id
int64
0
13.5M
type
stringclasses
5 values
by
stringlengths
2
15
time
unknown
title
stringlengths
0
198
text
stringlengths
0
99.1k
url
stringlengths
0
6.6k
score
float64
-1
5.77k
parent
float64
1
30.4M
top_level_parent
int64
0
30.4M
descendants
float64
-1
2.53k
kids
sequence
deleted
bool
1 class
dead
bool
1 class
38,108,900
comment
lxgr
"2023-11-02T04:11:23"
null
The situation with Chrome and Apple devices is currently quite confusing.<p>Apple has only recently introduced the necessary APIs to allow for third-party passkey providers (i.e. other apps acting as a passkey storage) and users (i.e. other apps using passkeys stored in iCloud and in other third-party provider apps).<p>But it&#x27;s not easy as passkeys being supported on the latest versions; at least Google used to support a non-synchronizing platform authenticator implementation of WebAuthN using the system keychain and Touch ID (or the login password as a fallback) as well. So there is also a chance you were using that, at least on macOS.<p>&gt; Is the future state for bitwarden to be able to perform the same trick somehow?<p>For web browsers, I believe the current approach of 1Password and presumably also Bitwarden is to inject a custom implementation of WebAuthN into every page&#x27;s context. This doesn&#x27;t require any WebAuthN&#x2F;passkey support on the browser&#x27;s side.<p>On macOS, they could also act as a system-level passkey provider though; this should then allow all passkey consumers (such as Safari and other browsers) to use these passkeys natively, i.e. without a JavaScript shim. And on iOS, given how web extensions are notoriously tricky there and all browsers are kind of Safari under the hood anyway, that might even be the only option.
null
null
38,107,920
38,102,082
null
[ 38109034 ]
null
null
38,108,901
comment
ndriscoll
"2023-11-02T04:11:28"
null
Ok in that case, it&#x27;s to end the the war of all against all, but genocide is a rather strong reason to dissolve the truce. The people unable to have kids because of policy decisions that it&#x27;s economically inefficient would owe no obligation to society, including the obligation to warn anyone ahead of time that the contract with them has ended.
null
null
38,108,798
38,107,537
null
null
null
null
38,108,902
comment
cereal_cable
"2023-11-02T04:11:33"
null
This happened with copper lines for telephony providers. Incumbent Local Exchange Carriers have to provide access for Competitive Local Exchange Carriers to enter the market and break up their monopoly. This effectively made DSL and T1s available via CLECs as they could acquire access to a copper circuit directly.<p>Internet has yet to be regulated that way and fiber lines aren&#x27;t considered the same as those copper lines.<p>Also, fiber to the home is done using most often a PON system purchased from a specific vendor and is a time shared medium. You might only get 1Gbps service but you also aren&#x27;t getting 100% of the fiber to yourself. The home side device will filter information from your neighbors for instance.<p>There&#x27;s always ways to do this of course but, it wouldn&#x27;t be as straightforward as patch the fiber from your home in the same way that they did with copper lines.
null
null
38,106,727
38,103,733
null
null
null
null
38,108,903
comment
null
"2023-11-02T04:12:02"
null
null
null
null
38,108,048
38,104,554
null
null
true
null
38,108,904
comment
Pigalowda
"2023-11-02T04:12:02"
null
You trying to be abrasive or no? It seems like yes but I’ll respond.<p>Everyone I know from multiple residencies and in fellowship all reset radprimer and redid the questions for core. It’s not like people save it, they do it twice. Anyways, like I said, I was pretty average for prep. Also I forgot to add - everyone I know also used the Radiology Core Physics app, that’s like an additional 300 or 500 questions.<p>Ben White is pretty well known, he pretty much gives a road map that includes rad primer<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.benwhite.com&#x2F;radiology&#x2F;approaching-the-abr-core-exam&#x2F;" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.benwhite.com&#x2F;radiology&#x2F;approaching-the-abr-core-...</a><p>“Looking back, in an ideal world: I would have read Core Radiology and started RadPrimer in the fall. Done CTC and physics Feb&#x2F;March and then filled in the rest of the time with questions, probably primarily via the A Core Review Series. Qevlar is nice for the phone app with offline capabilities and probably would’ve made it in too. Most of the latter would have been important mostly for anxiolysis or possibly long-term retention, as passage wasn’t an issue.”<p>I felt like Radprimer and the physics app were the highest yield Then board vitals Last Kevlar<p>Highest yield book was War machine. Crack did OK. Essentials books were solid, especially nucs.<p>Later gator
null
null
38,108,671
38,098,779
null
null
null
null
38,108,905
comment
thatguy324354
"2023-11-02T04:12:11"
null
You can check out on Blind. This round seems to be pretty senior-level heavy. Layoffs mostly hit the senior&#x2F;principal engineers.
