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38,108,800
comment
greesil
"2023-11-02T03:52:13"
null
I was reading it and said to myself &quot;geez, sounds like that Kia minivan I rented&quot;. I got to the end and was delighted.<p>The two cars I actually own, a VW and a Toyota have much better experiences in my opinion.
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38,104,440
38,102,083
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38,108,801
comment
amw
"2023-11-02T03:52:19"
null
They don&#x27;t, this is a lie from the country that&#x27;s been embargoing Cuba into oblivion for sixty years.
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null
38,104,852
38,098,779
null
null
null
null
38,108,802
comment
aaronmdjones
"2023-11-02T03:52:27"
null
&gt; Okay, but he already knows that&#x27;s not how it works, as he was not sentenced by adding up the maximum possible sentences for each of his crimes.<p>Yes, he was.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.justice.gov&#x2F;media&#x2F;785641&#x2F;dl?inline" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.justice.gov&#x2F;media&#x2F;785641&#x2F;dl?inline</a><p><pre><code> I look then to Section 5G1.2{d) of the guidelines, which tells us that where there are multiple counts, and the guideline range exceeds the statutory maximum for the most serious count, the court must impose consecutive terms of imprisonment to the extent necessary to achieve the total punishment. There is a little bit of ambiguity, however, as to what is meant by &quot;total punishment&quot; where the guideline calculation calls for ~ife imprisonment, but Second Circuit case law makes clear that in such a situation, the district court is to stack or add up the maximum sentences for all the counts. In United States v. Evans, for example, 352 F.3d 65, where the guideline calculation called for life imprisonment but no count carried a life sentence, the court held that the guideline range is 240 years, the maximum sentences for all the counts added together. Accordingly, here the guideline range is not life imprisonment, but 150 years, the maximum sentences for each of the 11 counts added together.</code></pre>
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38,105,932
38,099,506
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38,108,803
comment
gpm
"2023-11-02T03:52:32"
null
Even sending the initial email...<p>This quite tech-savvy (based on the blog post) user<p>- Was told how to send the email: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;social.kernel.org&#x2F;notice&#x2F;AbN55QfONFCPweYq7E" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;social.kernel.org&#x2F;notice&#x2F;AbN55QfONFCPweYq7E</a><p>- Read and attempted to comply with those instructions: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;framapiaf.org&#x2F;@davidrevoy&#x2F;111336814871081424" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;framapiaf.org&#x2F;@davidrevoy&#x2F;111336814871081424</a><p>- Still ended up being told they did it wrong: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;lore.kernel.org&#x2F;linux-input&#x2F;ZULw6AcBaD6z2UZA@debian.me&#x2F;" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;lore.kernel.org&#x2F;linux-input&#x2F;ZULw6AcBaD6z2UZA@debian....</a>
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null
38,108,714
38,102,023
null
[ 38108860 ]
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38,108,804
story
wolverine876
"2023-11-02T03:52:42"
A Primer on Cislunar Space
null
https://www.afrl.af.mil/Portals/90/Documents/RV/A%20Primer%20on%20Cislunar%20Space_Dist%20A_PA2021-1271.pdf?ver=vs6e0sE4PuJ51QC-15DEfg%3D%3D
1
null
38,108,804
0
null
null
null
38,108,805
comment
sumanthvepa
"2023-11-02T03:52:45"
null
I&#x27;m curious has one tried to do what the author did for a subject like physics or geology, mathematics or computer science? I for one would pay for a service that allowed me to discover interesting CS and math papers.
null
null
38,105,839
38,105,839
null
null
null
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38,108,806
comment
jldugger
"2023-11-02T03:53:00"
null
&gt;&gt; Thailand has a PPP of 3x China.<p>&gt; Where are you getting this? I&#x27;m no economist, but based on a simple search and data from wikipedia [1], your number seems wildly incorrect.<p>Ah jeez <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;data.worldbank.org&#x2F;indicator&#x2F;PA.NUS.PPP?locations=TH-CN-US" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;data.worldbank.org&#x2F;indicator&#x2F;PA.NUS.PPP?locations=TH...</a> is what I was using but I&#x27;m by no means competent in this. Was supposed to be citatation 3 but fell off it seems.
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null
38,094,239
38,058,564
null
null
null
null
38,108,807
comment
codetrotter
"2023-11-02T03:53:21"
null
Currently yes. One day maybe not. Besides, the ideal computer is an idea that can never quite be achieved :^)
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null
38,108,781
38,108,751
null
[ 38108845 ]
null
null
38,108,808
comment
somehnguy
"2023-11-02T03:53:30"
null
None of their examples were aggressive, let alone very aggressive. To me just sounds like someone who knows how to drive a little better than most.
null
null
38,108,495
38,102,083
null
null
null
null
38,108,809
comment
uncomputation
"2023-11-02T03:53:38"
null
You have it backwards on two counts. First count is the point of POSIX is any OS vendor doesn’t need to worry about any other OS compatibility. Just implement POSIX interfaces. Second count is that is OP’s exact point: it never has been done before, because too many OS vendors give POSIX very little thought. This helps realize the original vision of POSIX.
null
null
38,108,343
38,101,613
null
[ 38108858, 38109142 ]
null
null
38,108,810
comment
inquisitiverab
"2023-11-02T03:53:38"
null
Self-charging is interesting. Seems like it would be difficult, since you would have to have your screen at a very specific angle, given the lid of the laptop has the most non-screen and non-keyboard surface area.
null
null
38,108,751
38,108,751
null
[ 38108833 ]
null
null
38,108,811
comment
wodenokoto
"2023-11-02T03:53:46"
null
I did a stint at large pharma, and it was not free software that was used to extract structured data from publication.
null
null
38,107,621
38,105,839
null
null
null
null
38,108,812
comment
tcmart14
"2023-11-02T03:53:47"
null
I like that distinction and verbiage.
