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38,108,400 | comment | jeffbee | "2023-11-02T02:48:53" | null | Perhaps this is possible in your state, but under the California state constitution eminent domain powers can only be used for enumerated state interests, when there is no other choice than to take private property, and the taking has to be the minimal taking that achieves the purpose.<p>I know under <i>Kelo</i> eminent domain can be used for any and all purposes in Connecticut, but that's not true everywhere. | null | null | 38,108,169 | 38,100,541 | null | [
38109438
] | null | null |
38,108,401 | comment | gorlilla | "2023-11-02T02:48:57" | null | What do you do when 'high-earning' last decade is somewhat laughable to this one? Was compounding worth it when inflation just gobbled up all of the effort you out into those earnings faster than interest could compound?<p>It's been a rough couple of decades afterall. | null | null | 38,106,797 | 38,098,779 | null | [
38108920
] | null | null |
38,108,402 | comment | fzeroracer | "2023-11-02T02:49:20" | null | It's become particularly worse in the past 30 years or so as the cycle of stripmining has intensified. CEOs and execs and investors and private equity are quickly ransacking businesses and siphoning money. The idea of a sustainable business model has vanished as growth involves throwing billions of dollars into cornering and monopolizing a market so you can profit from the rent. It's even harder for new businesses to start up because costs are high enough that you NEED investment funds. | null | null | 38,108,344 | 38,107,537 | null | [
38108757
] | null | null |
38,108,403 | comment | taurath | "2023-11-02T02:49:23" | null | The fertility rate also lowers for other factors. Declines do not match up with incomes - I think implying cost of living, which is what anecdotally almost everyone I know says, is a nonfactor may be premature. In the US the birthrate has been mostly the same since the early 70s. The difference between the top and bottom birthrates by income is all of 28% (45 per 1000 women for $200k or more, vs 63 per 1000 women for under $10k) - thats significant but certainly not the only factor. | null | null | 38,108,311 | 38,107,537 | null | [
38108452
] | null | null |
38,108,404 | comment | ngcc_hk | "2023-11-02T02:49:26" | null | <a href="https://icfp23.sigplan.org/details/scheme-2023/5/A-R4RS-Compliant-REPL-in-8Kb" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://icfp23.sigplan.org/details/scheme-2023/5/A-R4RS-Comp...</a><p>Hope there is a video | null | null | 38,108,305 | 38,108,305 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,405 | story | thelastgallon | "2023-11-02T02:49:27" | Panasonic launches a central heat pump system that works in -15C (5F) | null | https://electrek.co/2023/10/27/panasonic-launches-a-central-heat-pump-system-that-works-in-15c-5f/ | 3 | null | 38,108,405 | 0 | null | null | null |
38,108,406 | comment | riku_iki | "2023-11-02T02:49:28" | null | in which context, and why your bold statements should be trusted blindly? | null | null | 38,108,386 | 38,105,839 | null | [
38109025,
38109245
] | null | null |
38,108,407 | comment | inrodos | "2023-11-02T02:49:38" | null | Location: UK
Remote: Easy
Willing to relocate: Yes
Technologies: Rust, Typescript, Solidity, Functional incl Haskell, Postgres, Cloud, Linux, Svelte, SvelteKit
Résumé/CV: On request
Email: blue.flag0852@fastmail.com<p>management experience, passionate about solving problems, startup experience, ideally backend, ability for frontend, correct and verifiable software | null | null | 38,099,084 | 38,099,084 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,408 | comment | demondemidi | "2023-11-02T02:49:38" | null | If you’re eating it every day it’s a problem. | null | null | 38,104,719 | 38,104,719 | null | [
38108596
] | null | null |
38,108,409 | comment | renegade-otter | "2023-11-02T02:49:46" | null | Wouldn't it be simpler to just have a 'Nix running in a VMWare Fusion? Why go through this pain?<p>I am on a Mac, but my work is done on a Mint. | null | null | 38,108,048 | 38,104,554 | null | [
38108602,
38109282,
38108594
] | null | null |
38,108,410 | comment | sshanky | "2023-11-02T02:49:51" | null | The site keeps repeating video. Try the share button, copy the link, past and open it and you’ll see the same footage again and again. I’m not convinced it is live at all. | null | null | 38,107,711 | 38,107,711 | null | [
38108430,
38108958
] | null | null |
38,108,411 | comment | PaulDavisThe1st | "2023-11-02T02:50:42" | null | I'm nearly 60. I've been self-employed for the last 25 years. I worked at precisely two jobs that offered any sort of pension funding at all.<p>Next month, I'll be forced to cash out the pension funds from a multinational corporation I worked for for 18 months back in the mid-1980s. $14k. I'll take it :)<p>The point you're making is predicated on the idea that there are only two options: company-owned-and-managed pension plans (typically defined benefit) and individually directed investment based strategies (i.e. 401(k)).<p>However, the problems with both of these (and yes, there are problems with both of them) can be addressed by socialized pension schemes. Make them opt-out (opt-in if you must): the vast majority of people will opt in, the plans will have enormous financial stability (some would argue based on too much economic power, which we can already see said about e.g. Vanguard), and people would not be forced to grapple with investment questions they are generally ill-equipped to answer. For those that really think they can do better by themselves - go for it. | null | null | 38,107,396 | 38,101,388 | null | [
38108541
] | null | null |
