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38,108,700 | comment | brotchie | "2023-11-02T03:36:38" | null | The only way out, is through :) | null | null | 38,106,657 | 38,103,638 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,701 | story | jruohonen | "2023-11-02T03:37:01" | The Crowd: A Study of the Popular Mind (1895) [pdf] | null | https://www.files.ethz.ch/isn/125518/1414_LeBon.pdf | 1 | null | 38,108,701 | 0 | null | null | null |
38,108,702 | comment | DaiPlusPlus | "2023-11-02T03:37:02" | null | > Feel free to yell at them clouds.<p>I do that every time I get my AWS invoice | null | null | 38,107,385 | 38,097,938 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,703 | comment | haldujai | "2023-11-02T03:37:35" | null | Residents unionizing is a good start. | null | null | 38,108,337 | 38,098,779 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,704 | comment | barbazoo | "2023-11-02T03:37:49" | null | That sounds hard.<p>Luckily I only fainted a few times in my life but the last one was most vivid as in some time had clearly passed and I was injured. That scares me now thinking under what circumstances it could happen again. | null | null | 38,107,678 | 38,106,257 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,705 | comment | DaiPlusPlus | "2023-11-02T03:37:56" | null | HN is now Reddit, circa 2012. | null | null | 38,107,345 | 38,097,938 | null | [
38109329
] | null | null |
38,108,706 | comment | null | "2023-11-02T03:38:04" | null | null | null | null | 38,108,301 | 38,104,554 | null | null | true | null |
38,108,707 | comment | serf | "2023-11-02T03:38:05" | null | oilite bar stock is up there next to delrin as one of the most useful materials to have around the machine shop, especially if you do marine work. | null | null | 38,108,604 | 38,108,604 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,708 | comment | kuchenbecker | "2023-11-02T03:38:13" | null | That's a surprisingly small amount, it would mean that a year of video is only 1.5 EiB. IIRC google has like hundreds of EiB in storage. | null | null | 38,105,340 | 38,101,629 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,709 | comment | friend_and_foe | "2023-11-02T03:38:24" | null | A hyperobject is supposed to be something so large and complex that no human mind is capable of grasping it. I'm not the one invoking this unfalsifiable definition, some of those claiming to understand it however, are. That's obviously disingenuous and should immediately set off your bullshit alarm. | null | null | 38,079,720 | 38,072,773 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,710 | story | williswee | "2023-11-02T03:38:34" | null | null | null | 1 | null | 38,108,710 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,711 | comment | beautron | "2023-11-02T03:38:34" | null | Same for me on centurylink. I've run into this on a number of sites. I don't like it. | null | null | 38,106,912 | 38,101,613 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,712 | comment | athrun | "2023-11-02T03:38:37" | null | Not disagreeing with your overall point, but symbol collision is still very much an issue with dynamic linking on Linux right?<p>AFAIK, the gnu dynamic linker doesn't do any namespacing (as opposed to Solaris'). | null | null | 38,107,401 | 38,101,613 | null | [
38109028
] | null | null |
38,108,713 | comment | anArbitraryOne | "2023-11-02T03:38:48" | null | Funny, they're also 'leaking' signals that interfere with optical telescopes | null | null | 38,105,629 | 38,105,629 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,714 | comment | charcircuit | "2023-11-02T03:39:07" | null | >It’s email. How is it a poor experience?<p>How do you search for existence bug reports to see if someone else has hit the issue? How do you subscribe to an issue to know if progress is being made on it? How do you keep track of all of the issues. Why is it the user's job to traige bugs to the right person? Microsoft doesn't reccomend you to find the email of someone on the NTFS team if you find a bug in Window's handling of NTFS.<p>The part about writing and sending the initial is passable using email, but everything else is terrible. | null | null | 38,108,466 | 38,102,023 | null | [
38108823,
38108803
] | null | null |
38,108,715 | comment | speed_spread | "2023-11-02T03:39:09" | null | Teslas are missing too many buttons and knobs. Basic stuff like heating and volume, I want my hand to know where to reach as I'm driving. | null | null | 38,104,699 | 38,102,083 | null | [
38108869
] | null | null |