null
null
38,108,039
38,101,328
null
null
null
null
38,108,813
comment
neom
"2023-11-02T03:53:52"
null
I&#x27;ve lived in 3 cities, Seoul South Korea, Toronto Canada and NYC USA. In all 3, callbacks from the police come from UNKNOWN&#x2F;BLOCKED.
null
null
38,108,684
38,108,684
null
null
null
null
38,108,814
comment
lumalabsCA
"2023-11-02T03:54:03"
null
Luma Labs AI | Hybrid | Palo Alto, CA, US | Full-time | Engineering<p>At Luma we’re working at the cutting-edge of 3D graphics, neural rendering, web graphics, and high performance computing. We have some of the best and brightest researchers in the field, and bring lightning speed innovation to products. We are looking for strong generalist software engineers, front end web developers, and iOS engineers to join us and help make 3D accessible to everyone. See open positions here: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;lumalabs.ai&#x2F;join" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;lumalabs.ai&#x2F;join</a>
null
null
38,099,086
38,099,086
null
null
null
null
38,108,815
comment
jiveturkey
"2023-11-02T03:54:12"
null
&gt; dependencies vendored<p>did you mean versioned? if you really meant vendored, could you elaborate?<p>I don&#x27;t know about brew, but MacPorts wasn&#x27;t ready when Sonoma came out. So that&#x27;s a bit of a bummer for early adopter types, or folks that need to develop their own app against beta macOS and depend on ports for their setup.
null
null
38,108,468
38,104,554
null
[ 38109115, 38108909 ]
null
null
38,108,816
comment
stillconfused
"2023-11-02T03:54:12"
null
Hi- Those are the same translation (Red Pine&#x27;s) of the two sections from Mitchell that you quoted, 4 and 9. They are quite different than Mitchell, and correspond about as closely as one can to the text (given assumptions on punctuation; Classical Chinese was not punctuated).<p>To give a bit more detail of the first one, 4:<p>Mitchell 4a: The Tao is like a well: used but never used up. It is like the eternal void: filled with infinite possibilities.<p><pre><code> 1. The original text does not mention a well. 2. those who use it are not full, not the Tao not used up. 3. there is no mention of eternal voids just a lack of fullness for users. 4. there is no mention of infinite impossibilities, but it is possible &quot;as it were the ancestor of us all&quot; is mistranslated by Mitchell where &quot;all&quot; wan wu (literally 10,000 things) is translated as infinite, and the ancestor part is dropped. </code></pre> Mitchel 4b: &lt;blank&gt;<p><pre><code> It appears Mitchell skips the middle part of the section, which discusses dulled edges, tangles, light, and dust. </code></pre> Mitchell 4c: It is hidden but always present. I don&#x27;t know who gave birth to it. It is older than God.<p><pre><code> 1. The first half is clear &#x2F; as if it were present, not hidden. The rest is reasonable. </code></pre> By all means if you found something in Mitchell, enjoy, but he&#x27;s taken many liberties while translated a language he did not understand, and so it doesn&#x27;t match the original text as well as other alternatives.
null
null
38,097,414
38,058,843
null
null
null
null
38,108,817
comment
null
"2023-11-02T03:54:14"
null
null
null
null
38,108,572
38,104,719
null
null
true
null
38,108,818
comment
marssaxman
"2023-11-02T03:54:22"
null
I sincerely hope you are joking.
null
null
38,108,651
38,102,083
null
[ 38108916 ]
null
null
38,108,819
comment
hollerith
"2023-11-02T03:54:51"
null
A friend used to have a 2004 Scion, and I know what you mean.
null
null
38,104,551
38,102,083
null
null
null
null
38,108,820
comment
someonehere
"2023-11-02T03:55:03"
null
I’ll chime in with something a blogger once wrote.<p>Paraphrasing here: “The current macOS (macos 11 at the time it was written) looks and feels like it was designed by someone who never used macOS and has only used an iPhone.”
null
null
38,101,328
38,101,328
null
null
null
null
38,108,821
comment
jotato
"2023-11-02T03:55:04"
null
It is a Trane. Sadly switching isn&#x27;t like distro hopping :&#x2F;
null
null
38,105,451
38,102,636
null
null
null
null
38,108,822
story
negativelambda
"2023-11-02T03:55:30"
null
null
null
4
null
38,108,822
null
[ 38108874 ]
null
null
38,108,823
comment
db48x
"2023-11-02T03:55:35"
null
You can search the mailing list archive via the web page: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;lore.kernel.org&#x2F;lkml&#x2F;" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;lore.kernel.org&#x2F;lkml&#x2F;</a><p>You track the issue by waiting for replies to your email. With a bug tracking system you would wait for replies to the bug report in exactly the same way.<p>It is not the user’s _job_ to triage bug reports or direct them to the right person, but it is _helpful_ if they can take a minute to peruse the list of kernel modules and find out who the maintainer of the most relevant module is. By adding that person to the CC list of your email, you ensure that they will notice your email right away.<p>Microsoft has hired hundreds of people to serve as liaison between customers who pay for tech support and the developers who write the code. There’s no way for you to break through that barrier and talk to an NTFS developer directly because Microsoft prefers it that way. The Linux kernel developers cannot afford and do not desire to have that level of bureaucracy in between them and the world.
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null
38,108,714
38,102,023
null
[ 38109163 ]
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null
38,108,824
story
oidar
"2023-11-02T03:55:37"
Feds sue anesthesiology giant over alleged scheme to hike prices
null
https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2023/09/21/usap-monopoly-ftc-anesthesiology-prices/
3
null
38,108,824
0
null
null
null
38,108,825
comment
jldugger
"2023-11-02T03:55:52"
null
Is median income even relevant in places with massive informal economies?
null
null
38,094,208
38,058,564
null
null
null
null
38,108,826
comment
knoxg
"2023-11-02T03:55:54"
null
Do you like rings ? Do you like wings ?<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=dpLNA1Dk68M&amp;ab_channel=PeterSerafinowicz">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=dpLNA1Dk68M&amp;ab_channel=Peter...</a>
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null
38,100,284
38,100,284
null
null
null
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38,108,827
comment
hcnews
"2023-11-02T03:56:13"
null
Maybe you were <i>technically</i> right for some small scope of the problem, no proper industry definition of GC was supported by C++ by any of the major compiler. So, the HPC scientists were right imo.<p>Being technically right for an aspect that doesn&#x27;t matter is a common trope that a lot of software engineers fall for.