null
null
38,103,083
38,097,769
null
null
null
null
38,108,906
comment
lxgr
"2023-11-02T04:12:26"
null
From the website:<p>&gt; Passkeys support for mobile applications is planned for a future release.
null
null
38,104,020
38,102,082
null
null
null
null
38,108,907
comment
TylerE
"2023-11-02T04:12:53"
null
Dark chocolate isn’t especially bad for you. Not that much sugar in it, really, if you stick to 80%+. The nutritional profile is a lot like peanut butter.. calories and fat yes, but gobs if protein.
null
null
38,108,552
38,104,719
null
[ 38109456 ]
null
null
38,108,908
comment
pilgrim0
"2023-11-02T04:13:07"
null
The way you put it, I find it pretty fucking interesting. Thanks for the comment.
null
null
38,108,785
38,102,096
null
null
null
null
38,108,909
comment
nsagent
"2023-11-02T04:13:08"
null
Early adopters can upgrade MacPorts before it officially supports the latest OS by building from source if they have the patience and are willing to debug any broken ports.
null
null
38,108,815
38,104,554
null
[ 38109148 ]
null
null
38,108,910
comment
cratermoon
"2023-11-02T04:13:19"
null
Nor Mutual of Omaha&#x27;s Wild Kingdom.
null
null
38,108,355
38,106,461
null
null
null
null
38,108,911
comment
Phostera
"2023-11-02T04:14:07"
null
Pretty much describes my 2022 Outback. I’m working on the wife to sell it for two 10k older vehicles and 10k worth of parts budget. Mostly because the cameras and electronics will expensively fail and the warranty will be a pita.
null
null
38,102,083
38,102,083
null
null
null
null
38,108,912
story
PaulHoule
"2023-11-02T04:14:35"
Car buyers are more likely to consider an EV if their neighbors drive one
null
https://techxplore.com/news/2023-10-car-buyers-electric-vehicle-neighbors.html
1
null
38,108,912
0
null
null
null
38,108,913
comment
svennidal
"2023-11-02T04:14:46"
null
My car is almost 15 years old. I can change every setting in my car without taking my eyes of the road. If my car was a text editor it would be Vim.
null
null
38,102,083
38,102,083
null
null
null
null
38,108,914
comment
gruez
"2023-11-02T04:14:55"
null
&gt;It’s now wrong, but it’s a classic straw man argument (or a cake or cupcake argument really — “should we make cupcakes illegal then?” (Uh. Yes, if they contain large amounts of cadmium or lead we absolutely should — you want me to give lead paint in food to your kids?)).<p>It&#x27;s ironic that in the course of calling out a straw man, that you went with an example that&#x27;s the easiest to defeat. What about tuna? They also contain large amounts of heavy metals, so much so that some authorities recommend you only eat a few cans a week. Should we banning tuna as well?
null
null
38,108,608
38,104,719
null
[ 38109024, 38109088 ]
null
null
38,108,915
story
totetsu
"2023-11-02T04:15:08"
Ask HN: What HCI Experiments should be carried on?