38,108,412 | comment | Manuel_D | "2023-11-02T02:50:45" | null | It'd be good to see if there's a more up to date survey, but substantially more working parents would rather not work and take care of their kids full time: <a href="https://www.pewresearch.org/social-trends/2007/07/12/fewer-mothers-prefer-full-time-work/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.pewresearch.org/social-trends/2007/07/12/fewer-m...</a><p>This discussion is usually framed in terms of "people can't work because they have to parent kids" when in reality is more like "people can't spend as much time parenting because they have to work". If money were not a problem, more people would quit their jobs or work part time to spend more time with kids.<p>And as other commenters have pointed out taking care of children is indeed a productive job even if a stay at home parent doesn't file a W-2. Furthermore, there's some research (though not without controversy) that kids cared for by parents have better outcomes than those placed in child care. | null | null | 38,107,537 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,413 | comment | sturob | "2023-11-02T02:50:49" | null | The story they lead their marketing with ends:<p>“Cool! Now this will be with me wherever I go.”<p>So the next question is obviously:<p>"Will it? Forever? What are you doing to ensure that?"<p>Because most consumer startups fail. The ones that get bought out usually end up sunset or neglected. Even the ones that IPO often alienate users by chasing quarterly earnings (evernote/dropbox/pinterest). | null | null | 38,105,254 | 38,101,966 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,414 | comment | wigglewoggle | "2023-11-02T02:51:00" | null | I share your disdain for drums. Only issue is every four wheel disc vehicle I own still has a drum for the parking brake. Except these days they're electronic and need a scan tool to release them and get the rotor off! | null | null | 38,108,082 | 38,102,083 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,415 | comment | FireBeyond | "2023-11-02T02:51:32" | null | Not unless there's a lot of money on the line.<p>Step daughter had an accident where the issue was a collision mid intersection, assumption of one party running a red light. No cameras, no witnesses except her and the other party, and both were adamant they had a green.<p>The car she was driving absolutely has telemetry that could have shown "was she at a complete stop, and for how long", immediately before the collision, i.e. showing being stopped at a red light before going (still some discussion on timing if jumping the gun, sure).<p>Insurance wasn't even remotely interested. It's not worth it to get that information unless, like I (and they) said, it's a very serious accident with a lot of money on the line and no other ways to determine fault. | null | null | 38,107,610 | 38,102,083 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,416 | comment | stefan_ | "2023-11-02T02:51:43" | null | I can understand shipping the old stuff because you don't give a fuck, but why on earth are they .. patching them. Jesus. | null | null | 38,107,155 | 38,104,554 | null | [
38108586
] | null | null |
38,108,417 | comment | duxup | "2023-11-02T02:51:51" | null | I remember an app that had a recycling bin so when you added a file… someone else got it so they could “re-use it”.<p>Fun and similarly random idea. | null | null | 38,108,389 | 38,107,711 | null | [
38108731
] | null | null |
38,108,418 | comment | jmye | "2023-11-02T02:51:51" | null | This is nonsense. Daycare is expensive because no one provides it, and because no one wants Joey Bag of Donuts with no insurance or credentials watching their kids, whom they presumably love (although many people do just that because it’s their only option and few states do a sufficient job enforcing quality standards).<p>There are waitlists long enough that parents have to sign up before their child is born. That’s nothing, at all, to do with “landlords” or “investors”.<p>I’m so tired of faux-progressive outrage online that always only focuses on how one of roughly three things are to blame for everything, no matter how tenuous or invented the connection is. | null | null | 38,108,132 | 38,107,537 | null | [
38108489
] | null | null |
38,108,419 | comment | explaininjs | "2023-11-02T02:51:52" | null | For one, it'd be a potential way to maintain a sophisticated full-conversion lifetime A/B testing setup with no PII of any sort ever hashed/retained. No IP addresses required, or anything else. | null | null | 38,106,710 | 38,081,633 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,420 | story | bpierre | "2023-11-02T02:52:43" | Midjourney Style Tuner | null | https://docs.midjourney.com/docs/style-tuner | 2 | null | 38,108,420 | 0 | null | null | null |
38,108,421 | comment | wigglewoggle | "2023-11-02T02:52:53" | null | Chains usually have no service interval, so at the outset they seem cheaper and more reliable. But the unfortunate reality is they still fail, or something related to keeping them on fails, you just live in a false sense of security for a few 10's of thousands of km more | null | null | 38,108,315 | 38,102,083 | null | [
38108728
] | null | null |
38,108,422 | comment | rendaw | "2023-11-02T02:53:00" | null | This doesn't mention accumulation at all. My understanding is that these accumulate in your body and are fairly difficult to get rid of. From that perspective Ars' arguments about allowed daily intake levels don't make much sense. If they accumulate, you'll get 1000x the amount by eating a piece every day for 3 years. | null | null | 38,104,719 | 38,104,719 | null | [
38108608,
38108665,
38108653,
38108641,
38108478
] | null | null |
38,108,423 | comment | FireBeyond | "2023-11-02T02:53:05" | null | > The other is to have actual sensors in the tires that read pressures.<p>Hell, my car (admittedly a performance vehicle) will give you exact PSI, but more than that, even gives you individual tire <i>temperatures</i>. | null | null | 38,104,342 | 38,102,083 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,424 | comment | jart | "2023-11-02T02:53:10" | null | I'm so happy to hear you're interested in this problem. There's two packages in the Cosmo repo you could depend on for doing this: third_party/double-conversion/ and third_party/gdtoa/. Both libraries are pretty good, but I think double-conversion is the more impressive of the two. It'd be great to see scanf() parse floats with double-conversion if it's possible. One last thing, if any of the non-standardized features of our scanf() implementation get in your way, then I'm not super attached to them and they can be deleted. | null | null | 38,108,334 | 38,101,613 | null | [