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null
38,099,660
38,097,984
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null
null
null
38,108,828
comment
barkerja
"2023-11-02T03:56:13"
null
Multiple passkeys backed by different sources (password manager, iCloud, Yubikey, etc.) can serve as a backup in the case you lost access to your password manager, for example.<p>If a service provides the option for more than one passkey, I always configure several.
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null
38,106,154
38,102,082
null
[ 38108864 ]
null
null
38,108,829
comment
cratermoon
"2023-11-02T03:56:20"
null
When I was studying documentary methods in media studies, this was widely shared. There were (and are) many things calling themselves documentaries but are closer to entertaining simulations.<p>The difference between what&#x27;s allowed for popular media and what research professionals would accept is pretty wide.
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null
38,106,461
38,106,461
null
null
null
null
38,108,830
comment
gabidb3
"2023-11-02T03:56:22"
null
Location: Los Angeles, CA<p>Remote: Would love to work on-site but remote is also fine.<p>Willing to relocate: no<p>Technologies: Java, Python, Spring, Angular, Jenkins, Docker. Also used C++, JavaScript, SQL.<p>Resume: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;gabidb.github.io&#x2F;resume&#x2F;" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;gabidb.github.io&#x2F;resume&#x2F;</a><p>Email: gabidb3@gmail.com<p>Gabriela Georgieva - currently pursuing a Master&#x27;s of Engineering in CS degree at Cornell Tech with 2 years of professional experience in the DevOps team at Vmware. I worked on developing &amp; deploying software applications and automating processes and tests. As an intern there I developed a full-stack application using Spring, Angular, Jenkins and Docker. While I am looking for Software Engineering roles, I am currently working on Machine Learning projects using Python, Sklearn, and Pytorch, so I am also interested in ML&#x2F;Data Science positions.
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null
38,099,084
38,099,084
null
null
null
null
38,108,831
comment
schaefer
"2023-11-02T03:56:26"
null
The ship has sailed on “isn’t useful”. Today’s Google is user-hostile.
null
null
38,097,938
38,097,938
null
null
null
null
38,108,832
comment
3ace
"2023-11-02T03:56:30"
null
I haven&#x27;t heard or see someone mentioning Defender Chronicles for a long time now
null
null
38,108,658
38,107,413
null
[ 38109010 ]
null
null
38,108,833
comment
codetrotter
"2023-11-02T03:57:04"
null
The panel can sit on the lid, but it could “flip out” so that even though the screen is facing you, the solar panel could face upwards toward the sky at the same time :D
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null
38,108,810
38,108,751
null
null
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null
38,108,834
comment
marcod
"2023-11-02T03:57:16"
null
I find it delicious that it was a <i>Disney</i> filmmaker who bought the lemmings off kids and let them run into the river (luckily they can swim).
null
null
38,108,090
38,106,461
null
[ 38109069 ]
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38,108,835
story
jruohonen
"2023-11-02T03:57:22"
Propaganda (1928) [pdf]
null
https://ia801206.us.archive.org/0/items/BernaysPropaganda/Bernays_Propaganda.pdf
4
null
38,108,835
3
[ 38109052, 38108836 ]
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null
38,108,836
comment
jruohonen
"2023-11-02T03:57:22"
null
When compared to other classics in this genre, Bernays&#x27; take is actually well-written and eloquent. If you read his conclusion, it also reflects a distant era when the term &quot;propaganda&quot; still carried a positive vibe.
null
null
38,108,835
38,108,835
null
[ 38108863 ]
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null
38,108,837
comment
1vuio0pswjnm7
"2023-11-02T03:57:33"
null
Are the results for these queries changing much over time.
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null
38,108,388
38,108,388
null
null
null
null
38,108,838
comment
PaywallBuster
"2023-11-02T03:57:34"
null
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=xMZlr5Gf9yY">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=xMZlr5Gf9yY</a>
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null
38,108,090
38,106,461
null
null
null
null
38,108,839
comment
Shawnj2
"2023-11-02T03:57:54"
null
Nebula, especially the curiosity stream bundle, just looks like a better and better deal every year. $15&#x2F;year, most of which goes to the people actually making videos based on your watch time for a better experience than YouTube is totally worth it when google pulls this kind of shit lol
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null
38,103,297
38,101,629
null
null
null
null
38,108,840
comment
haldujai
"2023-11-02T03:57:55"
null
AI has had the opposite effect on false positives. Statistically, most patients aren&#x27;t (that) sick and don&#x27;t have zebras.<p>Taking radiology as an example (because that&#x27;s my specialty) ~90% of studies are normal and some types (e.g. CT for pulmonary embolism, CT for transient ischemic attack&#x2F;vertigo) are closer to 98-99% normal.<p>Every diagnostic AI application I&#x27;ve seen implemented as of 2023 that merely replicates the work of a human has done nothing but increase false positives.<p>The extreme class imbalance makes this a non-trivial problem.