38,108,716 | comment | hcarvalhoalves | "2023-11-02T03:39:20" | null | Since you invited comments:<p>Rules #1, #2, #3: I don't feel these are rules as much as aesthetic opinions. The only thing that matters is for URLs to be unique, and no client should rely on parsing slashes on URLs to derive how data is structured.<p>Rules #4, #5: Very specific to how data is serialised, I wouldn't take it as a rule, although the future-proofing argument is good.<p>Rules #6, #7: I feel these are sensible rules in general, not even specific to REST.<p>Rule #8: 404 or 200 is context specific, but what I would say is that if you can represent the absence in the resource do it, otherwise use 404.<p>Eg: if the student 99 doesn't exist, GET /students/99 returns 404; but if you want to represent there are no students, GET /students/ can return 200 OK with a [] body – since that _is_ the representation of such information. Many APIs fail here, returning 404 on a resource like GET /students/ that is expected to always exist.<p>And, definitely don't use 401 GONE in a way that's not in RFC.<p>Rule #9: I believe it's a good idea to minimize the variation in resource representation in general, this benefits both the client and the server by allowing the reuse of cached data.<p>Rule #11: Agree. I would go further and even ignore mechanisms like 24 hours temporary idempotency keys - just straight allow clients to PUT a resource with whatever ID, following advice from Rule #6, and be done with it.<p>All in all, this shows "REST" really means different things to different people at this point, we probably need better definitions for the good practices at the different levels (data structures, HTTP compliance, serialisation). | null | null | 38,103,310 | 38,103,310 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,717 | comment | jqpabc123 | "2023-11-02T03:39:23" | null | More crypto fraud? Who knew. | null | null | 38,106,608 | 38,106,608 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,718 | comment | nn3 | "2023-11-02T03:39:31" | null | If its one adult per 10 kids and they each pay 700 the child care is making 840k per kindergarden teacher. Assuming the adult makes 60k a year thats 780k of overhead. Where is it all going? | null | null | 38,107,537 | 38,107,537 | null | [
38109171
] | null | null |
38,108,719 | comment | beej71 | "2023-11-02T03:39:35" | null | This is why we have trouble hiring college instructors in my town. The cost is living is high and you can make 2x easy in industry. I don't see much mystery in all this.<p>I made the transition because I was ready for semi-retirement and got a house at a good time some years back so my mortgage is only $1200. | null | null | 38,107,567 | 38,106,757 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,720 | comment | numpad0 | "2023-11-02T03:39:46" | null | Tablets tends to emit heat, leaves fingerprint, your hand obscures writing, and expensive. Upside is it's more conceptually straightforward. To each their own. | null | null | 38,105,662 | 38,102,023 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,721 | comment | ip26 | "2023-11-02T03:40:01" | null | It isn’t always a modern affliction. Some food plants just do this, pulling heavy metals from the soil. You’ve heard of arsenic in brown rice. | null | null | 38,108,563 | 38,104,719 | null | [
38109420
] | null | null |
38,108,722 | comment | lumost | "2023-11-02T03:40:08" | null | an interesting, albeit unsatisfactory solution to the Fermi parodox would be that we are a rare anomaly of a distant moon of comparable but lesser mass to the primary body, located in the inner solar system, but without tidal locking.<p>The latter two points might turn out to be extremely rare events. | null | null | 38,108,026 | 38,107,078 | null | [
38109125,
38108971
] | null | null |
38,108,723 | comment | beej71 | "2023-11-02T03:40:24" | null | If you don't need the money and like the challenge, it's awesome. | null | null | 38,107,670 | 38,106,757 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,724 | comment | noman-land | "2023-11-02T03:40:25" | null | <p><pre><code> So has that changed passwords into not being “thing you know”?
</code></pre>
Yes? If you write your password down on a piece of paper it becomes something you have, no? | null | null | 38,108,640 | 38,102,082 | null | [
38109388
] | null | null |
38,108,725 | comment | null | "2023-11-02T03:40:25" | null | null | null | null | 38,108,530 | 38,108,530 | null | null | true | null |
38,108,726 | comment | antoncohen | "2023-11-02T03:40:38" | null | > can anyone explain why in the US if I click unlock on the remote, it just unlocks the front door? This keeps happening on rental cars. You have to click twice on unlock to get all the doors to open.<p>This is likely configurable. Instructions should be in the owner's manual. It is configurable for both my and my wife's vehicles, one via the touchscreen and the other by pressing and holding unlock for 5 seconds. | null | null | 38,106,254 | 38,102,083 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,727 | comment | ajmurmann | "2023-11-02T03:40:44" | null | Not sure about the replacements for flight attendants. I understand they have important tasks during emergencies. | null | null | 38,105,753 | 38,098,779 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,728 | comment | TylerE | "2023-11-02T03:40:57" | null | The good old “lifetime” part. Just like the “lifetime” fluid in most newer automatic trans. | null | null | 38,108,421 | 38,102,083 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,729 | comment | annjose | "2023-11-02T03:41:12" | null | The TEALS program looks very promising - thank you for suggesting here. I just filled out the application for a teaching assistant role (not confident to sign up for teaching right away). Looking forward to hearing from them. | null | null | 38,107,302 | 38,106,757 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,730 | comment | jerbear4328 | "2023-11-02T03:41:20" | null | well, couldn't all advancements in this kind of technology be useful to malicious people? | null | null | 38,107,439 | 38,101,613 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,731 | comment | null | "2023-11-02T03:41:25" | null | null | null | null | 38,108,417 | 38,107,711 | null | null | true | null |
