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38,108,600 | comment | alex-rnv | "2023-11-02T03:21:08" | null | [dead] | null | null | 38,108,599 | 38,108,599 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,601 | comment | TylerE | "2023-11-02T03:21:15" | null | Huh? How is a rural road or parking lot with literally no other cars around "the highest possible fatality rate"?<p>It's not ME that scares me. It's Sally Mae driving a 7 thousand pound Suburban while talking on the phone and putting on make up. She won't even notice anything smaller than a full size sedan. | null | null | 38,108,571 | 38,102,083 | null | [
38108957
] | null | null |
38,108,602 | comment | hobotime | "2023-11-02T03:21:37" | null | Native on apple silicon can be magical. I remember Jupyter being awesome once I found the goat to sacrifice to get it to install a few years back. | null | null | 38,108,409 | 38,104,554 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,603 | comment | throw10920 | "2023-11-02T03:21:43" | null | > As someone who worked with Chinese nationals, even some of them who were complete simps for The Party had no desire to have all their finances completely digitized and tracked.<p>Heck, even if I/they were ok with the <i>government</i> tracking them, our current big <i>private</i> payment networks (Visa/Mastercard) actively track you and sell your transaction data to buyers - I really don't want that.<p>Unless and until Visa/Mastercard/et al are <i>legally</i> forbidden from selling or sharing your transaction data, there will always be a legitimate use for cash, and it's immoral to not take cash payments. | null | null | 38,099,694 | 38,098,671 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,604 | story | evanjrowley | "2023-11-02T03:21:54" | Oilite | null | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oilite | 4 | null | 38,108,604 | 1 | [
38108707
] | null | null |
38,108,605 | comment | null | "2023-11-02T03:22:11" | null | null | null | null | 38,108,437 | 38,106,461 | null | null | true | null |
38,108,606 | comment | dimensi0nal | "2023-11-02T03:22:11" | null | poop dot bike | null | null | 38,104,073 | 38,100,284 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,607 | comment | PaulDavisThe1st | "2023-11-02T03:22:11" | null | My results from the same query are related to yours but substantively different.<p>Top result: article from GameRant on the best colossal weapons (I have no idea what this means)<p>6 "intelligent" answers, the first of which when expanded lists the "Elden Ring: All 11 Colossal Swords, Ranked By Physical Strength"<p>Article from The Gamer called "Elden Ring: 14 Best Colossal Swords, Ranked"<p>4 YT videos<p>Reddit block<p>.... | null | null | 38,107,128 | 38,097,938 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,608 | comment | happytiger | "2023-11-02T03:22:23" | null | *What is this article?*<p>This is a chocolate company PR plant article, which have been hitting the presses hard with this message. It is disaster management / emergency PR.<p>They don’t want to discuss bioaccumulation of heavy metals because it would be very bad for business.<p>It’s not new. And it’s especially bad <i>for children</i> so you can imagine what the chocolate industry worries about at night.<p>*Isnt all food bad in excess of RDA?*<p>There is a big difference between eating in an unhealthy way and selling a product that has known health effects that are especially egregious for kids, so don’t pay any kind to the other counterargument big chocolate likes to press: that any food in excess is unhealthy.<p>It’s now <i>wrong</i>, but it’s a <i>classic</i> straw man argument (or a cake or cupcake argument really). So then “should we make cupcakes illegal then?”<p>Well. Uh. Unfortunately: <i>yes, if they contain large amounts of cadmium or any measurable amount of lead we absolutely should</i> — no amount of lead in food is considered “safe” especially for kids.)).<p>*You must hate chocolate.*<p>I love chocolate. Why can’t we process this stuff out of it so we can enjoy it properly? Anyone an expert in heavy metals removal from food? Save chocolate please. The world needs you.<p>*This is just one article on one piece of research.*<p>A few earlier articles and research that bolsters the case:<p><a href="https://www.confectionerynews.com/Article/2015/02/16/Lead-and-cadmium-metals-in-chocolate-Hershey-and-Mars-face-lawsuit" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.confectionerynews.com/Article/2015/02/16/Lead-an...</a><p><a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/YouShouldKnow/comments/10y9yhe/ysk_as_you_sow_has_tested_chocolate_for_heavy/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.reddit.com/r/YouShouldKnow/comments/10y9yhe/ysk_...</a><p><a href="https://www.health.harvard.edu/heart-health/heavy-metals-found-in-popular-brands-of-dark-chocolate" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.health.harvard.edu/heart-health/heavy-metals-fou...</a><p><a href="https://time.com/6243073/heavy-metals-dark-chocolate-food/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://time.com/6243073/heavy-metals-dark-chocolate-food/</a> | null | null | 38,108,422 | 38,104,719 | null | [
38108914,
38108898
] | null | null |
38,108,609 | comment | rman666 | "2023-11-02T03:22:29" | null | This is like asking if anyone is making any serious career/life plans anticipating fly cars … except flying cars are probably easier than AGI. Generative AI, which is where all the excitement is, is a dead end path for AGI. | null | null | 38,105,061 | 38,105,061 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,610 | comment | Waterluvian | "2023-11-02T03:22:37" | null | Yes! This idea! I so badly need a 4K stream of some downtown apartment where I can see the lights at night and hear the ambience.<p>I’d put it on a dedicated tv in my room. | null | null | 38,107,711 | 38,107,711 | null | [
38108782
] | null | null |