Hey HN,<p>Stumbled upon a cool ArcGIS story map the other day, showing novelists as pins around the Caribbean. Got me thinking – isn&#x27;t this a refreshing way to explore data?<p>Back in the &#x27;90s, we had all these quirky and diverse interfaces: Clippy, virtual desktops, Flash interfaces, pen tablets. I think Carmen Sandiago, and the encarta encyclopedia epitomize this era. There was an explosion of HCI. It was a fascinating time to use computers as a child. Seems like we’ve settled into a more standardized UI&#x2F;UX groove these days, primarily driven by the ad and surveillance economy. Some that I remember: 1. Diverse input methods: The god glove from Black&amp;white. Remember when you could navigate your PC with Dragon NaturallySpeaking? 2. Interactive interfaces: Flash videos with links in the video. 3. Personalized helpers: Clippy had personality. What happened to interfaces with character? 4. Visual tools for everything: Timelines, maps, you name it. There were so many creative ways to visualize data.<p>Any thing you miss or think we should bring back? Or any new paradigms that have caught your eye?
null
1
null
38,108,915
0
null
null
null
38,108,916
comment
Shawnj2
"2023-11-02T04:15:16"
null
For cars yes, for everything else no.
null
null
38,108,818
38,102,083
null
null
null
null
38,108,917
comment
jrumbut
"2023-11-02T04:15:34"
null
Java is particularly rough because there are several populations of Java users (students, Android developers, enterprise developers, among others) and their coding standards are universes apart.
null
null
38,107,964
38,097,938
null
null
null
null
38,108,918
comment
gruez
"2023-11-02T04:15:39"
null
What does ethical sourcing have to do with heavy metal poisoning?
null
null
38,108,898
38,104,719
null
[ 38109057, 38109119 ]
null
null
38,108,919
comment
csomar
"2023-11-02T04:15:40"
null
It seems that these owners are making these payments somehow. If you have capital, you can maintain the fictional values of your assets (these mortgages) by not accepting rent. This can happen if these owners are big corps&#x2F;funds and not a regular retiree that needs the rent.<p>Question is, if they are using these fictional valuations to maintain some other sort of financial schemes that helps them pay the monthly. The whole thing will be a pyramid scheme awaiting collapse.
null
null
38,101,879
38,100,541
null
null
null
null
38,108,920
comment
Manuel_D
"2023-11-02T04:15:45"
null
Some napkin paper math. I googled &quot;largest index fund&quot; and got these 3 results:<p>Vanguard 500: 3x return over last 10 years<p>Vanguard total stock market index fund: 2x over last 10 years<p>SWPPX: 3x over last 10 years.<p>Google is telling me inflation from 2013 to 2023 is 41%.<p>So even with inflation accounted for you&#x27;re looking at a 50-150% ROI over 10 years. Maybe I just got incredibly lucky picking index funds, so I googled the total market capitalization of US domestic companies and that grew from about 15 to 30 trillion. This stat seems to be wonkier, other estimates claim 45 trillion (probably a more inclusive estimate counting smaller companies).<p>But TL;DR: No, inflation did not gobble up the returns on investments
null
null
38,108,401
38,098,779
null
null
null
null
38,108,921
comment
catlover76
"2023-11-02T04:16:13"
null
y u talkin to police bro, u snitchin?
null
null
38,108,684
38,108,684
null
null
null
null
38,108,922
comment
m463
"2023-11-02T04:16:18"
null
decaf does not mean caffeine-free (usually &lt; 5%, but not always)
null
null
38,105,851
38,097,184
null
null
null
null
38,108,923
comment
LASR
"2023-11-02T04:16:20"
null
Great. So now my car is the teenager in the driver seat I have to keep pestering with instructions to not kill me.