38,108,732 | comment | astrange | "2023-11-02T03:41:58" | null | They do respect it. You have to sign up for research and fill out a thousand surveys before any of that data is used for… research. | null | null | 38,106,300 | 38,097,184 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,733 | comment | numpad0 | "2023-11-02T03:41:59" | null | Everyone frantically rushes to archived versions of Wacom drivers and starts installing random .reg files from the Internet when Microsoft do this(they did couple times). | null | null | 38,106,712 | 38,102,023 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,734 | comment | efitz | "2023-11-02T03:42:20" | null | Yes. If you don’t want to answer because it might be incriminating, then you have to assert your fifth amendment privileges; you can’t lie and say that you don’t remember. | null | null | 38,091,015 | 38,087,761 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,735 | comment | joak | "2023-11-02T03:42:37" | null | Hey why everyone thinks it's legitimate to pay for content?<p>So if you are poor, access to content should be denied to you?<p>Most of the people on the internet are poor accessing youtube with $40 smartphones.<p>They cannot pay premium, why send them ads? What's the point? Make them waste their precious time and bandwidth? | null | null | 38,101,310 | 38,101,310 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,736 | comment | Cypher | "2023-11-02T03:42:47" | null | Come over to my house, I can give you some food | null | null | 38,104,352 | 38,104,352 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,737 | comment | pomian | "2023-11-02T03:42:48" | null | We need a Jony Ive in every company. | null | null | 38,108,341 | 38,102,083 | null | [
38108968,
38108857
] | null | null |
38,108,738 | comment | Semaphor | "2023-11-02T03:42:55" | null | > A 20-something will just scroll through the blog content to get to the recipe at the end. No huss, no fuss. In fact, they’ll open multiple tabs of search results to compare recipes in the time it takes you to gawk at the fact that you have to scroll to the end.<p>Uh, I do that and I’m 37. But I don’t scroll, I click the button that says "recipe" that’s on pretty much every recipe site.<p>IMO this is mainly about being used to the state of recipe sites on the internet, and has nothing to do with searching. | null | null | 38,108,547 | 38,097,938 | null | [
38108879
] | null | null |
38,108,739 | comment | dieselgate | "2023-11-02T03:42:56" | null | Potentially preaching to the choir here, I'll stick with my '02 and '88. Don't mind using glow plugs during cold startup procedure | null | null | 38,102,083 | 38,102,083 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,740 | comment | justrealist | "2023-11-02T03:42:57" | null | Well that's sort of a separate question, my point is that if I pay $5 for someone to cook me a hot dog, 1 hot dog is produced whether sales tax is 0% or 50%, and that's what GDP is measuring. | null | null | 38,108,243 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,741 | comment | loeg | "2023-11-02T03:43:17" | null | The nanny was more like $5000/mo. Daycare is a lot less expensive. | null | null | 38,108,112 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,742 | comment | fsckboy | "2023-11-02T03:43:56" | null | adding one piece a day per person to the national diet would probably have a dramatic effect, especially since that increase will be a bell curve too, with half consuming more.<p>Depends how you word these Q&As. Each individual has varying susceptibility to diabetes and heavy metal poisoning. You can't apply population statistics to individuals, except that population effects will find certain individuals, and except to say "more is worse, less is better" if it's something harmful. | null | null | 38,108,513 | 38,104,719 | null | [
38109255
] | null | null |
38,108,743 | comment | billfor | "2023-11-02T03:43:57" | null | Consumer reports has an agenda or is incompetent. Maybe for dishwashers, paint, or mattresses, but most of their reviews are biased or poorly reviewed.<p>The classic example is the way they dinged Tesla for the full self driving because it went through a stop sign, and then when you examine their video closely you can see on the left side of the dash that the FSD wasn't even engaged (steering wheel should be blue). Their explanation after they were caught didn't even make grammatical sense.... Canceled my subscription after that.<p><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IQOf_F6hibk&t=350s">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IQOf_F6hibk&t=350s</a> | null | null | 38,104,719 | 38,104,719 | null | [
38108988,
38108768
] | null | null |
38,108,744 | comment | bertilxi | "2023-11-02T03:43:58" | null | <p><pre><code> Location: Santa Fe, Argentina
Remote: Yes
Willing to relocate: Yes
Technologies: Typescript, Node JS, React, React Native, GQL, SQL, Postgres, Redis, Docker, Git, AWS.