38,108,611 | comment | delish | "2023-11-02T03:22:49" | null | For the record, the Dilbert comic[0] whence "here's a nickel, kid" mentions Unix, not Linux. macOS is a certified Unix.<p>Accordingly, Macs c/o Unix have been used to perform real work for decades.<p>Even so Don Norman, Apple Fellow, wrote the forward to the Unix Hater's Handbook. I say this to say there's serious thought behind Apple's OSes _pre-Unix_ and criticism of Unix. (See e.g. John Siracusa's encomia to the spatial Finder).<p>[0] <a href="https://i.imgur.com/z96dZ0x.jpg" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://i.imgur.com/z96dZ0x.jpg</a> | null | null | 38,108,525 | 38,104,554 | null | [
38108759
] | null | null |
38,108,612 | comment | newZWhoDis | "2023-11-02T03:23:15" | null | >Arstechnica is really understating the risks here.<p>Glad to see my Ars ban in 2015 was ahead of the curve, and sad they are still churning out the same garbage that got them blacklisted in the first place. | null | null | 38,108,284 | 38,104,719 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,613 | comment | sva_ | "2023-11-02T03:23:18" | null | When I do $ whois search.ing, it says "Domain not found.". But if I enter it on get.ing, it says "search.ing is already taken."<p>Kinda strange, maybe Google doesn't want to use it themselves because it could be seen as monopolistic, but also doesn't want to sell it? | null | null | 38,100,284 | 38,100,284 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,614 | story | icodesign | "2023-11-02T03:23:19" | Show HN: An app to extend iPhone 15 Action Button | I've been working on an app to extend the new Action Button on iPhone 15 Pro (Max) these days and now it's ready to use. Have a try and feedback is welcomed!<p>ActionMate is now on App Store. ActionMate is a practical tool designed to enhance the usage of Action Button in conjunction with the Shortcut app.<p>Two notable features that I added to Shortcuts include:<p>- Volume Button Change Detection: This action recognizes when the volume button is adjusted, offering different functionality based on the action taken.<p>- Shake Gesture Detection: Identify when the device is shaken, allowing for unique actions to be triggered by the motion.<p>These advanced actions enable users to create shortcuts like a combination of long-pressing the action button and shaking the device to launch Shazam for music recognition or long-pressing the action button and tapping a volume button to initiate various other actions. Please note that these two requires a pro in-app purchase to unlock. | https://apps.apple.com/us/app/actionmate/id6467690300 | 1 | null | 38,108,614 | 0 | null | null | null |
38,108,615 | comment | CamperBob2 | "2023-11-02T03:23:19" | null | We'll find out soon enough, won't we. Or at least GM will. | null | null | 38,107,531 | 38,102,083 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,616 | comment | seneca | "2023-11-02T03:23:32" | 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>I don't think anyone is advocating for returning to the 1950s status quo. We should, however, do away with the delusion that couples can have both two careers and raise children. Sheryl Sandberg sent this message to women quite a while ago at this point, she just tilted it toward "give up on the family and focus on the career".<p>We can create incentives that allow it to make sense for a family to have a single income, and a mother to raise her own children again, without telling women they're required to do that. Right now there's not much of a choice at all. Couples are forced to have two incomes because they can't make economic ends meet otherwise. Giving women real choice is a whole lot better than what we currently have and better than the 1950s. Women who wants careers can have them, and women who wants to be full-time mothers should be able to do that without it meaning being destitute. | null | null | 38,108,458 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,617 | comment | bellboy_tech | "2023-11-02T03:23:37" | null | Watching the SpaceX launches on the SpaceFlightNow youtube channel is an amazing thing. The amount of money people pledge for memberships/tips during each launch always amazes me.<p>If a hack organization like SFN (great ppl, but the hosts act like children) can make $$$$ by ripping half the NASA/SpaceX feeds, then NASA is deserving.<p>(Yes I am aware that SFN has it's own hardware and staff expenses. I have a ton of respect for them and what they continue to do) | null | null | 38,107,297 | 38,107,297 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,618 | comment | jeswin | "2023-11-02T03:23:54" | null | > Is that really a fair comparison, though?<p>GP is highlighting a problem with Apple, and it's quite true. I have a licenses to Macomedia Fireworks (from 2010) for macOS and Windows. Windows version works still flawlessly. macOS dropped 32-bit support after Mojave (2018). I paid good money for Fireworks, and more importantly I loved that app. | null | null | 38,108,399 | 38,107,413 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,619 | comment | PaulDavisThe1st | "2023-11-02T03:24:02" | null | How has it been badly managed? | null | null | 38,108,541 | 38,101,388 | null | [
38108948
] | null | null |
38,108,620 | comment | myownpetard | "2023-11-02T03:24:13" | null | Your sources are talking about the ratio of small molecule vs. large molecule drugs. Even if you're developing small molecule drugs you are likely targeting some aspect of protein signaling/gene expression.<p>People are being dismissive of your comments because to say that proteins are niche in the context of pharma is like saying advertising is niche in the context of Meta and Google. | null | null | 38,108,374 | 38,105,839 | null | [
38108674
] | null | null |