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null
38,106,913
38,098,779
null
null
null
null
38,108,841
comment
sneed_chucker
"2023-11-02T03:58:00"
null
Neat little article, but the premise is sort of flawed.<p>The author says that the 3rd gen of consoles really begins with the NES (by which I guess he means 1985), and so these early 1980s consoles can&#x27;t belong to the 3rd generation.<p>Ok, but the SG-1000 was only sold on the Japanese market and was released in 1983. Nintendo also released the Famicom (NES) in Japan that same year.<p>So I think it makes more sense to say that the 3rd generation begins in 1982&#x2F;1983 with the Colecovision and Atari 5200. I don&#x27;t think it&#x27;s fair to exclude them from the 3rd generation just because they weren&#x27;t as successful as the NES.<p>It&#x27;s not like the NES&#x2F;Famicom was radically more advanced than those consoles either. The 5200 and NES have very similar hardware (both are running MOS 6502 variants). The NES was a little more powerful but that&#x27;s not why it was more successful. The NES beat the competition because it was a better designed product that was ruthlessly marketed and supported by Nintendo.<p>The NES had super durable, and (for the time) ergonomic controllers while the 5200 and Colecovision had shitty, stiff joysticks with 9-digit numpads attached to the body. Nintendo sought out top game design and engineering talent to put out compelling, boundary pushing original titles while Atari and Coleco were still stuck in the arcade port paradigm.
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null
38,102,141
38,102,141
null
[ 38109029 ]
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null
38,108,842
comment
JumpCrisscross
"2023-11-02T03:58:03"
null
&gt; <i>If you aren&#x27;t renting out a space within some number of months, you start owing tax on what your financial agreement says is your &quot;rent&quot;</i><p>This cascades into consolidation in crisis. Small landholders can’t afford to ride out the trouble. Large ones can.
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null
38,107,991
38,100,541
null
null
null
null
38,108,843
comment
camel_gopher
"2023-11-02T03:58:09"
null
They’ll take your money, and it will go straight to exec bonuses.
null
null
38,102,787
38,098,779
null
null
null
null
38,108,844
comment
TylerE
"2023-11-02T03:58:13"
null
There is a reason I specified ipv4 and not v6
null
null
38,104,824
38,095,699
null
null
null
null
38,108,845
comment
jruohonen
"2023-11-02T03:58:19"
null
&gt; One day maybe not.<p>But I reckon that the other ideas would be doable already today.
null
null
38,108,807
38,108,751
null
null
null
null
38,108,846
comment
amw
"2023-11-02T03:58:26"
null
There is more authoritarianism in your life in the US than there is for the average person in Cuba. I know it&#x27;s hard to believe, but it turns out spending almost half your waking hours selling your labor for a wage to a much richer person than you doesn&#x27;t actually end up with a life defined by agency.<p>Cuba isn&#x27;t poor because of an inefficient command economy. Cuba is poor because it has been denied access to its largest trading partner (and more) for over half a century. And people _still_ have a better healthy life expectancy in that country than in the US. Imagine what it could be like there if the US did more than pay lip service to world prosperity and peace.
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null
38,100,194
38,098,779
null
null
null
null
38,108,847
comment
ClimaxGravely
"2023-11-02T03:58:56"
null
This reminds me when I found out the truth of a childhood movie of mine : Milo and Otis
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null
38,106,461
38,106,461
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null
null
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38,108,848
comment
p0ckets
"2023-11-02T03:58:59"
null
I think your first proposal addresses the root cause.<p>But the second proposal - forcing municipalities to write options with unlimited potential losses - is silly. The whole point of the zoning authority is to say &quot;it&#x27;ll be best for the neighborhood in the long run for there to be some retail shops here&quot;, and it makes sense whether you&#x27;re talking about a lot or the first floor of a building. If the development isn&#x27;t profitable with the ground-floor retail requirement, then just don&#x27;t build it.<p>Some sort of option might work, but it would have to be something like: the municipality can choose to rent the space for a fixed price if it&#x27;s vacant for long enough. This encourages the landlord to rent it for some higher price.
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null
38,101,101
38,100,541
null
null
null
null
38,108,849
comment
lxgr
"2023-11-02T03:59:08"
null
Not sure about managed vs. unmanaged devices, but Apple used to support attestation before they started synchronizing passkeys via iCloud.
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null
38,107,757
38,102,082
null
null
null
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38,108,850
story
gumby
"2023-11-02T03:59:16"
New Survey Approach Breaks Down America's Complicated (Cultural) Landscape
null
https://www.americancommunities.org/new-survey-breaks-down-americas-complicated-landscape/
2
null
38,108,850
1
[ 38109091 ]
null
null
38,108,851
comment
syntheweave
"2023-11-02T03:59:27"
null
I think one thing that could be said of &quot;Lost Generation&quot; systems is that they primarily reflect memory size, not other aspects of performance. The graphics on 400&#x2F;800&#x2F;5200 could be described, in rough terms, as the 2600 plus a lot of framebuffer RAM and generalizations on the rasterization to move it out of software kernels and allow different allocations of video memory for the application. If RAM had been cheaper when the 2600 was designed, the architectures would be more similar than different. You can also see this in modern Intellivision homebrew: while the graphical I&#x2F;O is limited, the CPU on it is a Motorola 68000 and can easily throw around whatever <i>processing</i> is needed for any 80&#x27;s game experience. Like Atari, Mattel dropped the ball, experienced corporate paralysis, and didn&#x27;t go forward with a planned upgrade to the Intellivision platform(Intellivision IV), which would have been a very high-spec third generation machine.<p>And this theme of memory basically holds true through the end of the &quot;Fourth&quot; Generation: games on console were assumed to be memory-starved, and advancements within those generations occurred through larger ROM enabling larger and more animated sprites, more graphically distinct &quot;worlds,&quot; full soundtracks and scripted cutscenes. In 1988, the year of the great DRAM shortage, more of the games released used smaller ROM space, and it caused a notable regression back to technically simpler productions.<p>When you get to the Playstation&#x2F;Saturn&#x2F;N64 the approaches diverge quite a bit because the bottlenecks shift according to which platform you talk about. Memory is still a major consideration, but data streaming can be either relatively easy(N64) or a considerable engineering problem(everyone else), while the inverse is the case with data storage capacity. It&#x27;s easier to discuss specific platforms as stable entities from that era onwards, since there&#x27;s a cleaner separation of computing resources from game content.