Résumé/CV: https://bit.ly/cv-berti
Email: contact@berti.sh
</code></pre>
I am a software engineer and tech lead with 7 years of experience building web platforms.
Previously I was co-founder and CTO of belo, a fintech based in Argentina.
I am looking for new challenges. | null | null | 38,099,084 | 38,099,084 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,745 | comment | haldujai | "2023-11-02T03:43:59" | null | Yes, the system as designed by a cocaine addict[1] is broken. Residency is still necessary in principle. In a specialty program one only starts to become competent in PGY4.<p>It's a difficult problem to fix, I finished my residency training in Canada where we don't have ACGME protections in place and while it was far more abusive than US programs (where I currently work) it certainly made us very competent at the end, better than I am seeing in the average US trainee I supervise.<p>I'm not sure what the solution is to be honest. Competency is almost entirely driven by clinical volumes and exposure, you don't train to handle the 90% of normal cases but the 9% that are challenging and the 1% that's incredibly complex. If you're not working long hours (or spending many more years in training) chances are you won't get that exposure.<p>With that said one could argue with the current expectation that everyone does 1-2 fellowships we're already training longer.<p>[1]<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Stewart_Halsted" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Stewart_Halsted</a> | null | null | 38,108,629 | 38,098,779 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,746 | comment | loeg | "2023-11-02T03:44:02" | null | Most places in Seattle are $2500/mo or higher, too. We got really lucky. | null | null | 38,108,190 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,747 | comment | joak | "2023-11-02T03:44:11" | null | Hey why everyone thinks it's legitimate to pay for content?<p>So if you are poor, access to content should be denied to you?<p>Most of the people on the internet are poor accessing youtube with $40 smartphones.<p>They cannot pay premium, why send them ads? What's the point? Make them waste their precious time and bandwidth? | null | null | 38,101,629 | 38,101,629 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,748 | comment | kennywinker | "2023-11-02T03:44:12" | null | No need to hunt so deep into the repo, it's right there in the 3rd paragraph of the description: "The goal of this project is to run games from the early days of iOS" | null | null | 38,107,957 | 38,107,413 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,749 | comment | dieselgate | "2023-11-02T03:44:21" | null | My thoughts as well, Maybe they were lifts or something | null | null | 38,107,762 | 38,102,083 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,750 | comment | temptemptemp111 | "2023-11-02T03:44:30" | null | [dead] | null | null | 38,104,719 | 38,104,719 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,751 | story | codetrotter | "2023-11-02T03:44:38" | The Perfect Laptop | null | https://text.nstr.no/~erik.nordstrom/perfect-laptop.txt | 3 | null | 38,108,751 | 6 | [
38108781,
38108810,
38109098
] | null | null |
38,108,752 | comment | dotnet00 | "2023-11-02T03:44:39" | null | I'm using a Samsung Galaxy Book 3 Pro 360. Personally I love it, the large screen and large touch pad makes it great for note taking and coding. Makes it as tolerable as it gets to not be at the triple monitor desktop setup at my desk (particularly when using the S8Ultra as a second screen). The battery life has also been more than sufficient for my needs (but since it's basically for web browsing, document editing, note taking, amateur level drawing and light client for SSH'd vscode, it isn't doing much). My main criticism would be it feels a bit delicate.<p>I had also tried the regular Galaxy Book 3 360 for a day, but I felt the screen was a bit small and not as sharp as I'd like.<p>That said, since EMR pens also work in-place of S pens, I'd guess that S pens will work on any device that supports EMR pens (minus the bluetooth air gestures, those aren't available on windows laptops). For me the value was the 'ecosystem' with my other devices which also happen to be from Samsung, including the ability to share the stylus between everything. | null | null | 38,107,692 | 38,102,023 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,753 | comment | NotYourLawyer | "2023-11-02T03:44:45" | null | Apple Car when? | null | null | 38,102,083 | 38,102,083 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,754 | comment | latentcall | "2023-11-02T03:44:50" | null | These are my favorite kind of websites. Really interesting to see real perspectives from around the world in this way. Thanks for sharing! | null | null | 38,107,711 | 38,107,711 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,755 | comment | JumpCrisscross | "2023-11-02T03:44:51" | null | > <i>SEC and bank regulators start requiring banks (& such) to disclose how badly their portfolios are impaired by $Pretend/month "rents" that nobody is paying</i><p>You are looking for non-performing loan reporting. The FDIC collects these in detail to the degree that, should you want to override GAAP, you have sufficient model inputs to calculate in the aggregate. | null | null | 38,101,101 | 38,100,541 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,756 | comment | peeters | "2023-11-02T03:44:56" | null | I think the "different times" was referring more to the animal cruelty than the choice to stage a scene. | null | null | 38,108,642 | 38,106,461 | null | [
