extremely well for compost. I want simply to figure out how to make the most of my available inputs, so if I can turn those green leaves into mushroom food instead and still grow enough grain while I use those stalks for construction projects etc, then great. We&#x27;re talking about living here, so it&#x27;s a matter of costs and benefits, right?.. what&#x27;s Life worth?<p>(0): <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Peripheral_nervous_system" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Peripheral_nervous_system</a><p>(1): <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Econophysics" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Econophysics</a>
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[ 11500450 ]
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mineshaftgap
1,460,663,354
You have to feel bad for the people up voting this because they think it is edgy.
true
11,499,294
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11,499,802
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StringyBob
1,460,663,399
In hardware design you typically test functionality through logic simulation or emulation (effectively running the code in a computer simulation or fpga), use test harnesses, look for code coverage, run unit tests, random code fuzzing, code assertions etc. You might also do formal checks for some assertions to e.g. avoid deadlocks.<p>A secondary check is that the source that you functionally tested is logically equivalent to what you manufacture. This is where you are not checking your code, but the issue is trust of compiler&#x2F; compiler optimisations in synthesis. It needs to be redone if you recompile - that&#x27;s the step I don&#x27;t really ever see in software development - if I use a different compiler option or underlying instruction set architecture to the SQLite Dev team, do I still trust my binary?<p>Of course the level of paranoia is far higher in hardware where it costs multiple millions of dollars to crank out a new spin of a chip!
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[ 11500517 ]
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npolet
1,460,663,382
This is what I thought. I would have to go out my way to completely nuke the servers I work on. I&#x27;m trying to understand what structure this guys company had if everything can be mistakenly deleted without any chance of recovery.<p>Maybe I misread the article and he runs a niche hosting company that has different requirements, but it seems strange to me to be able to completely remove your online body of work in a matter of minutes.
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conceit
1,460,663,417
needs another image link for visualization
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astrodust
1,460,663,421
If it was 31337 accounts, it would be super-troll territory.
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[ 11500545 ]
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11,499,804
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story
jivid
1,460,663,419
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[ 11499993 ]
https://www.facebook.com/FacebookforDevelopers/videos/10153628493763553/
1
Origami – Design prototyping app by Facebook
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2
11,499,806
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comment
howlin
1,460,663,435
Mushrooms are the fruiting body of a much larger fungal complex. Many fungi use the fact that animals carry the mushrooms (and their spores) off to eat as a reproductive strategy.
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borski
1,460,663,441
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http://arxiv.org/abs/1604.03758
1
The Tau One-Way Functions Class: P ≠ NP
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0
11,499,808
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comment
mkagenius
1,460,663,451
&gt; Copying from the post 2 years back<p>For those who missed this story: Its the 20 year anniversary of the robots.txt file. The new Google Easter Egg robots.txt was uploaded recently, on the anniversary of the Robots.txt file. You can access the new Robots file at google.com&#x2F;killer-robots.txt. The new File Reads as: User-Agent: T-1000 User-Agent: T-800 Disallow: &#x2F;+LarryPage Disallow: &#x2F;+SergeyBrin T-1000 and T-800 are the different versions of Terminators for the movie series, The Terminator.&lt;br &#x2F;&gt;Here its telling these two killer robots to not kill the Google founders, Larry Page and Sergey Brin. Pun Intended. Now Larry &amp; Sergey are safe enough.
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[ 11499855 ]
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NelsonMinar
1,460,663,457
There&#x27;s a good Reply All podcast episode about this. They do work. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;gimletmedia.com&#x2F;episode&#x2F;18-silence-and-respect&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;gimletmedia.com&#x2F;episode&#x2F;18-silence-and-respect&#x2F;</a>
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dr_jay
1,460,663,463
That is a great idea. Want to help out? :)
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11,499,811
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joeld42
1,460,663,464
That&#x27;s a fair point, I tried Atom and it felt laggy but I haven&#x27;t tried this one yet.
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[ 11503467 ]
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story
yitchelle
1,460,663,466
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http://www.ripenecommerce.com/amazon-seo-insights
1
What makes a product rank well on Amazon?