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38,108,020
38,102,141
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null
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38,108,852
comment
myownpetard
"2023-11-02T03:59:47"
null
&gt; Word of advice to all those who are chomping at the bit to disrupt pharma with AI.<p>Literally the first line in the comment that started this thread.
null
null
38,108,674
38,105,839
null
[ 38108870 ]
null
null
38,108,853
story
svetlana182233
"2023-11-02T04:00:18"
null
null
null
1
null
38,108,853
null
null
null
null
38,108,854
comment
jiveturkey
"2023-11-02T04:01:01"
null
&gt; she tends to stick with the pre-installed OS<p>That&#x27;s not a great idea security-wise. Apple has formally committed to only updating the latest major version for security fixes. Of course, they have backported some fixes, but even in early 2023 those backports were highly delayed and incomplete.<p>If you&#x27;re talking 7-8 years (and the hardware is certainly good for that long) of still using the OS as shipped, I feel like that is a mistake. The most painful updates are when they do the very large refactors, like Mojave-&gt;Catalina, then Catalina-&gt;Bug Sir. I am guessing whatever comes after Sonoma will be a biggie also.<p>I am still on Catalina for my media server. I don&#x27;t dare update it. But it&#x27;s not connected to Internet.
null
null
38,108,048
38,104,554
null
[ 38109152, 38109197 ]
null
null
38,108,855
comment
throwaway092323
"2023-11-02T04:01:06"
null
If tax is based on land improvement, a flat parking lot in a busy area is profitable, even if it doesn&#x27;t provide optimal value to the community. The owner may wish to add some buildings to the lot, but land improvement tax means they have to pay extra to have and keep those buildings, even if a recession keeps them empty.<p>Land value tax flips this, removing some of the risk of adding value to a property while discouraging hoarding.
null
null
38,107,912
38,100,541
null
[ 38109150 ]
null
null
38,108,856
comment
sweetpotato14
"2023-11-02T04:01:33"
null
I&#x27;ve been using Fina as an alternative anyway (<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;fina.xyz" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;fina.xyz</a>)<p>Kinda like notion but for you Finances...seems like they could be the next modern financial tracking app
null
null
38,105,299
38,105,299
null
null
null
null
38,108,857
comment
warkdarrior
"2023-11-02T04:01:33"
null
You&#x27;d better not hold the steering wheel wrong!
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null
38,108,737
38,102,083
null
null
null
null
38,108,858
comment
CharlesW
"2023-11-02T04:01:34"
null
&gt; <i>First count is the point of POSIX is any OS vendor doesn’t need to worry about any other OS compatibility. Just implement POSIX interfaces.</i><p>I must be missing something. How are you getting from &quot;just implement POSIX interfaces&quot; to &quot;compile once run everywhere&quot;?<p>Wouldn&#x27;t the former just promise that you could compile the same source on any POSIX-compliant OSs and get a binary that runs on that OS, on that architecture?
null
null
38,108,809
38,101,613
null
null
null
null
38,108,859
comment
dragonwriter
"2023-11-02T04:01:37"
null
&gt; If the crimes are similar, the judge is going to lump them together and pick the longest sentence as the one to serve<p>That&#x27;s <i>not</i> how it works. The guidelines calculation is done based on all offenses, a total punishment is calculated, and “If the sentence imposed on the count carrying the highest statutory maximum is less than the total punishment, then the sentence imposed on one or more of the other counts shall run consecutively, but only to the extent necessary to produce a combined sentence equal to the total punishment.” US Sentencing Commission <i>Guidelines Manual 2023</i>, §5G1.2(d)<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.ussc.gov&#x2F;guidelines&#x2F;2023-guidelines-manual&#x2F;annotated-2023-chapter-5#5g12" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.ussc.gov&#x2F;guidelines&#x2F;2023-guidelines-manual&#x2F;annot...</a>
null
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38,101,087
38,099,506
null
null
null
null
38,108,860
comment
db48x
"2023-11-02T04:01:48"
null
Yea, it looks like they sent their original email to several people, but failed to send it to the list. And they didn’t include any of the specifics in the email (such as kernel versions), instead giving a link back to their blog post. Whether you use email to report a bug or a bug tracker, you _must_ include all relevant information in the report itself. Even if it means repeating yourself, or coping and pasting from your blog.<p>Edit: Actually, they might have remembered to CC the mailing list, but since they use Proton Mail it probably sent the email encrypted. Don&#x27;t send encrypted email to mailing lists.
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38,108,803
38,102,023
null
null
null
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38,108,861
comment
friend_and_foe
"2023-11-02T04:02:08"
null
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.ph&#x2F;oOv5l" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.ph&#x2F;oOv5l</a>
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null
38,101,629
38,101,629
null
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null
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38,108,862
story
biplob_sheikh
"2023-11-02T04:02:13"
null
null
null
1
null
38,108,862
null
null
null
null
38,108,863
comment
gumby
"2023-11-02T04:02:17"
null
Well, the German propaganda ministry was the marketing or advertising ministry of the state. Once their term had been colonized, regular marketing types needed to find a new term. At least they, of all groups, were positioned to get the word adopted.<p>If there’s anything good to take from that it’s that at least those guys didn’t want to be associated with the nazis, at a time when the nazis were still reasonably popular in the USA.