null
null
38,108,651
38,102,083
null
null
null
null
38,108,924
comment
xyzelement
"2023-11-02T04:16:31"
null
Inreresting, my &#x27;21 Toyota does not lock me out of using the screen. But anyway I&#x27;ve learned it&#x27;s much faster to engage with Android Auto or Car Play via voice. My steering wheel has a button that makes the car &quot;listen&quot; and then I simply say android assistant-like commands eg &quot;navigate to ____&quot; &quot;send message to _____&quot; &quot;gas stations along my route&quot; &quot;Play Wheels on the Bus&quot; etc.
null
null
38,108,179
38,102,083
null
null
null
null
38,108,925
comment
jppittma
"2023-11-02T04:16:35"
null
Who cares about posix? It&#x27;s not the 2000&#x27;s anymore. Solaris is dead. HP-UX is dead. Were you worried that someday you might have to port your shell script to AIX?<p>GNU and Linux won. The only BSD environment is macOS, and if you put GNU on macOS, then the only thing I can think of that&#x27;s worth a mention is alpine and busybox containers, but at that point it feels like we&#x27;re just grasping at straws.
null
null
38,107,517
38,104,554
null
[ 38109067 ]
null
null
38,108,926
comment
numpad0
"2023-11-02T04:16:49"
null
OT, but PSA: If anyone has issues with tablet PC screens feeling slimy and uncomfortable to draw on, try &quot;paperlike&quot; screen protectors. It has grainy finishing reminiscent of tracing papers and office desk surfaces, and significantly improves drawing feel.
null
null
38,102,023
38,102,023
null
null
null
null
38,108,927
comment
zamadatix
"2023-11-02T04:16:52"
null
I think people get more value out of the unified search&#x2F;url bar &quot;just working&quot; without having to think how to use it than they&#x27;d get out of not having to type &quot;.com&quot;. If they want that kind of workflow they kind of already have it in the form &quot;apple&quot; enter -&gt; first result.<p>It would also mean every single word entry would have to hit the root level of this public name lookup system since the client wouldn&#x27;t know until after it checked.
null
null
38,107,063
38,100,284
null
[ 38109170 ]
null
null
38,108,928
comment
totetsu
"2023-11-02T04:17:01"
null
They say its a Myth, but then<p>&gt;&quot;What people see is essentially mass dispersal,&quot; said zoologist Gordon Jarrell, an expert in small mammals with the University of Alaska Fairbanks. &quot;Sometimes it&#x27;s pretty directional. The classic example is in the Scandinavian mountains, where (lemmings) have been dramatically observed. They will come to a body of water and be temporarily stopped, and eventually they&#x27;ll build up along the shore so dense and they will swim across. If they get wet to the skin, they &#x27;re essentially dead.&quot;
null
null
38,106,461
38,106,461
null
null
null
null
38,108,929
comment
teaearlgraycold
"2023-11-02T04:17:11"
null
Yeah that sounds good to me
null
null
38,108,438
38,107,537
null
null
null
null
38,108,930
comment
js8
"2023-11-02T04:17:13"
null
I work on enterprise observability, professionally. I think conflating service names (such as &#x2F;product) and service parameters (such as &#x2F;product&#x2F;{product_id}) in the same syntax is a big mistake.<p>The reason is you want tools to be able to tell a difference and discern how to categorize by service (for reporting). Also, there are privacy implications for monitoring tools, since query parameters might contain sensitive data.<p>There already are query parameters in the URL, that is better. I wish people never went with the idea of putting parameters in the path.
null
null
38,103,310
38,103,310
null
null
null
null
38,108,931
comment
hnfong
"2023-11-02T04:17:15"
null
&gt; inevitable difference between &quot;true&quot; and &quot;provable&quot; (ie Godel&#x27;s incompleteness). Now that part is pretty much solved, we are fairly confident that the foundations of mathematics are consistent.<p>Your assertion about the inevitability is true only under specific axioms. If you are willing to drop the notion that infinity exists, or the law of excluded middle (and maybe others), the problems that arise from Gödel&#x27;s incompleteness theorems don&#x27;t necessarily apply.<p>I&#x27;m very far from mathematician circles so I don&#x27;t know how they actually interpret Gödel, but the idea of being &quot;fairly confident&quot; that math foundations are consistent while knowing that either there are true statements that we can&#x27;t prove, or that the foundations aren&#x27;t consistent, feels like a pretty weird thing to me.<p>I always thought most mathematicians just looked at Gödel like he discovered an interesting novelty, then ignored him and went back to doing whatever math they were already doing, instead of losing sleep over what his theorem implied.