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0
11,499,813
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story
myrtille
1,460,663,472
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[ 11503400 ]
http://cedrozor.github.io/myrtille/
2
Myrtille, your desktop in a browser. Open source, zero install/config
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0
11,499,814
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comment
anton_tarasenko
1,460,663,483
This is how it looks then: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;docs.google.com&#x2F;spreadsheets&#x2F;d&#x2F;1hRpEmkV26VQSN2q_X9_BXoNP7MHvuyjCrJJLWt6NExA&#x2F;edit?usp=sharing" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;docs.google.com&#x2F;spreadsheets&#x2F;d&#x2F;1hRpEmkV26VQSN2q_X9_B...</a>
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11,499,815
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spacemanmatt
1,460,663,485
No, you&#x27;re a good citizen. When I saw the story hit facebook, it got reshared faster than anything else today.
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batbomb
1,460,663,503
Views and WITH statements help out quite a bit for this, though it does depend on the database. In general, basic views are well-supported across all RDBMS. If your database supports it, Materialized Views are amazing for the caching of certain complex queries and reusability, and that&#x27;s something SQLAlchemy can&#x27;t do by itself.
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vox_mollis
1,460,663,517
ASLR is already a part of pretty much every current operating system ( save FreeBSD-RELEASE )
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11,499,730
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[ 11499954, 11499958, 11499846 ]
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ghaff
1,460,663,521
I was being a little snarky. All I meant is that the Oasis seems to be a rather premium device compared to a Paperwhite and that doesn&#x27;t obviously overlap with the market for low-cost airlines. (Though, to be fair, the dynamics on internal European travel are a bit different than the US.)
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11,499,820
true
comment
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1,460,663,568
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jarrodatCode42
1,460,663,546
Since the infrastructure for CrashPlan&#x27;s backup engine is the same between our Business&#x2F;Consumer clients, we recommend that all users routinely connect their devices to the backup destinations. That being said, this policy only affects CrashPlan for Home subscribers at this time.
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ngrilly
1,460,663,573
Why?
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[ 11500036 ]
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11,499,823
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EdHominem
1,460,663,575
&gt; &quot;something must be done, this is something&quot; kind of thinking. You don&#x27;t need to be absolutely evil or absolutely idiotic to subscribe to this philosophy.<p>To fall into it without warning, no. Like all fallacies, it&#x27;s a local maxima.<p>But to stick with it after it&#x27;s pointed out... At best that&#x27;s stupidity, at worst it&#x27;s deceit and treachery.
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[ 11501562 ]
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peeters
1,460,663,575
What am I missing? When I Google &quot;blackberry pin to pin encryption&quot; , the first result is this article:<p>&gt; Canadian government warns BBM PIN-to-PIN messaging is ‘most vulnerable method of communicating on a BlackBerry’<p><a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;bgr.com&#x2F;2013&#x2F;02&#x2F;27&#x2F;blackberry-messenger-security-vulnerability-346634&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;bgr.com&#x2F;2013&#x2F;02&#x2F;27&#x2F;blackberry-messenger-security-vuln...</a><p>&gt; Canadian government agency Public Safety Canada, which is tasked with overseeing cyber-security across all federal departments, has issued a memo warning government workers that communicating using BlackBerry Messenger PIN-to-PIN messaging is “the most vulnerable method of communicating on a BlackBerry.” ... According to the memo, PIN-to-PIN messages sent via BlackBerry Messenger could be intercepted and read by any BlackBerry user anywhere in the world. ... “Although PIN-to-PIN messages are encrypted, they key used is a global cryptographic ‘key’ that is common to every BlackBerry device all over the world,” Public Safety Canada official stated in the memo. “Any BlackBerry device can potentially decrypt all PIN-to-PIN messages sent by any other BlackBerry device.”<p>Why is there any surprise then that the RCMP has capability to decrypt it?