38108574
] | null | null |
38,108,425 | comment | huytersd | "2023-11-02T02:53:15" | null | Most people are dissatisfied with their jobs/professions according to surveys so you would be in the minority. | null | null | 38,108,250 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,426 | comment | explaininjs | "2023-11-02T02:53:25" | null | This (ostensibly) empowers the user-facing "feature" whereby you're presented the "User XXX is on TikTok, you should join them!" modal when you click their link. Which is perhaps better than no end-user impact at all. | null | null | 38,098,553 | 38,081,633 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,427 | story | lawn | "2023-11-02T02:53:30" | I designed my own keyboard layout. Was it worth it? | null | https://www.jonashietala.se/blog/2023/11/02/i_designed_my_own_keyboard_layout_was_it_worth_it/ | 4 | null | 38,108,427 | 0 | null | null | null |
38,108,428 | comment | tflinton | "2023-11-02T02:53:36" | null | Mastercard | US Remote, Salt Lake City, Ireland, Mumbai | Full Time | Cloud and Platform Engineers at all levels.<p>Come work on a growing sector of fintech in Mastercards Open Banking division. Work with large scale AWS systems and design and implement state of the art distributed systems. We’re looking for cloud engineers, platform engineers and distributed systems engineers from Junior to Principal.<p>Email your resume to trevor.linton@mastercard.com. | null | null | 38,099,086 | 38,099,086 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,429 | comment | freetime2 | "2023-11-02T02:53:44" | null | For what it’s worth, I actually appreciate most of the safety features on my 2021 Toyota Alphard.<p>The power sliding doors and rear gate move slowly, but not to the point I’ve ever found it annoying. With kids getting in and out, I wouldn’t want it to be any faster. And unlike in the article, they don’t stop until they actually encounter resistance - which worked fine the one time my kid closed the door on me when I was fetching something out of the back seat.<p>The proximity sensors do beep pretty loudly every time I get near an obstacle - which is frankly more often than not when parking, and my wife does find it pretty annoying. But it’s a large car, and visibility around the front and rear corners is not great - so I appreciate having an extra audio cue when I’m approaching an obstacle. Often my goal is to get as close as possible to said obstacle when parking (wall, fence, etc) - so my cue to stop is when it finally plays the long sustained beep to let me know that impact is imminent.<p>I’ve only had automatic breaking engage a few times. Mostly when I back into a parking space too fast and it thinks I’m going to crash - which is easy enough to avoid by going a bit slower. Once it engaged while I was stopped at a traffic light due to a massive downpour which I guess confused the proximity sensor. That was annoying, and could have been worse if I were actually moving, but I just turned it off with a button on the dashboard and carried on.<p>I find lane keeping assistance (which engages automatically with cruise control) to be incredibly useful on highways, and while it does get wonky sometimes in heavy snow or around construction sites, the car is pretty good about disengaging the feature automatically when it gets confused and makes a ding to let me know. At that point I’ll usually just turn it off manually with a button on the steering wheel until conditions improve. The article mentions needing to keep applying force to the steering wheel even when stopped, but my car doesn't require that.<p>There’s also a lane departure warning that engages if I cross over a lane divider without signaling first, which plays two short beeps and applies some force to the steering wheel. But easy enough to override if I continue applying force, and most of the time it’s my fault for not signaling properly anyway.<p>Doors do automatically lock themselves again after a while, but it’s nowhere close to 15 seconds like in the article. It’s maybe happened once or twice and no big deal to unlock again. On the other hand there have been times when I have unlocked my car because I wanted to grab something, and then got distracted and never actually visited it. In these cases I’m glad to have it lock itself again vs. remaining unlocked for several hours.<p>My car does play a chime at startup, but it’s not unpleasant, and I’m so used to my now that I have stopped noticing it.<p>I don't have tire pressure sensors - but my mother had a car with this feature many years ago and they were indeed prone to false alarms. She took it to the dealer several times to fix it, and the dealer pretty much acknowleged that they were garbage. Not sure if she ever got it fixed permanently or just learned to ignore it.<p>Anyway - I know that a lot of this stuff varies by manufacturer and model, so I’m not saying my experience is universal. But for anyone asking who actually appreciates this stuff - I do. Staying safe is really important to me, and whatever annoyance the safety systems in my car cause is easily offset by their benefit. I certainly wouldn’t want to go back in time to before safety assistance features existed. | null | null | 38,104,656 | 38,102,083 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,430 | comment | royal_ts | "2023-11-02T02:53:46" | null | Definitely isn't live as it has shown me Paris which is in the same time zone as I am and it's already way past midnight and it's been bright daylight there | null | null | 38,108,410 | 38,107,711 | null | [
38108486
] | null | null |
38,108,431 | comment | charonn0 | "2023-11-02T02:53:47" | null | Receiving a service is consideration. | null | null | 38,104,056 | 38,101,760 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,432 | comment | ShadowBanThis01 | "2023-11-02T02:53:47" | null | And it's an actual sports car. People don't even know what that means anymore.<p>And regular hatchbacks and station wagons are now "SUVs." | null | null | 38,108,392 | 38,102,083 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,433 | comment | Manuel_D | "2023-11-02T02:53:49" | null | An alternate explanation is that high income people have high expectations of their children. An upper-class couple is probably going to want to send their kids to private school, do competitive sports, tutor them in an instrument, etc. Thus, the cost of children is higher for wealthier people. | null | null | 38,108,311 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,434 | comment | Fire-Dragon-DoL | "2023-11-02T02:54:06" | null | And then you have sexism though. I want to enjoy my children as much as my wife and we both want a career too | null | null | 38,108,316 | 38,107,537 | null | [