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38,108,836
38,108,835
null
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38,108,864
comment
lolinder
"2023-11-02T04:02:38"
null
But that doesn&#x27;t explain why you&#x27;d want multiple keys all in the same password manager. That seems to miss the point of the redundancy, like keeping an &quot;offsite&quot; backup onsite.
null
null
38,108,828
38,102,082
null
null
null
null
38,108,865
comment
xyzelement
"2023-11-02T04:03:25"
null
OMG. What kind of car is this?
null
null
38,108,672
38,102,083
null
[ 38109000 ]
null
null
38,108,866
story
bindidwodtj
"2023-11-02T04:04:22"
0. The Devilish Qualm
null
https://thewutheringword.blog/2023/10/31/hello-world/
1
null
38,108,866
0
null
null
null
38,108,867
comment
hungle9
"2023-11-02T04:04:24"
null
Willing to relocate: Yes<p>Technologies: - Python [advance], Java, Javascript, Bash scripts[Advance], MySQL, MongoDB, LLM, Langchain<p><pre><code> - ReactJS + Redux - Airflow, Kafka, TensorFlow, Pytorch,OpenCV, SciPy, NumPy, Pandas, Wordpress, Scikit-learn - AWS, Google Cloud, Docker, Kubernetes</code></pre> Résumé&#x2F;CV:<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;drive.google.com&#x2F;file&#x2F;d&#x2F;1rWWQn8fyY8Ph1p8EyIMKVQwKOCAoEpZ9&#x2F;view" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;drive.google.com&#x2F;file&#x2F;d&#x2F;1rWWQn8fyY8Ph1p8EyIMKVQwKOCA...</a> Email: lehung [AT]gmail.com Website: hunglethanh9.github.io Linkedin: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.linkedin.com&#x2F;in&#x2F;hunglethanh&#x2F;" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.linkedin.com&#x2F;in&#x2F;hunglethanh&#x2F;</a> Hello, I&#x27;m Hung. I am a Full Stack Engineer and Product Manager with 10 years of commercial experience and community building (esp. Saas, Automation test) in prototyping, MVP, software development as well as maintenance and DevOps. Great communication skills, Startup experience, team leadership, passionate about programming, self starter, OK with freelance&#x2F;consulting as well as full time work.
null
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38,099,084
38,099,084
null
null
null
null
38,108,868
comment
nsagent
"2023-11-02T04:04:43"
null
Agreed. I switched from Homebrew to MacPorts a few years ago and couldn&#x27;t be happier. I just delay upgrading macOS until MacPorts officially supports the latest OS (which often takes a bit longer than Homebrew).<p>NOTE: I briefly tried Gentoo Prefix, so I could use the same setup for both Linux and macOS, but that required quite a bit more time investment than I&#x27;m willing to deal with. I spent even less time trying out Nix, but the learning curve was steeper than I had the time for, so I gave up on it pretty quickly.
null
null
38,108,468
38,104,554
null
null
null
null
38,108,869
comment
resolutebat
"2023-11-02T04:04:44"
null
You can adjust volume from the left scroll button on the wheel.<p>I was driving around last week in a rented Kia <i>very</i> similar to the target of the article&#x27;s rant, down to all the listed warts (DING! DING! DING!). After getting used to Tesla&#x27;s set-and-forget approach, I found having to fluff around with the temperature controls manually quite annoying.
null
null
38,108,715
38,102,083
null
null
null
null
38,108,870
comment
riku_iki
"2023-11-02T04:05:02"
null
Sure, now let&#x27;s read the post?
null
null
38,108,852
38,105,839
null
null
null
null
38,108,871
comment
resolutebat
"2023-11-02T04:05:05"
null
Blame American manufacturing for that, they&#x27;re aligned beautifully on the ones made in Shanghai.
null
null
38,107,776
38,102,083
null
null
null
null
38,108,872
comment
clippy99
"2023-11-02T04:05:09"
null
At first glance I thought this was the headline of a satirical article. :D
null
null
38,097,984
38,097,984
null
null
null
null
38,108,873
story
g42gregory
"2023-11-02T04:05:21"
Yann LeCun: AI one-percenters seizing power forever is real doomsday scenario
null
https://www.businessinsider.com/sam-altman-and-demis-hassabis-just-want-to-control-ai-2023-10
59
null
38,108,873
28
[ 38109384, 38109151, 38109397, 38109215, 38109431, 38109408, 38109168, 38109423, 38109292, 38109301, 38109307 ]
null
null
38,108,874
comment
oatmeal1
"2023-11-02T04:05:34"
null
&gt; “I have ordered a complete siege on the Gaza Strip. There will be no electricity, no food, no fuel, everything is closed. We are fighting human animals and we act accordingly” - Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant11<p>&gt; Mass killings are one means by which genocide is committed, but that is not the only method by which a group is “destroyed” or exterminated (in whole or in part). Raphael Lemkin, the Polish Jewish lawyer credited with coining the term, said that genocide often includes “a coordinated plan aimed at destruction of the essential foundations of the life of national groups so that these groups wither and die like plants that have suffered a blight . .. . It may be accomplished by wiping out all basis of personal security, liberty, health and dignity.”23
null
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38,108,822
38,108,822
null
null
null
null
38,108,875
comment
freeqaz
"2023-11-02T04:05:35"
null
I also thought this. Collectively, asking HN, how would you implement something like &quot;for fun and profit&quot;? (Without making it an RCE machine)
null
null
38,108,389
38,107,711
null
[ 38109220 ]
null
null
38,108,876
comment
brennoflavio
"2023-11-02T04:05:44"
null
It does not actually clicks on the ads. It sends the request to ad server but does not execute any response from the server, so it&#x27;s safe to run<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;dhowe&#x2F;AdNauseam&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;FAQ#how-does-adnauseam-click-ads">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;dhowe&#x2F;AdNauseam&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;FAQ#how-does-adnause...</a>
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38,102,580
38,101,760
null
null
null
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38,108,877
story
AppleStock1999
"2023-11-02T04:05:57"
null
null
null
1
null
38,108,877
null
[ 38108878 ]
null
null
38,108,878
comment
AppleStock1999
"2023-11-02T04:05:57"
null
[dead]
null
null
38,108,877
38,108,877
null
null
null
null
38,108,879
comment
underwater
"2023-11-02T04:05:57"
null
The state of recipe sites is 100% driven by Google. Those sites add the fluff because that is what Google rewards. The actual recipe quality doesn&#x27;t matter. If I use my example, the page contains:<p>* Bio of the author - Google SEO rewards content written by &quot;real humans&quot;, so this is there to appease the bot.<p>* Giant images of overnight oats - This helps the page rank highly on Google Image Search.<p>* Fluffy paragraphs - &quot;The beauty of overnight oats is that you can make them as simple or creative as you’d like. The base recipe is delicious, and filling all on its own. But if you’d like to spruce it up, you can add a variety of toppings and mix-ins, including fresh fruit, nuts, seeds, spices, jams, and more&quot;. Is that supposed to be text written for other humans? Google rewards original content, which means recipe sites need to include massive paragraphs of filler to appear like an authoritative source.<p>* Ads - Gotta make the money.<p>* More fluff &quot;Here’s a few reasons why you should to whip up this recipe today…&quot; - Again, this is not text written for humans.<p>* Repeat the fluff, pictures and ads approximately 5 times.<p>* Common questions &quot;Do you have to use yogurt?&quot; - Trying to appeal to Google Instant Answer searches.<p>* Recipe - Finally!<p>* Recipe rating - This allows the site to put a star rating and review count on Google, again, for SEO<p>So, 95% of the content and functionality of that page is an attempt to convince Google into sending traffic, or ads generating revenue, rather than serving the end user.<p>Content on the web has dramatically changed from 20 years ago because publishers are creating content for a broken machine and not for other humans. This negative feedback loop is hurting the web, and not just Google. This leaves the door open for upstarts like ChatGPT or TikTok to gain mindshare.