38109101,
38109019
] | null | null |
38,108,757 | comment | OldGuyInTheClub | "2023-11-02T03:45:30" | null | I wish I could do more than agree. I am pushing 60. The alarm was raised about wealth concentration and inequity from the time I was in high school. My generation and I didn't do enough to stop it. I'm not sure I <i>did</i> anything except sign the odd petition and vote. For the past thirty years wealth concentration has become the central dogma of the American economy if not the culture as a whole. Baseball, hot dogs, apple pie, and laissez-faire. | null | null | 38,108,402 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,758 | comment | joak | "2023-11-02T03:45:39" | null | Hey why everyone seem to think it's legitimate to pay for content?<p>So if you are poor, access to content should be denied to you?<p>Most of the people on the internet are poor accessing youtube with $40 smartphones.<p>They cannot pay premium, why send them ads? What's the point? Make them waste their precious time and bandwidth? | null | null | 38,101,760 | 38,101,760 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,759 | comment | msla | "2023-11-02T03:45:44" | null | > macOS is a certified Unix.<p>So's z/OS, whereas FreeBSD isn't.<p>Also, there are Linux distros that are certified Unixes: Inspur K-UX, for example.<p>> Unix Hater's Handbook<p>Ah, yes, the "our favorite proprietary system was killed by Open Systems and we're Big Mad about it" book. | null | null | 38,108,611 | 38,104,554 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,760 | comment | derefr | "2023-11-02T03:45:54" | null | Oddly, putting my feet closer to my heart (such as when washing my lower legs in the shower) seems to unplug my sinuses if they’re plugged. Related mechanism? | null | null | 38,108,675 | 38,106,257 | null | [
38109097
] | null | null |
38,108,761 | comment | db48x | "2023-11-02T03:46:05" | null | It’s exactly as chaotic or orderly as the people who are talking to each other, and it would be no different if those same people were using a bug tracker.<p>And what do you mean by unsearchable? There is a search box right there for anyone to use: <a href="https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/</a> Long time subscribers to the list would do a local search from within their own email program, of course. | null | null | 38,108,632 | 38,102,023 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,762 | story | inquisitiverab | "2023-11-02T03:46:11" | What pains you about call-in customer service? | There have been massive strides in NLP, but I feel like I have to decide between sittig on hold for hours with my bank or listening to a robotic voice walking me thorugh a menu.<p>There have been some improvements on both in the past years. The questions is, can we make calling customer service at large companies an enjoyable experience?<p>If you're a company, and want to get involved as we build out a solution, sign up to be an initial partner/join the waitlist at: https://communis.super.site<p>Either way, I want to hear your pain points. What do you want to improve about customer service interactions that take place over the phone? | null | 2 | null | 38,108,762 | 0 | null | null | null |
38,108,763 | comment | bfung | "2023-11-02T03:46:24" | null | While reading your Google examples, I don’t think I could parse out what you were intending as a human. Perhaps different keywords would work better?<p>For example, “speed work running”, were you looking to improve sprinting? (I’m not a runner, so it almost reads to me like “working fast while on a treadmill”). Reading the rest of your example, maybe “sprint workouts” would give better results?<p>(40+yr old guy here, Google had always worked for me, as many people had described it working for 20yr olds. Finding the right, specific enough set of keywords had always been my “trick”. Little did I realize I subconsciously generate embeddings like a LLM to Google search) | null | null | 38,108,178 | 38,097,938 | null | [
38108899
] | null | null |
38,108,764 | comment | naruhodo | "2023-11-02T03:46:25" | null | There's only so much you can do to optimise bitcoin-mining malware. | null | null | 38,107,921 | 38,107,590 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,765 | comment | windexh8er | "2023-11-02T03:46:29" | null | > Practically nobody does geothermal heat pumps here. The up-front cost is waaaaaay higher than any kind of normal (for us) set-up, not many people do it so that makes the cost even higher because the installation market is tiny, and energy costs aren't high enough to make the extra tens of thousands of dollars a good investment.<p>This isn't true in all parts of the US. A family member of mine has had an open loop geo-thermal system for almost a decade now, and they're definitely not the only one in the area.<p>I'd say about half of my neighborhood has air source heat pumps and about a quarter of the remaining have geo-thermal (vertical loops).<p>There are two HVAC businesses in my area that specialize in nothing but ground source heat pumps. If there was no market, they'd be out of business.