38108457
] | null | null |
38,108,435 | comment | zeroCalories | "2023-11-02T02:54:06" | null | Yeah, it's not like these parents vanished into thin air. They are doing work that produces real value, we simply can't capture the output as a clean number in GDP or, maybe more importantly, tax dollars. | null | null | 38,107,950 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,436 | comment | gugagore | "2023-11-02T02:54:08" | null | OO is a lot of things to a lot of people, but it's not "structured control flow". | null | null | 38,107,412 | 38,097,984 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,437 | comment | iancmceachern | "2023-11-02T02:54:11" | null | Not different times, they're still at it | null | null | 38,108,090 | 38,106,461 | null | [
38108642,
38108605
] | null | null |
38,108,438 | comment | huytersd | "2023-11-02T02:54:17" | null | Childcare is not the answer. Letting one parent stay at home while being able to financially afford a single income life is. | null | null | 38,108,257 | 38,107,537 | null | [
38108929
] | null | null |
38,108,439 | comment | parineum | "2023-11-02T02:54:34" | null | It's sugary in any form. That's an issue of ignorance rather than being mislead. | null | null | 38,095,287 | 38,094,768 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,440 | comment | charonn0 | "2023-11-02T02:54:47" | null | A cucumber is a good, not a service. | null | null | 38,105,478 | 38,101,760 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,441 | comment | fomine3 | "2023-11-02T02:55:09" | null | QA is somewhat scalable than development. More test to find more bugs. | null | null | 38,107,706 | 38,101,328 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,442 | comment | kromem | "2023-11-02T02:55:13" | null | I wouldn't be so quick to dismiss a niche for third party data analysis.<p>A very common feature across verticals is that in house data analysis is siloed.<p>While it's a difficult sell, getting multiple siloed data sources to agree to 3rd party analysis for shared gains can be <i>extremely</i> successful for everyone involved when pulled off.<p>So looking specifically at pharma, while analysis of published papers is meh, an often discussed component of research is the bias against publishing negative results.<p>So a hypothetical product like using ML across multiple firms' data of failed products and research in order to establish a model that could more quickly identify dud research avenues by leveraging industry data could only exist with the broadest dataset as a 3rd party product and would deliver gains that could be quite profitable for some of the largest companies out there.<p>Also, I think anyone who has worked with larger corporations on in house tech knows that even if the individual efforts are quite large and sophisticated, the sheer amount of bureaucracy that goes into every single thing at a sizable firm can mean significant advantages for startups vs in-house efforts, particularly when related to fast moving fields.<p>I'd agree that "moving into a niche without knowing it extremely well" can be fraught with issues and that attempting to get buy in from B2B firms for a startup is a nightmare, but I'd disagree with "large company does X in house so creating a startup to do X is a bad idea." | null | null | 38,107,621 | 38,105,839 | null | [
38108551
] | null | null |
38,108,443 | comment | mitemte | "2023-11-02T02:55:30" | null | Speaking of bricking devices. One of Apple’s greatest shames was releasing Apple TV 4K, which lacks a USB port. This model could only be unbricked by Apple, until iOS 17 made it possible to do so via the iPhone recovery feature. | null | null | 38,103,380 | 38,101,328 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,444 | comment | taurath | "2023-11-02T02:55:44" | null | > if you want people at the bottom to make a decent wage then customers will have to pay it<p>We could always consider it a public good. $35 billion a year is the rough estimated cost I've found to provide universal pre-k (ages 3-5), with people leaving the workforce costing $155billion elsewhere in the thread. We spend at minimum $880 billion on the military. Seems like a no brainer to me. | null | null | 38,108,167 | 38,107,537 | null | [
38109199
] | null | null |
38,108,445 | comment | huytersd | "2023-11-02T02:55:45" | null | I’ve only ever heard good things about fiber. High bandwidth, relatively low cost and next to no outages because they are buried. What’s dreadful about it? | null | null | 38,105,219 | 38,103,733 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,446 | comment | nomel | "2023-11-02T02:56:02" | null | I used to eat a large bar of very dark, high quality, chocolate per day (having to constantly explain to onlookers that the whole bar had the sam sugar as a half cup of milk). I’m sure I was in the 99th percentile for cocoa. I stopped when I saw this coming a few years ago. | null | null | 38,108,117 | 38,104,719 | null | [
38108563
] | null | null |
38,108,447 | comment | fzeroracer | "2023-11-02T02:56:03" | null | Wages are not 1:1 corresponded with reduction in labor force, because companies will often gladly squeeze individuals harder and harder rather than pay more to hire more. Look at all of the people who complained about 'people not wanting to work' when fast food and restaurant industries had a lack of workers.<p>Additionally this can tend to have bad effects on the rest of our systems, for example the nursing shortage isn't resulting in better pay for most individuals despite them being in high demand. It's resulting in a rise in traveling nurses which also impacts the salary of other nurses. Companies are incredibly resistant to paying people more, especially when they have monopolistic control over jobs in certain areas which allows them to forcibly depress wages. | null | null | 38,108,316 | 38,107,537 | null | [