null
null
38,108,738
38,097,938
null
[ 38109225 ]
null
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38,108,880
comment
themainuser
"2023-11-02T04:06:27"
null
Our service was badly impacted, almost 100% outage. I&#x27;m not happy with Cloudflare declaring it as a minor incident and changing it to major after it was resolved. Why not be truthful and start with the correct status&#x2F;severity?
null
null
38,100,932
38,100,932
null
[ 38109387 ]
null
null
38,108,881
comment
leonidbelyaev
"2023-11-02T04:06:32"
null
Bullshit. There is no known safe level of lead.
null
null
38,104,719
38,104,719
null
[ 38109303, 38109040 ]
null
null
38,108,882
comment
bediger4000
"2023-11-02T04:06:54"
null
Once again we find out that ads are always lies, and advertising itself is corrupting the platform, just like it did radio, TV, search and newspapers before this.
null
null
38,106,554
38,106,554
null
null
null
null
38,108,883
comment
Bu9818
"2023-11-02T04:07:04"
null
Also, malicious code can be pushed to the website if you are logging in through that. You have to trust that their infrastructure is safe.
null
null
38,106,707
38,102,082
null
null
null
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38,108,884
story
kobimo
"2023-11-02T04:07:08"
null
null
null
1
null
38,108,884
null
null
null
null
38,108,885
comment
pylua
"2023-11-02T04:07:25"
null
Doesn’t look good for the defense. One difference I do see here is that there is an explicit disclaimer present on the ad if I am reading it correctly. That sort of disclaimer may work well for South Park but I don’t know about this.
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null
38,108,085
38,105,463
null
null
null
null
38,108,886
comment
simne
"2023-11-02T04:08:12"
null
Size could be beneficial for air-space industry. May be in transportation. For example, exist ships with special rotors for maneuvers, so this is possibility, to place somewhere very compact engine (or compressor), instead of bulky and expensive electric engine.<p>For ground applications, I don&#x27;t think this is enough beneficial, to be alternative to classic turbines.
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null
38,071,796
38,071,796
null
null
null
null
38,108,887
comment
themainuser
"2023-11-02T04:08:13"
null
&quot;This was a frustrating incident, made more difficult by Cloudflare’s reliance on our own suite of products.&quot;<p>I&#x27;m glad this was the case. We would have seen a different response from Cloudflare if they were not eating their own dogfood.
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null
38,100,932
38,100,932
null
null
null
null
38,108,888
comment
neurostimulant
"2023-11-02T04:08:24"
null
AFAIK if you type something in the browser&#x27;s omnibar, the search provider such as google will receive the autocomplete query, so google will at least know your secret domain. If you&#x27;re using letsencrypt, your subdomain will show up in the public CT log, which is probably being mined by some data or security companies. Your dns providers will also know this secret subdomain as well and and some data companies might be able to obtain them.
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null
38,104,979
38,102,082
null
null
null
null
38,108,889
comment
viraptor
"2023-11-02T04:08:44"
null
The point there is not that the decision will be made - that can happen anywhere. The difference is that in one of those, you can still patch the old behaviour. In the other two you can only raise a bug and hope somebody cares.