<p>I think, where I am, it's harder to find a cognizant air source installer. Most of the HVAC businesses here are still under the misconception that air source isn't viable in our northern locale and often don't try to sell, or try to talk people out of them. But my air source is able to heat our house easily at 0F and is rated to run below -10F. It's currently my main heat source. Over the course of winter I'd guesstimate 60-70% heat pump heating overall. | null | null | 38,103,782 | 38,102,636 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,766 | comment | tomcam | "2023-11-02T03:46:31" | null | If I were Tony Hoare I’d put the Quicksort algorithm on my tombstone | null | null | 38,090,715 | 38,090,715 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,767 | comment | turndown | "2023-11-02T03:46:37" | null | You are allowed to think that and in some ways they are, but both exist due to problems in C itself.<p>Lack of interest in evolving C at a reasonable pace has left the standard catching up to the implementations where there is no such ideological battle to implement a feature. The attribute situation in C is a great example of this. | null | null | 38,096,787 | 38,079,381 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,768 | comment | w-ll | "2023-11-02T03:46:41" | null | you had me, then ya lost me. | null | null | 38,108,743 | 38,104,719 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,769 | comment | koito17 | "2023-11-02T03:47:00" | null | > MacPorts has an advantage over HomeBrew by having all dependencies vendored so OS updates have less impact.<p>I use MacPorts, but be careful stating this. libc is unstable between major releases of Mac OS, and the recommendation from the MacPorts project itself is to reinstall *all* of your ports after an OS upgrade.[1] This is not a fun process if you don't delay updating until the build bots for the latest OS go online. Also note it is literally impossible to statically link libc in Mac OS applications.[2]<p>Realistically speaking, I think Nix is likely to be a better alternative to both MacPorts and Homebrew for setting up dev environments, since you will have a declarative file format rather than ad-hoc Tcl (or Ruby) scripts running a function for fetch, verify, configure, build, destroot, etc. The only reason I personally don't use Nix is because MacPorts has more or less just worked for me and I haven't had the motivation to learn how Nix really works.<p>[1] <a href="https://trac.macports.org/wiki/Migration" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://trac.macports.org/wiki/Migration</a><p>[2] <a href="https://developer.apple.com/library/archive/qa/qa1118/_index.html" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://developer.apple.com/library/archive/qa/qa1118/_index...</a> | null | null | 38,108,468 | 38,104,554 | null | [
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38,108,770 | comment | oidar | "2023-11-02T03:47:09" | null | It varies wildly depending on the medical school (state school in Texas is affordable for example), scholarships, program (MD/PhD programs, MD only, MD/JD programs), and terminal specialization. | null | null | 38,107,663 | 38,098,779 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,771 | story | neom | "2023-11-02T03:47:14" | The 'Ozempic Effect' on Wall Street Has Gone Overboard | null | https://www.wsj.com/finance/stocks/the-ozempic-effect-on-wall-street-has-gone-overboard-2ce5e055 | 1 | null | 38,108,771 | 1 | [
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38,108,772 | comment | arp242 | "2023-11-02T03:47:16" | null | That article is about FreeBSD's grep. | null | null | 38,107,155 | 38,104,554 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,773 | comment | barbazoo | "2023-11-02T03:47:16" | null | I think you may have changed my life. I have never seen this car before. It took me a couple of minutes to be able to appreciate it. But zooming in on the tech, it looks very electric, vs electronic. The infotainment system is modular, how awesome is that. | null | null | 38,104,551 | 38,102,083 | null | [
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38,108,774 | comment | toomuchtodo | "2023-11-02T03:47:28" | null | Comprehensive knowledge of the application codebase(es) you’re responsible for and the ability to quickly determine root cause of failures and revert or remediate, either by shipping hot fixes, infrastructure changes, or both. | null | null | 38,100,818 | 38,100,818 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,775 | comment | tiltowait | "2023-11-02T03:47:30" | null | I’ve found the Migration Assistant to be solid—almost fanatical—for persisting custom settings. Most recently, it carried over my non-standard OpenSSH + config with resident key support, GPG config, and a couple of other things without a hitch. I even found a few config files from 2007 and a same-era Safari SIMBL extension that probably stopped working in Snow Leopard, all faithfully migrated across five different machines and a dozen operating systems.<p>I’m curious what doesn’t work for her. | null | null | 38,108,048 | 38,104,554 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,776 | comment | neom | "2023-11-02T03:47:35" | null | <a href="https://archive.is/w8JNv" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://archive.is/w8JNv</a> | null | null | 38,108,771 | 38,108,771 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,777 | comment | ndriscoll | "2023-11-02T03:47:38" | null | What is the purpose of society? In the US, the stated goals were to<p>> form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity<p>I don't see "increase economic output" in there. I do see an explicit line item about Liberty for our Posterity (i.e. the authors' children and descendants). One might infer that actually that entire list was meant for us and our children too, and not just the people of the time. | null | null | 38,108,668 | 38,107,537 | null | [