38,108,621 | comment | adnjoo | "2023-11-02T03:24:32" | null | test | null | null | 38,099,086 | 38,099,086 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,622 | comment | tablarasa | "2023-11-02T03:24:42" | null | This is really cool. Can’t underestimate the power of this material to inspire future scientists. Hell I am a scientist and it inspires me too. I look forward to the launch (hehe) | null | null | 38,107,297 | 38,107,297 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,623 | comment | redwall_hp | "2023-11-02T03:24:46" | null | My 2007 Honda Fit has over 200K miles on it and I'm keeping it as long as I can. They discontinued it in the NA market too, unfortunately, even though there's a snazzy looking new model in Japan.<p>I will inevitably end up with a Civic hatchback. | null | null | 38,107,247 | 38,102,083 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,624 | comment | kuchenbecker | "2023-11-02T03:24:53" | null | I found that funny. | null | null | 38,107,355 | 38,101,629 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,625 | comment | zamadatix | "2023-11-02T03:24:54" | null | Multi-arch seems completely different than multi-platform. The former is obviously useful, the user isn't necessarily going to understand why a program which ran on their MacBook isn't runnable on their older iMac because it's ARM only. The two programs can also still use highly specific OS integrations, GPU acceleration APIs, and make assumptions about being a macOS system. The stretch to multi-platform comes at a much higher cost in limitations for a much more dubious level of gain, as badass as it is from a technical perspective. When I say "cost" e.g. on Windows I have to rename the executable to end in .exe be able to launch it, when I do simple text based programs like nano do run... but they are completely unusable. Bash runs but I can't select, copy, or paste text with the mouse. It's borderline unusable if the app does more than behind the scenes processing only.<p>With that in mind, "plugins" to cross platform applications instead of standalone apps could be an interesting use case though. That's something which has typically went towards per platform, interpreted/jited, or VM'd solutions - all of which have their downsides for a typical user, don't really care about the rest of the system as much, and don't need to be anything but "behind the scenes processing" in most cases. | null | null | 38,107,457 | 38,101,613 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,626 | comment | recursivedoubts | "2023-11-02T03:24:57" | null | sorry, <i>an</i> hypermedia | null | null | 38,108,463 | 38,103,310 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,627 | comment | newZWhoDis | "2023-11-02T03:25:13" | null | I mean cool, that’s great. You still get up and drive around/go out to eat surrounded by people who live in your society and make average choices.<p>All of them being lead poisoned effects you, even if “well hurr durr I don’t eat chocolate so I’m fine”<p>Which is the vibe your comment is radiating | null | null | 38,108,550 | 38,104,719 | null | [
38109139
] | null | null |
38,108,628 | comment | throw10920 | "2023-11-02T03:25:21" | null | Rust's richer type system provides relatively little value over other contemporary type systems like those of Python, TypeScript, and C#, while not providing anything remotely resembling an "interactive" development experience (no REPL, incredibly slow compilation, not hotpatching), and imposing the extremely burdensome and <i>completely</i> unnecessary burden of manual lifetime management.<p>Until these flaws are fixed, Rust is <i>utterly</i> unsuitable for rapid prototyping. | null | null | 38,100,440 | 38,099,145 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,629 | comment | SkyPuncher | "2023-11-02T03:25:58" | null | Residency is one form of that. A form with extreme labor restrictions and no ability to move jobs. | null | null | 38,108,230 | 38,098,779 | null | [
38108745
] | null | null |
38,108,630 | comment | anotherhue | "2023-11-02T03:25:59" | null | The contrast is remarkable, if there was any desire for backwards compatibility it would have presented itself.<p>They simply don't care. | null | null | 38,108,038 | 38,107,413 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,631 | comment | 882542F3884314B | "2023-11-02T03:26:01" | null | For those looking for alternatives Lunch Money is a great replacement.<p><a href="https://lunchmoney.app/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://lunchmoney.app/</a> | null | null | 38,105,299 | 38,105,299 | null | [
38109173
] | null | null |
38,108,632 | comment | whensdinner | "2023-11-02T03:26:03" | null | it's an unsearchable waterfall of noise, especially if you have to subscribe to multiple. It's such a chaotic and ephemeral way to communicate about things that should be orderly and timeless. I honestly cannot imagine trying to make a case for mailing lists when there are more robust and intuitive options available.<p>Saying "it's email" means nothing. Just because you announce the name of the tool doesn't make it the right tool. | null | null | 38,108,466 | 38,102,023 | null | [
38108761
] | null | null |
38,108,633 | story | vimo0991 | "2023-11-02T03:26:18" | null | null | null | 1 | null | 38,108,633 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,634 | comment | quantified | "2023-11-02T03:26:23" | null | The credentialing puts it all out of reach for the professionals who left school before they completed their bachelor's. | null | null | 38,107,505 | 38,106,757 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,635 | comment | haldujai | "2023-11-02T03:26:26" | null | To make it worse many of the big name institutions one would aspire to train in (e.g. 10 of the US News top 20 hospitals) are in expensive metros where you don't cross the "low-income line" until the third year of residency.<p>All the while spending 60-80 hours a week on clinical service and 5-10 hours on research and education so you can maybe get a job somewhere not remote when you're done. | null | null | 38,106,941 | 38,098,779 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,636 | comment | drschwabe | "2023-11-02T03:26:26" | null | This is a brilliant idea that seems to lack execution. | null | null | 38,107,711 | 38,107,711 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,637 | comment | throw10920 | "2023-11-02T03:27:01" | null | > Combining a sustainable business and Open Source under the same hat is tricky<p>That's because open source is generally not sustainable - it's reliant on being funded by other means of revenue generation. | null | null | 38,097,753 | 38,096,955 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,638 | comment | Shawnj2 | "2023-11-02T03:27:02" | null | There’s nearly 0 demand for this why is why you can’t do this. If there was this would either be an OS feature or a very popular third party app. | null | null | 38,108,593 | 38,107,413 | null | [