null
null
38,108,644
38,102,023
null
null
null
null
38,108,890
comment
TedDoesntTalk
"2023-11-02T04:09:15"
null
Fuck ArsTechnica.<p>Center For Disease Control (CDC):<p>“No safe blood level in children has been identified. Even low levels of lead in blood have been shown to affect a child&#x27;s learning capacity, ability to pay attention, and academic achievement. The effects of lead exposure can be permanent.”<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cdc.gov&#x2F;nceh&#x2F;lead&#x2F;docs&#x2F;lead-levels-in-children-fact-sheet-508.pdf" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cdc.gov&#x2F;nceh&#x2F;lead&#x2F;docs&#x2F;lead-levels-in-children-f...</a><p>World Health Organization (WHO):<p>“There is no known safe blood lead concentration; even blood lead concentrations as low as 3.5 µg&#x2F;dL may be associated with decreased intelligence in children, behavioural difficulties and learning problems.”<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.who.int&#x2F;news-room&#x2F;fact-sheets&#x2F;detail&#x2F;lead-poisoning-and-health" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.who.int&#x2F;news-room&#x2F;fact-sheets&#x2F;detail&#x2F;lead-poison...</a><p>Mayo Clinic:<p>“There is no safe blood level of lead.”<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.mayoclinic.org&#x2F;diseases-conditions&#x2F;lead-poisoning&#x2F;diagnosis-treatment&#x2F;drc-20354723" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.mayoclinic.org&#x2F;diseases-conditions&#x2F;lead-poisonin...</a><p>Columbia University:<p>“Lead and Children: No Amount of Lead is Safe”<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cuimc.columbia.edu&#x2F;news&#x2F;lead-poison-and-children-no-amount-lead-safe" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cuimc.columbia.edu&#x2F;news&#x2F;lead-poison-and-children...</a>
null
null
38,104,719
38,104,719
null
[ 38109295 ]
null
null
38,108,891
story
bindidwodtj
"2023-11-02T04:09:21"
Harry Potter: The Gen Z Edition
null
https://github.com/typoes/harry-potter-gen-z/blob/main/book_1/chapter_1.md
8
null
38,108,891
3
[ 38109175, 38109172, 38109234 ]
null
null
38,108,892
story
thunderbong
"2023-11-02T04:10:05"
Apple expected to post fourth consecutive quarterly sales decline Thursday
null
https://www.cnbc.com/2023/11/01/apple-q4-2023-earnings-preview-fourth-consecutive-sales-decline-expected.html
5
null
38,108,892
0
[ 38109134 ]
null
null
38,108,893
comment
thewileyone
"2023-11-02T04:10:07"
null
Things that annoy me about working in the office:<p>1. Commuting. This is a life-suck and no amount of great furniture and food makes up for sitting in traffic for 2 hours a day.<p>2. Meetings. When you&#x27;re in the office, there&#x27;s just no escaping the &quot;Do you have a minute?&quot; conversations. I&#x27;ve had weeks were I had to work 12 hour days because I was in scheduled and unscheduled meetings for 8 hours, leaving me 4 hours to work on deliverables.<p>3. Shitty people. There&#x27;s just some people in the office that you just don&#x27;t want to talk to or see if you can avoid them.<p>Things I like about NOT working in the office:<p>1. Picking up my kid from school. I pick her up and we talk on the way home one-on-one and we learn and understand more about each other. NOTHING you can give in the office will replace that.<p>2. Taking breaks. Lean back, stare off into the distance, have a cup of coffee without someone commenting, &quot;Working hard or hardly working? <i>chuckle</i>&quot;<p>3. Not working at home. Sometimes it&#x27;s nice to sit al fresco at a cafe and reply emails while enjoying a beverage.<p>Again, no amount of snacks, coffee, feng shui aligned furniture can make up for these points.
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38,087,173
38,085,909
null
null
null
null
38,108,894
comment
neom
"2023-11-02T04:10:35"
null
Meanwhile Namecheap just launched .bot tld today, that I think is frankly, quite cool.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.namecheap.com&#x2F;domains&#x2F;registration&#x2F;results&#x2F;?domain=rare.bot" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.namecheap.com&#x2F;domains&#x2F;registration&#x2F;results&#x2F;?doma...</a>
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38,100,284
38,100,284
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[ 38109005, 38109100 ]
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38,108,895
comment
panda888888
"2023-11-02T04:10:39"
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I also switched from Mint to YNAB a few years ago, and YNAB is head and shoulders better than Mint. I&#x27;ve always had good finances &#x2F; self discipline and didn&#x27;t think I needed YNAB, but it&#x27;s been way better than Mint for me. It&#x27;s easily worth the cost.
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38,107,177
38,105,299
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38,108,896
comment
llamaInSouth
"2023-11-02T04:10:52"
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.onion
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38,104,958
38,100,284
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38,108,897
story
thunderbong
"2023-11-02T04:11:02"
Google lays off employees working on its voice assistant
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https://www.businessinsider.com/google-lay-offs-voice-assistant-bard-roles-contractors-2023-11
14
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38,108,897
1
[ 38109419 ]
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38,108,898
comment
TylerE
"2023-11-02T04:11:05"
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There’s also a big difference between ethically sourced, tester boutique chocolate and Hersheys&#x2F;Cadburys type swill that isn’t fit for the name.
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38,108,608
38,104,719
null
[ 38108918, 38109395, 38109385 ]
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38,108,899
comment
underwater
"2023-11-02T04:11:12"
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&quot;Speed work&quot; is a class of running drills. The term is very common in running. I&#x27;ll let ChatGPT explain. This was its response was given the same prompt, when I specifically asked it to give me options it&#x27;s answer was more specific:<p>Speed work in running is a type of training that focuses on improving your running speed and anaerobic fitness. It involves various structured workouts and drills designed to increase your stride turnover and overall pace. Speed work is essential for athletes who want to enhance their performance in races or simply become faster runners.<p>Common forms of speed work in running include:<p>Interval Training: Interval workouts involve alternating between periods of high-intensity running (fast) and rest or recovery jogging. For example, you might run fast for 1 minute and then jog or walk for 1-2 minutes to recover. This process is repeated multiple times.<p>Fartlek Training: Fartlek, which means &quot;speed play&quot; in Swedish, is an unstructured form of speed work. During a fartlek run, you mix bursts of faster running with slower paces or jogging. You can do this based on how you feel or choose landmarks as your guide.<p>Hill Repeats: Running uphill at a high intensity is an excellent way to build strength and speed. Hill repeat workouts involve running up a hill at a fast pace and then jogging or walking back down to recover. This is repeated for a set number of repetitions.<p>Tempo Runs: Tempo runs are sustained efforts at a &quot;comfortably hard&quot; pace, typically just below your anaerobic threshold. This helps improve your lactate threshold and race pace.<p>Track Workouts: These are structured speed sessions done on a running track. Common track workouts include 400-meter repeats, 800-meter repeats, and 1,600-meter repeats, where you run at a fast, consistent pace and take rest intervals between each repetition.<p>Strides: Strides are short, fast runs of about 100 meters that help improve running form and leg turnover. They are typically done at the end of an easy run.<p>It&#x27;s essential to incorporate speed work into your training regimen gradually to avoid overuse injuries and adapt to the increased intensity. Make sure to warm up properly and cool down after each speed workout. Consult with a coach or experienced runner to create a personalized training plan that suits your goals and fitness level. Additionally, listen to your body and allow for sufficient recovery between speed sessions to prevent overtraining.
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38,108,763
38,097,938
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[ 38109015 ]
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