38108472
] | null | null |
38,108,448 | comment | jkaplowitz | "2023-11-02T02:56:03" | null | That sounds like a violation of pretty much any well-developed corporate conflict of interest policy, at least assuming they remain employed at the short-sold company during the loan. | null | null | 38,103,000 | 38,101,388 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,449 | comment | dumpsterdiver | "2023-11-02T02:56:05" | null | Indeed, but when the alternative is missing critical security updates for years at a time one only needs to be bitten once to understand the value. | null | null | 38,108,293 | 38,104,554 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,450 | comment | qwertox | "2023-11-02T02:56:23" | null | ++++++++++++++ WARNING ++++++++++++++<p>If you're hosting the servers yourself, not the datacenter versions, then you need to be <i>very careful</i> about how much you upgrade.<p>Jira, yes, you can upgrade that to the latest version, which is 9.11.<p>I did the same with Bitbucket and after the upgrade it told me that I have a server license but need a datacenter license for this latest version, which is 8.15. You can only upgrade up to 8.14 [0]. Luckily the downgrade from 8.15 to 8.14 is easy and there are instructions for it [1].<p>So I checked the upgrade matrix for Confluence [2] to make sure that I won't have the same issues as with Bitbucket, but these huge, tremendous idiots at Atlassian don't mention a single word about 8.5 being the last version to support server licenses, all above that requires datacenter licenses. I say idiots, because in the upgrade matrix from Bitbucket they highlight this requirement with bold text, in the one from Confluence they don't even care mention it.<p>[0] <a href="https://confluence.atlassian.com/bitbucketserver/upgrade-matrix-966065971.html" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://confluence.atlassian.com/bitbucketserver/upgrade-mat...</a><p>[1] <a href="https://confluence.atlassian.com/bitbucketserver/downgrade-bitbucket-when-upgrading-with-server-license-to-bitbucket-data-center-8-15+-1305971302.html" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://confluence.atlassian.com/bitbucketserver/downgrade-b...</a><p>[2] <a href="https://confluence.atlassian.com/doc/confluence-upgrade-matrix-960695895.html" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://confluence.atlassian.com/doc/confluence-upgrade-matr...</a><p>[3] <a href="https://confluence.atlassian.com/doc/confluence-8-5-release-notes-1252010185.html" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://confluence.atlassian.com/doc/confluence-8-5-release-...</a> | null | null | 38,105,292 | 38,105,292 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,451 | comment | wly_cdgr | "2023-11-02T02:56:43" | null | TIL that lemmings are a real animal | null | null | 38,106,461 | 38,106,461 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,452 | comment | Kranar | "2023-11-02T02:56:49" | null | You argued that there are people in their 30s who can just afford food and shelter and implied that they are not having kids due to their economic situation, whereas 20 years ago (so in 2003) they would have had kids, presumably because their economic situation would have been better 20 years ago.<p>Yet the statistics show that:<p>1. Those with lower incomes have more kids than those with higher incomes.<p>2. This trend has existed for more than 20 years, closer to 50 years in fact.<p>Now that I've pointed this out you seem to want to argue that income is not the only factor that determines fertility rates. Certainly that is true, but given that it's true why did you seem to emphasize it so strongly in your post when it supported the conclusion you wanted to make, but when I point out the opposite only then do you decide to diminish the relationship between income and fertility?<p>If the relationship between income and fertility is not that significant when I point it out, then it's not that significant when you want to use it for your argument either in which case your entire point kind of falls apart.<p>Finally as an aside, there is no shortage of countries with either cheap or even free child care, mostly in wealthy countries such as Finland, Sweden, Norway. But guess what? Fertility rates in those countries are incredibly low. | null | null | 38,108,403 | 38,107,537 | null | [
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38,108,453 | comment | gmerc | "2023-11-02T02:56:51" | null | if this can run bookworm I am sold | null | null | 38,107,957 | 38,107,413 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,454 | comment | gnicholas | "2023-11-02T02:56:57" | null | > <i>Selection bias a real problem with charters and privates.</i><p>Charter schools are frequently oversubscribed, and admit students via lottery. This makes it pretty easy to run randomized tests that aren't affected by selection bias. | null | null | 38,103,612 | 38,085,417 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,455 | comment | Manuel_D | "2023-11-02T02:57:23" | null | Not exactly. I'm not sure about the age of your kids, but it's not uncommon to see parents shopping and doing other chores with kids. I definitely remember being taken to the post office, grocery store, etc. When parents are taking care of kids they're not totally unproductive. | null | null | 38,108,088 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,456 | comment | thewileyone | "2023-11-02T02:57:27" | null | If I heard the name "Devon Rodriguez", I'd ask who that was. I'd recall "Subway Portrait Guy" but only after a moment.<p>Yeah, he's good but he's not great as the reviewer pointed out: he's just popular because his videos showing the reactions are uplifting. Just like Thomas Kinkade paintings were good, but not substantial, and he was so popular you could buy his paintings in the mall in the 90's.<p>Subway Portrait Guy siccing his fans on the reviewer is just thin-skinned. | null | null | 38,077,684 | 38,077,684 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,457 | comment | huytersd | "2023-11-02T02:57:38" | null | Yeah can’t have it all. I’d be willing to put up with some sexism if it meant everyday wasn’t a low paid grind to the gravestone. I would bet a lot of women would given how dissatisfied the workforce is currently. | null | null | 38,108,434 | 38,107,537 | null | [