null
null
38,104,412
38,102,096
null
null
null
null
38,108,932
story
daco
"2023-11-02T04:17:32"
Physical Activity Guidelines [pdf]
null
https://health.gov/sites/default/files/2019-09/Physical_Activity_Guidelines_2nd_edition.pdf
2
null
38,108,932
0
null
null
null
38,108,933
comment
spacechild1
"2023-11-02T04:17:33"
null
&gt; At 120fps, your frame budget is only 8ms<p>What a luxury :) In audio code the budget can be as low as 1.5 ms. And you can <i>hear</i> every time you miss the deadline.
null
null
38,100,887
38,097,984
null
null
null
null
38,108,934
comment
rajkumaar23
"2023-11-02T04:17:44"
null
Location: Tempe, AZ<p>Remote: Open to any<p>Willing to relocate: Yes, to anywhere in the US<p>Technologies: C++, PHP, Java, JavaScript, Go, Protobuf, SQL, Python, Android, Node.js, ReactJS, AWS, Docker, Kubernetes, Apache2, Nginx, Jenkins, SaltStack, Terraform, Neo4j, Kafka<p>Résumé&#x2F;CV: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;rajkumaar.co.in&#x2F;resume" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;rajkumaar.co.in&#x2F;resume</a><p>Email: rajkumaar2304@icloud.com
null
null
38,099,084
38,099,084
null
null
null
null
38,108,935
comment
dlyons
"2023-11-02T04:17:57"
null
Hey, I have a pretty extensive Emacs configuration [1] on my Macbook using Nix, nix-darwin, and the Nix community Emacs overlay. It&#x27;s been stable across multiple OS updates, and if minor stuff breaks 99% of the time an issue is already open as it&#x27;s broken for everyone. Really, Nix is pretty awesome for the dev environment use case; bore yourself through the syntax and be rewarded with an easily reproducible system.<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;dustinlyons&#x2F;nixos-config">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;dustinlyons&#x2F;nixos-config</a>
null
null
38,108,048
38,104,554
null
[ 38109141, 38109178, 38109231 ]
null
null
38,108,936
comment
galaxyLogic
"2023-11-02T04:18:02"
null
Doesn&#x27;t it all come down to: What is the meaning of &quot;is&quot;?<p>Mathematics is all about statements like &quot;a is bigger than b&quot;. &quot;3 is prime&quot;. Etc. But what is (sic!) the meaning of &quot;is&quot;?
null
null
38,102,096
38,102,096
null
null
null
null
38,108,937
comment
Cheyana
"2023-11-02T04:18:16"
null
In my experience in municipal IT, working on shared computers at police stations, most beat cops not only don’t have their own computers, but also don’t have their own phones, and have to make calls from shared phones in computer rooms that aren’t occupied most of the time, so those numbers wouldn’t be suitable to call back on. The public can always call a main non-emergency number to leave a message for an officer if they have to.
null
null
38,108,684
38,108,684
null
null
null
null
38,108,938
comment
tclover
"2023-11-02T04:18:59"
null
I don’t want to give money to this awful company. Alphabet is evil.
null
null
38,101,749
38,101,310
null
null
null
null
38,108,939
comment
zakki
"2023-11-02T04:19:02"
null
Is that enough to create the TLD itself, let say .banging?
null
null
38,106,731
38,100,284
null
null
null
null
38,108,940
comment
happytiger
"2023-11-02T04:19:04"
null
Struts and shocks can last maybe 50-100k. If you’re beating the crap out of your truck you might be on the low end of that scale. Maybe that’s what they mean?