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myrbergs_army
1,460,663,583
Author of the original story here, would be very interested in discussing further... evan [at] atavist [dot] net
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11,499,707
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[ 11515765 ]
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11,499,824
true
comment
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1,460,663,582
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bache
1,460,663,595
It does seem like a ridiculous claim
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ufmace
1,460,663,657
It&#x27;s kinda strange that major &quot;mainstream&quot; news publications are publishing articles with web board posts as the primary source, indeed, the entire story itself, with basically zero extra work. They could at least try to contact the guy, interview him, make sure he at least seems legit.
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11,498,232
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[ 11500327 ]
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11,499,837
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story
brahmwg
1,460,663,663
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http://m.phys.org/news/2016-04-trees-carbon.html
1
Trees trade carbon among each other, study reports
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0
11,499,826
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comment
coffeedan
1,460,663,586
yep, those Are Kiva robots.
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11,497,981
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11,499,827
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johne20
1,460,663,593
Anyone know how to &quot;fix&quot; the issue where I paste in a block of html and it doesn&#x27;t line up and indent properly? This works as I would expect in Sublime.
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astrodust
1,460,663,594
It&#x27;s distribution dependent.
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coroutines
1,460,663,612
I wonder how they decided spending money on this would be a good investment.<p>They must know how the internet works.<p>What specifically were they paying for that made it worth it? Keeping references to the incident away from their Facebook page?<p>Who HASN&#x27;T seen that image by now?<p>What a misguided allocation of funds.
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[ 11500039 ]
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waynecochran
1,460,663,658
John Stockton averaged 10.5 assists per game. I wonder what Kobe&#x27;s assists were after Shaq left?
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[ 11499904 ]
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11,499,832
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story
ShaneBonich
1,460,663,615
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http://motherboard.vice.com/read/remote-control-border-lines?
2
How Burner Cell Phones Became the Tool of the Trade for Human Smugglers
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0
11,499,830
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comment
krisdol
1,460,663,600
You&#x27;re arguing that stating that water is wet is an assumption
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[ 11500139 ]
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bmj
1,460,663,651
<i>For electricians, you could imagine that IoT&#x2F;home automation tech will change a lot: Home electrics could become more complex and more locked-down, requiring additional qualifications. In the worst case, independent electricians could find themselves in a similar situation that independent car repair shops are today.</i><p>I would see this going in the direction of some auto mechanics--that you have to be certified by a particular company in order to work on their equipment. But, yes, as you point out, independent electricians, as a vocation, aren&#x27;t going anywhere soon. There are too many homes (particularly in the east) with very old wiring.
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story
guifortaine
1,460,663,677
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https://github.com/voronianski/simon-le-bottle
1
Using the Facebook Messenger Platform from Node
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0
11,499,838
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comment
jholman
1,460,663,665
If you want to do well on GCJ, practice GCJ. All the past contests are online.
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[ 11500132, 11504026 ]
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rinon
1,460,663,729
Indeed, I was trying to give well-known examples. Some of the more interesting, not widely-deployed PaX mitigations are more accurate here.
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idunning
1,460,663,768
This is partially fixed in Julia 0.5 (or available now as BaseTestNext.jl in Julia 0.4). Its basically a backwards-compatible rewrite of the former Base.Test that adds the notion of test sets - enabling counting tests by default, but also not immediately failing out on the first bad test and even logging.
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11,499,842
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story
ItsDaBaest
1,460,663,699
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true
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http://sova.ponominalu.ru
1
Сова+-+
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11,499,843
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jwebgordon
1,460,663,700
Great stat I saw today: the 95-96 Bulls made 544 3-pointers that year. The 2015-2016 Warriors, if you took away every 3-pointer that Curry made, would still have 675. The game has changed indeed!
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11,499,576
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[ 11500548, 11506221 ]
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baldgeek
1,460,663,744
When is it coming to Android? :)
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omginternets
1,460,663,705
Don&#x27;t pretend like that&#x27;s a peer-reviewed source.
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beloch
1,460,663,691
Correct me if I&#x27;m wrong, but rm doesn&#x27;t wipe data out, it just deallocates the disk space devoted to it. If you actually managed to wipe out your entire file system with rm you could likely still recover your data with a recovery tool.<p>This story smells a wee bit fishy to me.