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] | null | null |
38,108,458 | comment | trealira | "2023-11-02T02:57:40" | null | Feminism arose in the US during the 1950s in the first place because a significant amount of women were not satisfied with being stay-at-home mothers and wives. Even if the world were suddenly taken back to the 1950s, the same thing would happen again eventually.<p>Also, if half the working population stayed home, the economy would be half as productive. Wages won't automatically increase; business will just go to some country or region where comparable labor is more abundant, and the country's economy becomes less competitive. | null | null | 38,108,316 | 38,107,537 | null | [
38108493,
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] | null | null |
38,108,459 | comment | bagels | "2023-11-02T02:57:40" | null | I have no idea if that person should take blame, but is your opinion that the actions of the dead, no matter the circumstances, are beyond criticism? | null | null | 38,107,027 | 38,100,284 | null | [
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] | null | null |
38,108,460 | comment | 082349872349872 | "2023-11-02T02:57:52" | null | For a critique of the system from within, see « Добро пожаловать, или Посторонним вход воспрещён » | null | null | 38,108,099 | 38,108,099 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,461 | comment | mscdex | "2023-11-02T02:57:53" | null | Generally speaking (I've not tested this kind of setup with the cosmopolitan libc) what I've done in the past with C is use something like libmicrohttpd along with some web assets linked into the executable (`xxd -i` can help you with the assets). That gives you a single (small) binary where you can use HTML/CSS/JS for the main GUI and logic.<p>You can then integrate additional libraries as you please, such as sqlite3 to give yourself fast, local database access over an endpoint on the embedded HTTP/S/2 (or websocket) server. | null | null | 38,105,756 | 38,101,613 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,462 | comment | jumboliah | "2023-11-02T02:58:13" | null | Higher birth rates make for higher GDP. Encouraging careers for birthing parents suppresses birth rates. We are playing the short game, not the long game. | null | null | 38,107,537 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,463 | comment | cxr | "2023-11-02T02:58:37" | null | I'm on your side, but every time you say "a hypermedia" it kills me. | null | null | 38,106,789 | 38,103,310 | null | [
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] | null | null |
38,108,464 | comment | pfisherman | "2023-11-02T02:58:38" | null | I already gave you a real life example with the uniprot reference. Here is another flagship knowledge base that heavily leverages NLP extraction.[0] Here is another one that gets used in what seems like every network biology article.[1]<p>Meta analyses? Automating meta analyses is not a real need. They have their place, but it’s like a quaint cottage industry type thing - like custom haberdashery.<p>Also the most valuable knowledge is not in any publication. If you are reading about it in an article then you are already 2-3 years too late.<p>0. <a href="https://geneontology.org" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://geneontology.org</a><p>1. <a href="https://string-db.org/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://string-db.org/</a> | null | null | 38,108,149 | 38,105,839 | null | [
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] | null | null |
38,108,465 | comment | parineum | "2023-11-02T02:58:51" | null | > Actually, there is significant research that shows that childhood obesity is an excellent predictor of adulthood obesity.<p>Fact.<p>> Because sugar drinks made it so easy to take in way too many calories for children and hence became overweight, we now have a big cohort of adults with weight problems.<p>Speculation. | null | null | 38,095,162 | 38,094,768 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,466 | comment | db48x | "2023-11-02T02:59:03" | null | It’s email. How is it a poor experience? You literally just type out a description of your problem into your favorite email program, one you have used thousands of times in your life, put the address of the mailing list in the To field, and send it. Then when someone replies, you get the reply as an email. If that’s a poor user experience for you, then you are using the wrong email program. | null | null | 38,107,219 | 38,102,023 | null | [
38108632,
38108714
] | null | null |
38,108,467 | comment | grahamg | "2023-11-02T02:59:07" | null | Location: Chicago, IL<p>Remote: yes or hybrid on-site<p>Willing to relocate: no<p>Technologies: Java, Spring; Javascript, React, Node.js; Python, Django; PHP, Laravel | SQL, MySQL, PostgreSQL | Linux, Docker, Kubernetes | AWS, GCP<p>Résumé/CV: <a href="https://grahamg.github.io/resume/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://grahamg.github.io/resume/</a><p>Email: grahamg@duck.com<p>Software Engineer with 12 years experience, working for the past four years at a performance marketing analytics agency. Individual contributor on agile product team that produces Benchtools-- a competitive analytics tool, to provide a holistic view of the entire search landscape, such as which competitors are active in search, which search engines do they appear in. | null | null | 38,099,084 | 38,099,084 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,468 | comment | jonhohle | "2023-11-02T02:59:13" | null | You might suggest she write a MacPorts Portfile(s) (or the Homebrew equivalent) that describes the her setup. It is a distraction, but hopefully a one time distraction. It doesn’t have the overhead of running docker, gives her all the tools in well-known paths. IMHO (and as a fan), MacPorts has an advantage over HomeBrew by having all dependencies vendored so OS updates have less impact.<p>Edit to add, if you or her want help with this, I wouldn’t mind helping, reach out to my username at gmail. | null | null | 38,108,048 | 38,104,554 | null | [