38109110,
38108962
] | null | null |
38,108,639 | comment | zmgsabst | "2023-11-02T03:27:10" | null | Modern mathematics deals with ISA design from the perspective of application:<p>A CPU, an FPGA, and an GPU are all Turing complete substrates, yet they’re useful for wildly different things.<p>Category theory, type theory, and set theory all can embed arbitrary mathematics — but the encodings you get lend themselves to different applications.<p>Eg, category theory is very useful at abstracting structures to check if they’re “the same”. | null | null | 38,107,946 | 38,102,096 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,640 | comment | addicted | "2023-11-02T03:27:15" | null | Any half decent sophisticated user on the internet has not remembered passwords for half a decade at least.<p>Nearly everyone is storing it in password managers.<p>So has that changed passwords into not being “thing you know”? | null | null | 38,107,278 | 38,102,082 | null | [
38108724
] | null | null |
38,108,641 | comment | kyriakos | "2023-11-02T03:27:25" | null | Theoretically if I was consuming 3 teaspoons per day (that's 17g approximately) wouldn't I be in danger even if the cadmium and lead levels are under the FDA levels? | null | null | 38,108,422 | 38,104,719 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,642 | comment | surge | "2023-11-02T03:27:32" | null | Yeah, you learn quickly in film school that documentaries edit footage however they like to tell a narrative. A lot of the incidents they describe happening in the wild are just multiple different situations clipped together, if you pay attention you'll notice some clips aren't even in the same place. There's even rumors recent footage of panicked animals were actually being caused by film crew drones, not anything happening naturally in the wild. | null | null | 38,108,437 | 38,106,461 | null | [
38108756
] | null | null |
38,108,643 | comment | maronato | "2023-11-02T03:27:54" | null | I’m not sure the problem is the business model. Bing has the same business model as Google and has been trying hard to get some traction, even integrating ChatGPT, to no avail.<p>Google is a verb, it’s the default, it’s the internet. Two whole generations grew up with it being their portal to information.<p>There’s nothing Kagi can do to dethrone Google, unfortunately. Its only hope is to carve a niche for itself and cultivate it. | null | null | 38,107,628 | 38,097,938 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,644 | comment | whensdinner | "2023-11-02T03:28:02" | null | Windows or macOS is the alternative. You don't get to trot out the "but big software will decide how your devices work" bogeyman when Linux literally just did the exact same thing to this person. | null | null | 38,107,074 | 38,102,023 | null | [
38108889
] | null | null |
38,108,645 | comment | nicknash | "2023-11-02T03:28:20" | null | ASYMPTOTA.COM (Dubai, ON-SITE)<p>Looking for exceptional quant-trader to join our highly successful HFT firm.<p>You’ll be joining a small, fun, highly collaborative team with deep experience in the most competitive trades on the planet.<p>Feel free to drop me a line with informal questions, as well as to apply:
nicholas.nash@asymptota.com | null | null | 38,099,086 | 38,099,086 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,646 | comment | CamperBob2 | "2023-11-02T03:28:34" | null | <i>You’d think BMW or Porsche would be the company to seriously invest in a Car OS, but it keeps not happening. I guess no one cares?</i><p>Oh, they care, all right. VW has tried, multiple times (see the whole Cariad debacle). Now GM thinks they can succeed where VW and others have failed.<p>Automakers simply don't understand the facts of life: there's a club consisting of technology companies who determine how consumers engage with their 'smart' devices, and they ain't in it.<p>Porsche at least shows <i>some</i> signs of understanding that. They have recently told their parent company to take a long walk off a short pier, and are opening talks with Google. VW AG's technological blundering has probably already cost Porsche billions... and counting. | null | null | 38,104,423 | 38,102,083 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,647 | comment | andrei_says_ | "2023-11-02T03:29:01" | null | I take chill in-the-flow steady progress over hyper rah-rah-rah windmill attacks any day, week, and month. | null | null | 38,106,648 | 38,098,779 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,648 | comment | jart | "2023-11-02T03:29:02" | null | See the comments in <a href="https://justine.lol/ape.patch" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://justine.lol/ape.patch</a> and at the bottom of <a href="https://github.com/jart/cosmopolitan/blob/3.0/tool/build/apelink.c">https://github.com/jart/cosmopolitan/blob/3.0/tool/build/ape...</a> and also <a href="https://github.com/jart/cosmopolitan/blob/3.0/ape/loader.c">https://github.com/jart/cosmopolitan/blob/3.0/ape/loader.c</a> has good information too. I'm planning to roll it all into a formal looking specification pdf sometime very soon. Feedback is welcome. As for your question, ELF headers are defined in the APE shell script as printf 'octal' statements. The loader parses those out in order and looks to see if the e_machine matches the host architecture, and if so, uses that one. | null | null | 38,108,597 | 38,101,613 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,649 | comment | cableshaft | "2023-11-02T03:29:04" | null | > And taylor swift tickets cost $100 (made up number) for two hours of music<p>Yes, a very made up number, Taylor Swift tickets for this year's tour were between $50 on the low end and $500 on the high end (plus fees) for the initial sale[1], and averaged $1600 in the resale market, with some tickets for that were close to the stage selling for up to $6300[2].<p>[1]: <a href="https://stylecaster.com/entertainment/music/1624301/how-much-taylor-swift-tickets/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://stylecaster.com/entertainment/music/1624301/how-much...</a><p>[2]: <a href="https://www.cbsnews.com/news/taylor-swift-eras-tour-tickets-resale-for-more-than-10-times-previous-tours/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.cbsnews.com/news/taylor-swift-eras-tour-tickets-...</a> | null | null | 38,108,208 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,650 | comment | throwaway092323 | "2023-11-02T03:29:07" | null | I don't disagree that modern features can be useful, nor do I disagree that some modern cars do it right. I'm saying that one car making the user say "pretty please" before disabling a distraction is one too many. | null | null | 38,107,990 | 38,102,083 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,651 | comment | Shawnj2 | "2023-11-02T03:29:08" | null | AI (specifically voice recognition and LLM’s) can probably help solve this problem by having the LLM control things for you while “talk to the thing like a human” is the exposed interface. | null | null | 38,108,341 | 38,102,083 | null | [