null
null
38,107,762
38,102,083
null
null
null
null
38,108,941
comment
SpaghettiCthulu
"2023-11-02T04:19:06"
null
I always assumed that was just a television thing.
null
null
38,034,232
38,025,998
null
null
null
null
38,108,942
comment
lxgr
"2023-11-02T04:19:11"
null
I can see the point of having multiple passkeys (e.g. backed by different passkey managers, like 1Password in addition to Bitwarden, or a combination of physical security keys and passkeys), as well as the point of being able to store multiple passkeys for different accounts in a single Bitwarden profile (e.g. for work and personal Google accounts).<p>But when would anyone need multiple passkeys for the same site account in the same Bitwarden vault?
null
null
38,103,786
38,102,082
null
null
null
null
38,108,943
comment
jimt1234
"2023-11-02T04:19:13"
null
&gt; At every turn, rude-ass automotive software you didn&#x27;t ask for clamors for your attention.<p>I love that sentence because it explains exactly how I feel. It&#x27;s a miracle if I can start my car without at least one message popping up. I&#x27;ve been driving since the mid-80s, just a few years after I started programming&#x2F;coding, and as much as I love software, and I think there&#x27;s a lot of benefit to software-enabled cars, I also see so much distraction. It&#x27;s like the web in the late-90s, littered with pop-up windows, except it&#x27;s my car, and I&#x27;m trying to drive.
null
null
38,102,083
38,102,083
null
null
null
null
38,108,944
comment
mrbonner
"2023-11-02T04:19:22"
null
I tried langchain agent and other abstractions and gave up after a few weeks. Things break randomly or after switching to a different LLm models (Claude vs ChatGPT). I determined that it was because of the prompt. So, I spent hours trying to make custom prompt. It works fine for me now but I wonder why I have to go through all that Frankenstein hack with Langchain and not just roll my own. I only use langchain for data loading now.
null
null
38,096,958
38,096,958
null
null
null
null
38,108,945
comment
brailsafe
"2023-11-02T04:19:24"
null
Now if they just do this for real life, I might be able to tolerate working in an office again
null
null
38,107,590
38,107,590
null
null
null
null
38,108,946
comment
resolutebat
"2023-11-02T04:19:28"
null
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;bank.ing" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;bank.ing</a> <i>is</i> ING Bank.
null
null
38,107,666
38,100,284
null
null
null
null
38,108,947
story
danjfoley
"2023-11-02T04:19:47"
Companies that use PHP and pay well
Looking to make a move, looking to find a list of companies with PHP as their backend. I&#x27;m a senior team lead now, but I just don&#x27;t get paid enough. I want to make 170k base at least with bonus and equity and all that great stuff.<p>I&#x27;ve got the usual linked in and job site searches going, but maybe there is a better way of going out it. And yes I like PHP. I have worked with the slim framework using packages from symfony and others to build up what we need. I&#x27;ve used straight up larvel and straight up symfony.<p>So where can a senior PHP dev work and make a good deal of money? Etsy seems to come up a lot. I&#x27;ve got my eye on their job postings.
null
3
null
38,108,947
0
null
null
null
38,108,948
comment
scarface_74
"2023-11-02T04:20:04"
null
Really? In the next 20 years less money will be taken out for current employees than needed to meet current obligations. The “trust fund” is a lie.<p>Either taxes will have to be raised on workers or benefits cut. Social security taxes have been used as part of the current general budget since the 70a
null
null
38,108,619
38,101,388
null
[ 38109205, 38109180 ]
null
null
38,108,949
story
TheFreim
"2023-11-02T04:20:09"
Vivaldi Browser
null
https://vivaldi.com/
2
null
38,108,949
0
null
null
null
38,108,950
story
toombowoombo
"2023-11-02T04:20:13"
Ask HN: How and how much do you sleep?