38108769,
38108868,
38108583,
38108815
] | null | null |
38,108,469 | comment | parineum | "2023-11-02T02:59:19" | null | It doesn't matter how many fat cells you have if you're running a calorie deficit. | null | null | 38,106,071 | 38,094,768 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,470 | comment | johntiger1 | "2023-11-02T02:59:43" | null | A lot of doctors are fee for service in Canada/USA. So especially in a clinic setting, they would know roughly how much certain procedures/consults impact their bottom line (i.e. how much they're getting paid). It's like a consultant not knowing their hourly billable rate. | null | null | 38,107,109 | 38,098,779 | null | [
38108510
] | null | null |
38,108,471 | comment | cxr | "2023-11-02T03:00:03" | null | > one of Fielding's own examples from his blog<p>Where? | null | null | 38,105,650 | 38,103,310 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,472 | comment | huytersd | "2023-11-02T03:00:07" | null | I would bet there is only so much squeezing you can do and losing 40-50% of the workforce would mean that you cannot sustainably as one person to do the job of two for an extended period. | null | null | 38,108,447 | 38,107,537 | null | [
38108491
] | null | null |
38,108,473 | comment | jltsiren | "2023-11-02T03:00:10" | null | I was estimating the costs of providing the education, not the prices of getting it. (The latter would be €0/year in Finland.) If a university can charge more, it can usually find a way to spend the extra money. | null | null | 38,108,146 | 38,098,779 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,474 | comment | ngcc_hk | "2023-11-02T03:00:10" | null | Would like to run this in python or even micropythin. This would mean it can run on my ipad with pythonista or as part of Jupyter page or python book. | null | null | 38,108,305 | 38,108,305 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,475 | comment | dingi | "2023-11-02T03:00:13" | null | Having children is overrated anyways. If you don't have money or time, don't make them. Let's see how economic pundits achieve never ending growth without new people. | null | null | 38,107,537 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,476 | comment | dnedic | "2023-11-02T03:00:15" | null | I think the electricity savings pale compared to the value of human time saved. | null | null | 38,094,984 | 38,094,620 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,477 | comment | dublinben | "2023-11-02T03:00:23" | null | You should consider a bike with dynamo lights. It’s more purely mechanical than any car made in the last century, and you can do all the maintenance yourself. | null | null | 38,108,101 | 38,102,083 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,478 | comment | brigandish | "2023-11-02T03:00:24" | null | On the other hand, eating a piece every day for 3 years will likely bring other health effects (primarily, obesity and diabetes) that will ruin that person's life before the metals get them, not that they should ignore the metals, mind. | null | null | 38,108,422 | 38,104,719 | null | [
38108572,
38108513,
38108552,
38108549,
38108509,
38108522,
38108492,
38108503
] | null | null |
38,108,479 | comment | evulhotdog | "2023-11-02T03:00:40" | null | You don’t, and they’re not really hiding anything from anybody who has any knowledge in the security space. | null | null | 38,106,116 | 38,102,082 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,480 | comment | quotz | "2023-11-02T03:00:51" | null | Why americans drink 20g espressos is beyond me. Thats a triple espresso in european standards. A single espresso is 7 grams. Having double espresso in america would basically translate to 6 espressos in europe. I moved from Europe to New York City a few years ago and I always ask the baristas how many grams is their espresso and they dont know. I ask them if the single espresso drink they have is essentially dopio espresso and they have no clue what i am talking about. And on top of that it costs 4$ for an espresso + taxes which equals to around 4.50$. Coffee culture in NYC is subpar to any major european city, and I am afraid to even find out hows it like in other cities in the US! Even the shit third world european country I come from (in the balkans) has better coffee culture than NYC! Then they're wondering why nobody can sleep here! | null | null | 38,103,952 | 38,097,184 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,481 | comment | ellis0n | "2023-11-02T03:00:54" | null | I think innovation cannot be stopped. This is a classic problem of attack and defense. Stronger attack robots will force the creation of stronger defensive robots and time is the key. | null | null | 38,098,513 | 38,098,513 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,482 | comment | toomuchtodo | "2023-11-02T03:01:01" | null | No one wants to be told they can’t have it all. That is the reality. Life is about choices. Not gender specific. | null | null | 38,108,457 | 38,107,537 | null | [
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] | null | null |
38,108,483 | comment | xboxnolifes | "2023-11-02T03:01:03" | null | From what I remember about my AP CS exam, there were a lot of question on string manipulation. | null | null | 38,107,335 | 38,106,757 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,484 | comment | null | "2023-11-02T03:01:05" | null | null | null | null | 38,108,142 | 38,107,537 | null | null | true | null |