38108923,
38108818
] | null | null |
38,108,652 | comment | tomcam | "2023-11-02T03:29:14" | null | [flagged] | null | null | 38,107,809 | 38,102,083 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,653 | comment | tomtheelder | "2023-11-02T03:29:32" | null | It doesn't mention accumulation because that's already factored in. The levels they are talking about are a daily amount, not a single dosage. | null | null | 38,108,422 | 38,104,719 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,654 | comment | apwell23 | "2023-11-02T03:29:43" | null | > Daycare is expensive for the same reason that everything is expensive - money to investors and landlords.<p>This is wrong. If this was the case there would investors lining up to make a killing.<p>Planet money did an episode on this<p><a href="https://www.npr.org/2023/02/02/1153931108/day-care-market-expensive-child-care-waitlists" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.npr.org/2023/02/02/1153931108/day-care-market-ex...</a> | null | null | 38,108,132 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,655 | comment | SamuelAdams | "2023-11-02T03:29:55" | null | Wait until you find out about the Mazda telemetry / data collection. Disabling it results in a prompt asking to re-enable it every time you start your car.<p>Imagine if your iPhone asked you to enable some non-default setting every time you unlocked it. As if you had the audacity to change your devices’ behavior! | null | null | 38,104,305 | 38,102,083 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,656 | comment | troupo | "2023-11-02T03:30:06" | null | The EU AI act is exactly the kind of regulation you'd want: document foundational models, prohibit the use of AI in applications where the cost of mistake is too high etc.: <a href="https://softwarecrisis.dev/letters/the-truth-about-the-eu-act/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://softwarecrisis.dev/letters/the-truth-about-the-eu-ac...</a> | null | null | 38,105,006 | 38,098,513 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,657 | comment | Sebguer | "2023-11-02T03:30:11" | null | The AMA is a leading reason that we don't have socialized medicine, though. They were one of the largest bodies that opposed single-payer for Obamacare. | null | null | 38,103,443 | 38,098,779 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,658 | comment | mkolassa | "2023-11-02T03:30:25" | null | Defender Chronicles, ChainRxn, Zombie Wars 2, etc.<p>Maybe even all the games I purchased before they were updated to include all the IAP’s.<p>I am so looking forward to the possibilities. | null | null | 38,107,413 | 38,107,413 | null | [
38108832
] | null | null |
38,108,659 | comment | zmgsabst | "2023-11-02T03:30:27" | null | And yet, there are times to use the other theories:<p>Eg, type theory has more succinct proofs of unique inverses. | null | null | 38,107,539 | 38,102,096 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,660 | comment | beherit | "2023-11-02T03:30:45" | null | SEEKING FREELANCER | Remote
Location: Sofia, Bulgaria
Willing to relocate: Yes
Technologies: DevOps, Linux, bash, python, docker, k8s,Jenkins, networking
CV: <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/kiril-blagoev-42519953/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.linkedin.com/in/kiril-blagoev-42519953/</a>
E-mail: kiril[dot]blagoev[at]gmail.com | null | null | 38,099,085 | 38,099,085 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,661 | comment | antoncohen | "2023-11-02T03:30:47" | null | This is vehicle specific. Not all 2023 vehicles behave this way. I have a current generation vehicle (same generation and tech as 2023).<p>- Doors stay unlocked. Eventually the engine won't start without pressing unlock on the key fob again, but the doors remain physically unlocked forever.<p>- Trunk is manually operated.<p>- It doesn't ding when starting the engine if my seatbelt it on. And I have a programmer that lets me disable the dings when my seatbelt it off. There are no dings when turning the engine off.<p>- Blind spot warning is configurable: Off, lights, lights + chime. The chime warning doesn't seem annoying.<p>- No lane keeping assistant.<p>- Tire pressure monitors work well. They are accurate (same pressure as multiple physical gauges I've tried). Tire pressure increases slightly when driving due to heat. They have never triggered a warning.<p>- I don't recall ever having to accept terms of service. It certainly hasn't happened multiple times.<p>I have physical knobs for volume, fan speed, and tuner. Physical buttons for everything else. No controls use resistive touch buttons. No controls are via touch screen (touchscreen has information and setting like blind spot, but not actual controls that don't have physical buttons).<p>I also have a 1990s vehicle, with an aftermarket touchscreen installed to support Android Auto and Apple CarPlay. The current generation vehicle is no more annoying than the 1990s one.<p>My wife has a 2023 model year vehicle. Many of the complaints in the post are enabled by default (auto re-lock, blind spot chime that gets confused by multiple lanes). But many of the annoying things are also configurable, including auto re-lock and blind spot.