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38,108,778 | comment | derefr | "2023-11-02T03:47:42" | null | I’m curious if there’s a refractory period. (I.e. if you faint and come to after the first needle goes in, then maybe you’re “past it”, and the rest won’t bother you?) | null | null | 38,108,508 | 38,106,257 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,779 | comment | Tanoc | "2023-11-02T03:47:54" | null | I can concur. Just yesterday I was searching for something specific and thought I was sleep deprived or just generally losing awareness because I could swear I typed a very specific name in, only for it to show up in Google's search results (not the search bar) missing the last letter with no "Did you mean ---?" or "Searching for ---. Look only for |||?". I tried it again, and it did the same thing. I switched from Google to Google Image Search and watched it in real time delete that last letter from the search bar where I'd typed the term in. I went to show an acquaintance immediately after, only for the behaviour not to repeat itself. It made me feel like I was going crazy. | null | null | 38,107,614 | 38,097,938 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,780 | comment | LargoLasskhyfv | "2023-11-02T03:47:57" | null | <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vortex86" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vortex86</a><p><a href="https://www.vortex86.com/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.vortex86.com/</a><p><a href="https://www.dmp.com.tw/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.dmp.com.tw/</a> | null | null | 38,104,304 | 38,103,861 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,781 | comment | jruohonen | "2023-11-02T03:48:05" | null | A pipe dream:<p>"
- Can stay powered on for 48 hrs w/o charging.
* Can watch five feature-length movies
w/o charging.
* Can browse the web or read eBooks
for 16 hours without charging.
- Uninterrupted Power and Self-Charging.
* built-in solar panels to recharge outdoors.
- "Sufficient" RAM size, CPU speed and
HDD/SSD/memristor/whatevs storage.
* Ever-changing.
* Today, in 2023:
+ 64 GiB RAM
+ 24 perf cores; >= 3.0GHz
+ 6 efficiency cores; >= 0.8GHz
* 4TiB persistent storage
" | null | null | 38,108,751 | 38,108,751 | null | [
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38,108,782 | comment | dr_kiszonka | "2023-11-02T03:48:05" | null | There are a lot of streams like that on YT. I am partial to nature, but I am sure you will find something for yourself.<p><a href="https://youtu.be/gFOYZuuNSZI" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://youtu.be/gFOYZuuNSZI</a> | null | null | 38,108,610 | 38,107,711 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,783 | comment | slimsag | "2023-11-02T03:48:11" | null | Distant shore was fantastic, I remember playing it a ton when I was younger and got an iPod touch for the first time. I've been thinking about that concept of game and how it could be integrated into other games | null | null | 38,107,957 | 38,107,413 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,784 | comment | pgporada | "2023-11-02T03:48:15" | null | That sucks, those people sound like grade A assholes. | null | null | 38,102,770 | 38,097,984 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,785 | comment | dwheeler | "2023-11-02T03:48:32" | null | I would have expected to see at least more of a discussion about Metamath.<p>Metamath by <i>itself</i> does not pick any particular foundation. It just lets you state axioms, then prove theorems from axioms and other proven theorems (letting you stack them up). So you can choose your axioms. Set theory with classical logic? Or with intuitionistic logic? Maybe you'd prefer simple type theory? Carry on!<p>That said, the largest Metamath database (set of axioms and proven theorems) is the "Metamath Proof Explorer". It's based on ZFC set theory with classical logic. It turns out that ZFC set theory is quite enough to model structures. This database does add the Tarski–Grothendieck Axiom for certain uses of category theory (the same axiom added by Mizar), but it's only used when it's <i>needed</i> and that is quite rare. Heck, even the axiom of choice turns out to be unneeded in many cases. You certainly don't <i>have</i> to use ZFC with classical logic as your fundamental starting point (indeed, someone who rejected classical logic would not accept it). But you can go a long way with it.<p>More information about Metamath is here: <a href="https://us.metamath.org/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://us.metamath.org/</a><p>More information about the Metamath Proof Explorer database (based on ZFC + classical logic) is here: <a href="https://us.metamath.org/mpeuni/mmset.html" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://us.metamath.org/mpeuni/mmset.html</a> | null | null | 38,102,096 | 38,102,096 | null | [