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[ 11502277, 11506646 ]
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_kst_
1,460,663,718
Another dangerous command is `crontab` with no arguments. It reads a new crontab from standard input. If you type Ctrl-C, it will abort and leave your existing crontab in place. If you type Ctrl-D, you&#x27;ve just created a new empty crontab and clobbered your old one.<p>My personal crontab is in a separate file in a source control system. I don&#x27;t use `crontab -e`; I edit that file and feed it to the `crontab` command.<p>(It would be nice if HN handled backticks the way they&#x27;re done in Markdown.)
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refriedbeans3
1,460,663,693
That Austin drop is staggering. And interesting to note that Dallas (?!) has 2x the venture investment that Austin does. Detroit had slightly more in Q1. Crazy.
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[ 11500009 ]
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LastZactionHero
1,460,663,616
If something as banal as a shoe commercial has a legitimately inspirational message about failure and success, you could argue society has reached a new high.
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11,499,768
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[ 11499859 ]
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waynecochran
1,460,663,793
It generally known that if you pass to Carmelo you&#x27;ll never see the ball again.
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11,499,855
true
comment
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1,460,663,841
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story
uptown
1,460,663,850
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true
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[ 11499869 ]
https://www.privateinternetaccess.com/blog/2016/04/subway-photographer-ties-random-photos-peoples-social-media-profiles/
1
Subway photographer connects random photos to people's social media profiles
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11,499,853
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PhasmaFelis
1,460,663,834
On the other hand, if there are companies that have succeeded in quietly optimizing away their critics, then we wouldn&#x27;t know.
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11,499,451
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[ 11499951 ]
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duaneb
1,460,663,873
Hah! Perhaps. I don&#x27;t think you can call it banal considering the investment, however—it&#x27;s straight-up propaganda. I highly doubt Kobe&#x27;s three-point shot has anything to do with his using Nikes.
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jholman
1,460,663,913
Okay, does anyone actually believe that causes a problem?<p>I can think of ONE time when that causes a problem, and that&#x27;s with indentation with multi-line strings. Oh look, HJSON included that feature. That&#x27;s like throwing the baby out and keeping all the bathwater.
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11,499,780
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[ 11500825, 11502111 ]
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avivo
1,460,663,985
Kite should just ask for a limited license like Heroku does (ideally more limited). Anyone worried about their IP should never use a service like Kite (or Heroku!) without looking at the legal docs — to ensure that they are not giving away their work for another organization to use or sell...<p>Kite doesn&#x27;t seem to currently have any legal docs that I can see, but I assume that will rectified soon.<p>More detail in another comment: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=11499670" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=11499670</a> (Also, hi Adam and Alex! Congrats!)
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sethish
1,460,663,838
&gt; security track record as good as Google Play or iTunes<p>Do they have great security track records? I know a lot of the integrations like games into their systems are terribly insecure.
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[ 11499928 ]
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jhasse
1,460,663,880
Having the git diff in your editor gives you syntax highlighting and let&#x27;s you edit it (the right side) like you&#x27;re used to.<p>I guess the killer feature of VS Code is multiple cursors (Ctrl+D). I only know of Sublime Text and Atom who also have this feature on Linux, not sure about Kate. Sublime Text is closed source and not gratis, Atom is slow and buggy.
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[ 11500765, 11500698 ]
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11,499,857
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zipwitch
1,460,663,850
Do you mean, &quot;this is a honeypot put out by the NSA, to see who wants this&quot;? Or do you mean, &quot;this is an attempt by the developers to see how the NSA tries to subvert, sabotage, or otherwise compromise their project&quot;?
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aab0
1,460,663,842
If nothing else, you would think after the first time he would have replaced the carpet with some sort of flat lining which would make finding objects much easier.
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idunning
1,460,663,822
Not sure what you mean - in case our office gets hit by a meteor?
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detaro
1,460,664,008
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=11491264" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=11491264</a>
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Retric
1,460,663,897
Attractive nuance is supposed to apply to children.<p>However, failure to collect keys get&#x27;s into murky situations.
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[ 11500156 ]
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