<p>So it is possible to pick a vehicle that isn't annoying. And I suspect most of the annoying things can be disabled. | null | null | 38,102,083 | 38,102,083 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,662 | comment | saagarjha | "2023-11-02T03:31:16" | null | I honestly feel like the fix here is replacing the assert with advance = advance > 0 ? advance : 1; | null | null | 38,104,554 | 38,104,554 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,663 | comment | seneca | "2023-11-02T03:31:23" | null | > I thought it was WW2 and the lack of men to do the jobs they usually would.<p>That doesn't track the reality of the timeline of women in the workforce. Women temporarily worked during WW2, and after the war things returned to the previous status quo. Women weren't common in the workforce until the 1960s. It wasn't until 1967 that women's labor force participation broke 40%[1] but then it pretty quickly hit 50% by 1978.<p>"Women's liberation" is what brought women into the labor force. That doesn't mean it "ruined America", it just means the approach had flaws that need to be iterated on.<p>1: <a href="https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/LNS11300002" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/LNS11300002</a> | null | null | 38,108,542 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,664 | comment | snvzz | "2023-11-02T03:31:34" | null | The parent (adrian_b) has to, if anyone.<p>But as far as I can see, they simply have a (misguided) preference for CISC.<p>They're very vocal against load/store architectures, and they don't seem to understand the tradeoffs RISC-V does make.<p>They don't even seem to get that RISC-V has had the highest density in 64bit from the start (first ratified user spec, 2019), and now has highest density among the 32bit too (as of recent Zc ratification). | null | null | 38,098,722 | 38,095,276 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,665 | comment | ip26 | "2023-11-02T03:31:39" | null | You accumulate when you can’t eliminate fast enough. Some sources indicate you can safely eliminate up to ~30mcg of cadmium per day. Many of these bars appear to have 10-12mcg. So, if you ate one bar daily, you would never accumulate. Four bars daily would be a different story. | null | null | 38,108,422 | 38,104,719 | null | [
38108954
] | null | null |
38,108,666 | comment | janalsncm | "2023-11-02T03:32:05" | null | Unlike most conspiracy “theories” which are unfalsifiable, this should be pretty easy to prove or disprove. Just search for some random plausibly appealing domains and check to see if they’re registered 24-72 hours later.<p>It’s not a particularly difficult or clever test to run, so I’m definitely not the first person to come up with it. It’s the kind of thing that’s big news if true but a non-story if false. The fact that no one has found it to be true suggests to me that it’s not happening. | null | null | 38,104,668 | 38,100,284 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,667 | comment | justrealist | "2023-11-02T03:32:05" | null | The research is pretty clear that under 2 years, parental separation massively increases cortisol levels and is net negative. So we're not doing daycare at all.<p>Our 2.5 year old does 4 hour preschool 2 days a week for social exposure etc. And other activities throughout the week.<p>> rather than the isolated 1950s suburban housewife model<p>I'll note, people give the 1950s crap, but actually my parents in the 50s spent the entire day outside running around the neighborhood with friends. Kids in the 50s were vastly healthier socially than kids today. | null | null | 38,108,502 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,668 | comment | apwell23 | "2023-11-02T03:32:20" | null | > make peace that people will have less or no kids because they are unaffordable<p>Yes this is the right choice. We have immigration to make up for the missing workers. This is not a social problem like you are portraying it.<p>Society gains nothing from people having kids when we have unlimited immigration potential. Society would just be subsidizing someones lifestyle choice which is not its job. | null | null | 38,108,232 | 38,107,537 | null | [
38108777,
38109330
] | null | null |
38,108,669 | comment | russfink | "2023-11-02T03:32:36" | null | I was expecting a graphviz app. | null | null | 38,101,966 | 38,101,966 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,670 | comment | andrew_shay | "2023-11-02T03:32:50" | null | Really cool! | null | null | 38,101,613 | 38,101,613 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,671 | comment | haldujai | "2023-11-02T03:32:54" | null | RADPrimer isn't board prep and the question have little to no relevance for the ABR Core. Basic is designed to be completed in R1 and intermediate during R2-3.<p>The 5000 questions are how you're supposed to learn radiology, as an alternative to reading a textbook. | null | null | 38,108,377 | 38,098,779 | null | [
38108904
] | null | null |
38,108,672 | comment | Tanoc | "2023-11-02T03:32:56" | null | Starting my current car is always a pain in the ass that takes at least a minute. Get in the car, put the seatbelt on first so it doesn't complain, push the Start/Stop Engine button, immediately turn off the traction control and turn on Sport mode (buttons for which are conveniently placed right beside eachother) so that the car doesn't try to kill me in the rain and so I can get across an intersection from a dead stop faster than fifteen seconds, turn off the blind spot monitoring system so it doesn't flash me, turn off the forward collision warning so it doesn't scare the shit out of me when I'm going through the drive through, disable the parking sensor so that when I go to pay for my food I don't have to keep pressing "Okay" to get it to shut up because it thinks the wall to my left is an oncoming car, and then wait for another minute for the idle revs to drop to 900RPM before I even think of shifting out of park because the engineers thought putting zero weight oil in a highly stressed inline four with less displacement than my childhood lunchbox was a good idea. | null | null | 38,102,083 | 38,102,083 | null | [
38109425,
38109035,
38109042,
38108865,
38108967,
38109064
] | null | null |