38,108,485 | comment | ejstronge | "2023-11-02T03:01:16" | null | I don’t have examples but in my coastal city, land values (for homes) are near 20% of the improvement. Edit: I'm seeing 40% land value compared to total assessed value for homes in my neighborhood, incidentally | null | null | 38,108,113 | 38,100,541 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,486 | comment | nivekkevin | "2023-11-02T03:01:18" | null | if it is live, oh man they better have a good moderation system | null | null | 38,108,430 | 38,107,711 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,487 | comment | sva_ | "2023-11-02T03:01:25" | null | Oof. I've been waiting for this TLD since it was first announced, checking it at irregular intervals, because my last name ends on 'ing'. Just hoping that nobody registers it before me (only 4 letters), because clearly I can't pay those premiums. | null | null | 38,100,284 | 38,100,284 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,488 | comment | ip26 | "2023-11-02T03:01:28" | null | It isn’t really radical policy, when you consider public school funding works the same way.<p>A better term than subsidy might help. For example, we don’t describe property taxes that go to your school district as an “education subsidy”. It’s just a public service you pay for (that everyone benefits from at some point in their lives). | null | null | 38,108,232 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,489 | comment | taurath | "2023-11-02T03:01:45" | null | > Daycare is expensive because no one provides it<p>Why isn't the Free Market providing it then?<p>> I’m so tired of faux-progressive outrage online that always only focuses on how one of roughly three things are to blame for everything<p>I have roughly 20 straight married friends and 4 have kids (all are making top 5% income) and 10 want them but are waiting until they can better afford housing. Thats the basis of my argument, that cost of living is a common complaint. Cost of living sucks, its worse than its ever been in many areas. In areas with low cost of living, they have the problem that housing is relatively cheap but jobs aren't plentiful. I don't think that's controversial, but please let me know what I'm missing. | null | null | 38,108,418 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,490 | comment | johntiger1 | "2023-11-02T03:01:50" | null | > We don’t need more internists or family med doctors<p>Pretty sure the big shortage is precisely in FM, because it's low-status and not as stimulating intellectually/too routine | null | null | 38,099,643 | 38,098,779 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,491 | comment | fzeroracer | "2023-11-02T03:02:00" | null | The key word is 'sustainably'. If companies cared about that, we wouldn't be in this spot. Companies will gladly coast with the bare minimum even if it means losing people can ruin entire systems or projects as long as the next quarter results look good. | null | null | 38,108,472 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,492 | comment | mixmastamyk | "2023-11-02T03:02:05" | null | Dark chocolate is low in sugar and carbs, what you appear to be concerned with. | null | null | 38,108,478 | 38,104,719 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,493 | comment | huytersd | "2023-11-02T03:02:07" | null | You’re making it sound like feminism is the cause for our current dire situation and I’m not completely sure that’s true. | null | null | 38,108,458 | 38,107,537 | null | [
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] | null | null |
38,108,494 | comment | _kb | "2023-11-02T03:02:14" | null | Australian here. Subsidised childcare is great, and absolutely crucial for single parent households. It disproportionally benefits private interests though, not families.<p>For-profit childcare centres have absolutely mastered the art of simultaneously minimising operating costs (underpaying staff) while increasing pricing. These increases then create pressure to improve subsidies. With CCS at up to 90% for low income households this creates a flow of public funds directly to their shareholders while not actually improving anything for the people it should help. | null | null | 38,108,232 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,495 | comment | blep_ | "2023-11-02T03:02:26" | null | I like how you disagree with the parent comment suggesting you drive very aggressively, and then nearly every example you give of the car being wrong is a direct result of you driving very aggressively. | null | null | 38,107,838 | 38,102,083 | null | [
38108808
] | null | null |
38,108,496 | comment | leetrout | "2023-11-02T03:02:31" | null | This year I started a company building daycare software.<p>My goal is to grow it sustainably while targeting small, independent providers.<p>There is so much shitty software out there that is over priced. I want to build safe, secure software I enjoy using myself while also being accessible for folks who arent savvy with technology everyday.<p>I am moving very slow right now since it is just me but excited about the potential.<p>My first customers are free while we figure out features but my goal is to charge $0.25/child/month. Waitlist and landing pages are free. Text and email notifications are pay per use while offering free credits each month.<p>My wife is a teacher, my mom was an SLP and I am a parent who never had a small, local provider have tech in their day care and payments and comms were manual and paper.<p>Real ability to affect change here. | null | null | 38,107,537 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,497 | story | pomdevv | "2023-11-02T03:02:40" | Show HN: (UPDATE) I made a web app that tells you if your food is spicy | Hi HN ! I've removed the login barrier so that everyone can try it :)<p>You can still check if a certain dish is spicy (on a general basis)<p>Last time theGeatZhopa mentioned adding allergens, so I'll look into it.<p>For the costs of running it, I've added a tip link for those who wants to support the development of this idea.<p>Have a great day ! See you in the comments :) | https://dieornot.com | 1 | null | 38,108,497 | 0 | null | null | null |
38,108,498 | comment | boopbeepbop | "2023-11-02T03:02:52" | null | This is great!
Do you rely on YouTube captions or do some sort of ASR? | null | null | 38,004,614 | 38,004,614 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,499 | comment | anjanb | "2023-11-02T03:03:03" | null | There's so much discussion here but I couldn't decide what is a good first course/book on linear algebra. Can someone please summarize and share a couple of books/courses ? Thanks | null | null | 38,060,159 | 38,060,159 | null | null | null | null |