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38,108,786 | comment | troupo | "2023-11-02T03:48:36" | null | > And when you are this early in the OS release cycle (we are only at 14.1)<p>I hope this was a joke :)<p>The worst thing that Apple did to themselves is force everything and everyone into a yearly release cycle | null | null | 38,103,883 | 38,101,328 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,787 | comment | kelseyfrog | "2023-11-02T03:48:56" | null | poop.ing* | null | null | 38,106,781 | 38,100,284 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,788 | comment | neurostimulant | "2023-11-02T03:48:57" | null | You might not get a head up when you're forced to change your domain though. For example, recently a huge number of .ml domains are dead and people that used them must scramble to migrate to another domain. The problem is some apps like mastodon (and now passkey) don't support changing domains unless the old domain is still accessible. | null | null | 38,107,824 | 38,102,082 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,789 | comment | tech234a | "2023-11-02T03:49:12" | null | I think they meant they were burned by Lastpass and are now less trustful of password manager services. | null | null | 38,106,261 | 38,102,082 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,790 | comment | jhunterprice | "2023-11-02T03:49:25" | null | Sphinx Defense | Engineering, DevOps, & Product | Remote (US Only), Washington, D.C, Colorado Springs, CO | <a href="https://www.sphinxdefense.com" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.sphinxdefense.com</a><p>Sphinx Defense builds software to solve complex national security problems for America and its allies. Founded by engineers and technologists with deep experience across commercial and defense technology, we’re building a vehicle-agnostic communication infrastructure to enable satellite operators to securely utilize antenna networks and maneuver satellites in real-time. We're bootstrapped, profitable, and growing aggressively.<p>To learn more about who we are, our engineering culture, and whether this is the right place for you, read our Key Values profile: <a href="https://www.keyvalues.com/sphinx-defense">https://www.keyvalues.com/sphinx-defense</a><p>If you have specific questions, or are interested and don't see a role that looks like a good fit, email me directly at hunter (at) sphinxdefense.com<p>Check out our open roles: <a href="https://www.sphinxdefense.com/#Careers" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.sphinxdefense.com/#Careers</a><p>Tech Stack: Programming: Python, Flask, pipenv, JSON
Data: PostgreSQL, Vault, ActiveMQ
Infrastructure: Docker, Terraform, Ansible, AWS, Linux | null | null | 38,099,086 | 38,099,086 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,791 | comment | runald | "2023-11-02T03:50:33" | null | Same experience as others, I see this job post every time, I applied at least two times with zero response. | null | null | 38,101,261 | 38,099,086 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,792 | comment | taurath | "2023-11-02T03:50:37" | null | I don't think the two points are orthogonal, I think they're complimentary - please don't look for conflict here where I'm simply trying to reflect on multiple ideas. It could be that folks with higher incomes have a much higher expectation of quality of life, in terms of outcomes and activities for their children, it could be that people with higher incomes get greedy. In either case, an lesser cost of living might give more of them. Of people you know with higher incomes, why do they choose not to have kids? Again, its less than a 30% difference between the highest income and lowest income. The difference between the middle incomes and the lowest income is less than 15%. Simply saying that there are more factors at play, which I don't think is controversial. | null | null | 38,108,452 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,793 | comment | kevans91 | "2023-11-02T03:50:47" | null | We (FreeBSD) should really reconcile our diff against OpenBSD and figure out what of the work I've done downstream makes sense and what doesn't. I'd imagine there's a healthy amount in both categories. | null | null | 38,108,301 | 38,104,554 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,794 | comment | smartbit | "2023-11-02T03:51:31" | null | There is a spin-off from gitlab that enables hiring people in many countries in the world. Could come handy. | null | null | 38,106,509 | 38,105,232 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,795 | comment | derefr | "2023-11-02T03:51:34" | null | The thing you describe happening to you is known as “orthostatic hypotension.” | null | null | 38,108,350 | 38,106,257 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,796 | comment | troupo | "2023-11-02T03:51:37" | null | Not do yearly release cycles. | null | null | 38,103,731 | 38,101,328 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,797 | comment | windexh8er | "2023-11-02T03:51:51" | null | My main unit (live in the northern part of the central US) can operate below -10F with no problem heating my house. It is a dual fuel system (natural gas + HP) and, normal operations I don't, normally, run the pump at those temps. I generally lock the HP out around 10F and let the system choose the heat source based on the conditions.<p>Air source heat pumps are very viable in the northern climates of the US. | null | null | 38,104,065 | 38,102,636 | null | null | null | null |
38,108,798 | comment | dragonwriter | "2023-11-02T03:51:55" | null | That wasn't the stated goal of <i>society</i>, it was the stated goal of the adoption of a particular framework of government (replacing an earlier one which, implicitly, fell short in those areas, but may have been adequate to other areas important to the goals the authors had for society.) | null | null | 38,108,777 | 38,107,537 | null | [
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38,108,799 | comment | balves | "2023-11-02T03:52:01" | null | Nix-darwin seems like a solution worth looking into for this. | null | null | 38,108,048 | 38,104,554 | null | null | null | null |