38,108,673 | comment | flykespice | "2023-11-02T03:32:59" | null | The only one game I'm looking forward to play on this emulator is the long forgotten Bioshock 1 port | null | null | 38,107,413 | 38,107,413 | null | [
38109158
] | null | null |
38,108,674 | comment | riku_iki | "2023-11-02T03:33:04" | null | > People are being dismissive of your comments because to say that proteins are niche in the context of pharma is like saying advertising is niche in the context of Meta and Google.<p>its all about how you define word "niche", for google, main revenue stream is supported by several pillars: search tech, infra tech, ads tech, ecosystem+network effect, human management. You remove one pillar, and everything is destroyed, so one can say ads is one of the niches in their food chain. I suspect with proteins it is about the same.<p>> in the context of pharma<p>there is no context of pharma. Post is about more broad bio-medical publications. | null | null | 38,108,620 | 38,105,839 | null | [
38109429,
38108852
] | null | null |
38,108,675 | comment | 0x00_NULL | "2023-11-02T03:33:12" | null | Nothing to be ashamed of. Your Vagus Nerve, the main signaling nerve for your autonomic system, can go off automatically and there’s nothing you can do to stop it. When it happens, sit down in a chair. If you can lean back and put your feet up, that’s better and the episode will resolve more quickly. These episodes will come and go quicker as you are prepared for them.<p>My wife has had to these for years. The only treatment we’ve found helpful is transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation (tVNS) with a tool like a Neuvana Xen - or you can go the expensive prescription route. We were actually treating her gastroparesis with this and found that modulating the signal worked for all sorts of misfirings - like when getting shots.<p>TLDR: You can’t avoid them, but you can mitigate them by sitting in a chair, leaning back, and bringing your feet closer to your heart. If anyone is watching, it just looks like you are trying out the recline function of the chair. If your Vagus Nerve issues are bad, you can try tVNS (under the supervision of your doctor, of course). | null | null | 38,108,504 | 38,106,257 | null | [
38108760
] | null | null |
38,108,676 | comment | roflchoppa | "2023-11-02T03:33:14" | null | I’m sure there is some other modern OEM hub assembly that you could swap in when it comes time to service it. Maybe off a 4Runner/jeep? | null | null | 38,108,082 | 38,102,083 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,677 | comment | PrayagBhakar | "2023-11-02T03:33:29" | null | But isn’t this just a natural part of how distributed systems work? If one part fails it can have downstream effects that can cross multiple boundaries like end user clients crashing, or another business’s server crashing, or your own server crashing. | null | null | 38,108,121 | 38,100,932 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,678 | story | thomasahle | "2023-11-02T03:33:31" | Supersizing Transformers: Going Beyond Rag with Extended Minds for LLMs | null | https://blog.normalcomputing.ai/posts/2023-09-12-supersizing-transformers/supersizing-transformers.html | 5 | null | 38,108,678 | 0 | null | null | null |
38,108,679 | comment | geebee-048 | "2023-11-02T03:33:34" | null | [dead] | null | null | 38,108,530 | 38,108,530 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,680 | comment | simne | "2023-11-02T03:33:35" | null | Paywall. | null | null | 38,097,044 | 38,097,044 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,681 | comment | nikau | "2023-11-02T03:33:37" | null | This is brushing over the layered lookback filesystem mount overhead | null | null | 38,100,119 | 38,098,647 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,682 | comment | apwell23 | "2023-11-02T03:33:47" | null | And lack of low skill immigration | null | null | 38,108,139 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,683 | comment | bloomingeek | "2023-11-02T03:33:48" | null | That's correct for water lines, and is expensive. But drain and sewer lines are in the slab. Just imagine the cost of removing your tile flooring, then cutting up the slab, removing the usually copper drain line (on older homes), laying new PVC, back filling with sand or gravel, THEN recovering the floors. Carpet would be a little cheaper. | null | null | 38,074,456 | 38,057,265 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,684 | story | 6stringmerc | "2023-11-02T03:34:29" | Ask HN: In your US city/metropolis, do Police default call back from UNKNOWN? | Genuinely curious about this subject, if known, so I set up a key that might help tally quickly just for a bit of data. My hope is this group might actually notice vs. xyz non-tech folks?<p>Do Not Know - dddd<p>No - nnnn<p>Yes - yyyy<p>(if okay with you) State - sXX<p>This observation is via the Southlake, TX police department, non-emergency contact number. According to my impression, policy does not allow officers to make appointments to take phone calls, by default they call back from UNKNOWN, and by request - must be each time - they will agree to call from an actual department number. Phew. Pretty nerdy but it's a system so...<p>Many thanks in advance! | null | 1 | null | 38,108,684 | 3 | [
38108937,
38108813,
38108921
] | null | null |
38,108,685 | story | jjjeong000 | "2023-11-02T03:34:40" | null | null | null | 1 | null | 38,108,685 | null | [
38108686
] | null | null |
38,108,686 | comment | jjjeong000 | "2023-11-02T03:34:40" | null | Chart flow | null | null | 38,108,685 | 38,108,685 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,687 | comment | kxrm | "2023-11-02T03:34:40" | null | JW Player | REMOTE | NL/UK/US/MK | Full-time | Engineering<p>JWP is the game-changing video software and data insights platform that's revolutionizing the Digital Video Economy. With our cutting-edge technology, we give our customers unparalleled independence and control over their digital video content. We began over a decade ago as an open-source video player, but today, JWP is the driving force behind digital video for hundreds of thousands of businesses worldwide. And with over 1 billion viewers tuning in every month across 2.7 billion unique devices, there's no limit to what we can achieve. We're on the lookout for passionate and innovative candidates who are ready to join us on this journey of transforming the world of digital video.<p>Open positions from Associate Engineer to Senior levels for both backend and frontend roles.<p>See <a href="https://jwplayer.com/careers/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://jwplayer.com/careers/</a> for a list of open roles. | null | null | 38,099,086 | 38,099,086 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,688 | comment | Gibbon1 | "2023-11-02T03:34:49" | null | Hat tipping Keynes I like to distinguish rentier capitalists from all the other types. In short capitalists that collect rents on stuff. Different than say an industrial capitalist the in the business of manufacturing and selling stuff.<p>The latter sort of understands that he needs workers to staff his factories. And consumers to buy. So he understands that children are tomorrows workers and consumers. The rentier capitalist is a financial parasite. He can't understand doesn't want to understand. Anything that reduces his rents like taxes to pay for school lunches pissed him off.<p>In the last 50 years rentier capitalists have managed to completely suppress the power of industrial capitalists and labor. And have managed to convince most people to think like them. So people think a parent spending time taking care of a child instead of working is 'a loss to the economy' | null | null | 38,108,187 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,689 | comment | bigstrat2003 | "2023-11-02T03:35:06" | null | You've misunderstood what we're talking about. Using the turn signal is what <i>triggers</i> the warning in this case. The car is correctly detecting that there's a car in your blind spot, but it incorrectly interprets the turn signal as "I'm going to change lanes" rather than "I'm making a turn". | null | null | 38,107,816 | 38,102,083 | null | [
38108695
] | null | null |
38,108,690 | comment | sanroot99 | "2023-11-02T03:35:06" | null | What is the point of being immortal, if lt bring eternal suffering, Life in itself current form is suffering for many, unless you solve all other problem other then just mortality, life in itself bring difference with long lifespan. Inherently I see no difference if I live 100 years or 1000 years. | null | null | 38,097,014 | 38,063,687 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,691 | comment | null | "2023-11-02T03:35:10" | null | null | null | null | 38,108,530 | 38,108,530 | null | null | true | null |
38,108,692 | comment | sltkr | "2023-11-02T03:35:11" | null | For me it works if I disable uBlock Origin. | null | null | 38,100,524 | 38,100,284 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,693 | comment | bellboy_tech | "2023-11-02T03:35:25" | null | Finally a smart use for my $1000 nVidia card.<p>Someone's genius is showing. Better zip up. | null | null | 38,107,590 | 38,107,590 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,694 | comment | FredPret | "2023-11-02T03:35:37" | null | This is brilliant.<p>It's the whining, incessant beeping that got me.<p>I recently switched cars from a recent model Ford (basically a nervous beeper on wheels) to an ancient Jeep that does nothing but drive. It's 1000x better. | null | null | 38,102,083 | 38,102,083 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,695 | comment | throwaway290 | "2023-11-02T03:35:43" | null | I see, sorry | null | null | 38,108,689 | 38,102,083 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,696 | comment | tech234a | "2023-11-02T03:35:52" | null | The developers have begun asking for permission to legally redistribute some apps that are compatible with this emulator: <a href="https://touchhle.org/app-archive/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://touchhle.org/app-archive/</a> | null | null | 38,107,413 | 38,107,413 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,697 | comment | zillizhiring | "2023-11-02T03:35:55" | null | Zilliz Vector Database Trailblazer | Full-time|Software|Sales|Engineering| Redwood City, CA| NYC| Onsite -Hybrid -Remote<p>Zilliz is a fast-growing startup developing the industry’s leading vector database company for enterprise-grade AI. Founded by the engineers behind Milvus, the world’s most popular open-source vector database, the company builds next-generation database technologies to help organizations quickly create AI applications.<p>Roles we are hiring for:<p>Senior Software Engineer, Cloud Platform |FTE| <a href="https://grnh.se/be38c5f55us" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://grnh.se/be38c5f55us</a><p>Staff Software Engineer, Database Systems |FTE| <a href="https://grnh.se/f324f6f45us" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://grnh.se/f324f6f45us</a><p>Solutions Architect |FTE| : <a href="https://grnh.se/3155e4975us" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://grnh.se/3155e4975us</a><p>Developer Advocate |FTE| SF: <a href="https://grnh.se/7995c7cd5us" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://grnh.se/7995c7cd5us</a> | null | null | 38,099,084 | 38,099,084 | null | [
38109105
] | null | null |
38,108,698 | comment | andrei_says_ | "2023-11-02T03:36:01" | null | The way the economy measures value is limited, manipulative, idiotic, and destructive.<p>I’d argue that the teaching of modern economics spreads a mindset that is a major contributing force to indescribable amount of unnecessary suffering and the destruction of our biosphere.<p>One of the healthier economic models is the Doughnut economics model.<p><a href="https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doughnut_(economic_model)" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doughnut_(economic_model)</a> | null | null | 38,108,043 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,699 | comment | redder23 | "2023-11-02T03:36:18" | null | So these "views" are not live webcams that just sit there, that would be more interesting. Just pre-recorded 10 min videos.<p>They charge $5 a month for this and do the creators actually see any of this money? Let me guess, no ;) | null | null | 38,107,711 | 38,107,711 | null | null | null | null |