Asking for a friend :)
null
2
null
38,108,950
7
[ 38109360, 38109321, 38109123, 38108966, 38109012 ]
null
null
38,108,951
comment
m463
"2023-11-02T04:20:17"
null
why do people say stuff like this?<p>for example, they sell it to GlaxoSmithKline<p>not to mention the recent data breach
null
null
38,105,886
38,097,184
null
null
null
null
38,108,952
comment
SpaghettiCthulu
"2023-11-02T04:20:24"
null
Do they really apply these optimizations on every draw call&#x2F;frame&#x2F;flush without any significant caching?
null
null
38,031,998
38,030,050
null
null
null
null
38,108,953
comment
thaumaturgy
"2023-11-02T04:20:28"
null
2001 Jeep Grand Cherokee here. It gets driven hard so it has some problems, and everyone around me keeps pressuring me to get a new car. I&#x27;ve looked, and I&#x27;ve driven a pile of rentals, and everything is just so awful. I think 2010 is about the latest model year I&#x27;d ever go.<p>So instead I&#x27;m getting a really sweet new motor built for mine. Still the same 4.0, but with updated components and a focus on improved efficiency. My target is 25mpg highway. ...and a little bit of hooning around the desert racing circuit maybe. :-)<p>Even with a fancy motor (and transmission), it&#x27;ll still be less money than a new replacement vehicle, and most importantly, it won&#x27;t piss me off all the time. With already-upgraded suspension, steering, and some electronics, it&#x27;s kinda fun and quite capable.<p>The only thing I&#x27;m really missing is safety. Jeeps are pretty terrible at the moose test to begin with, and 2001 was too early for side curtain airbags. I <i>think</i> I can retrofit 2004 side curtain bags into mine, and I&#x27;m redistributing weight in the vehicle that, along with some of the newer electronic suspensions, should improve its highway handling.
null
null
38,105,654
38,102,083
null
null
null
null
38,108,954
comment
TedDoesntTalk
"2023-11-02T04:20:29"
null
That’s cadmium. You don’t eliminate lead to the same degree.
null
null
38,108,665
38,104,719
null
null
null
null
38,108,955
comment
kodapoda
"2023-11-02T04:20:47"
null
You use Playwright for unit testing? That sounds like an incredibly slow and painful process vs @testing-library.
null
null
38,101,032
38,099,145
null
null
null
null
38,108,956
comment
arp242
"2023-11-02T04:20:47"
null
&gt; GNU grep is over 3000 LOC, whereas the FreeBSD version is 724.<p>Where are you getting that number from? Because I have a bit over 1,500 lines in usr.bin&#x2F;grep (code only, excluding comments and blanks) vs. 3,900 for GNU grep.<p>Also you can&#x27;t compile bsdgrep with just POSIX libc (such as musl) since it relies on some extensions (specifically: REG_STARTEND). So if you&#x27;re looking for POSIX_ME_HARDER then bsdgrep isn&#x27;t actually the right place.
null
null
38,107,517
38,104,554
null
null
null
null
38,108,957
comment
serf
"2023-11-02T04:20:51"
null
lack of response during an incident, poor road conditions, little or no flood control, rapidly changing road conditions over timne poor lighting, randomized rural traffic (tractors&#x2F;goats&#x2F;whatever), and inconsistent street placement.<p>rural driving has always been historically pretty dangerous, even on an otherwise empty road.
null
null
38,108,601
38,102,083
null
[ 38109074 ]
null
null
38,108,958
comment
pests
"2023-11-02T04:21:18"
null
TikTok Live can be interesting for this. I always run across this Australian DJ jamming on his balcony at about 3AM EST and its always amusing watching his sunset at that late hour.<p>There is also a trend of morning news TV hosts doing a Live of their broadcast. Its odd seeing the morning news of some other city&#x2F;country at midnight my time. Also interesting seeing the behind-the-scenes and from their perspective.
null
null
38,108,410
38,107,711
null
null
null
null
38,108,959
comment
firejake308
"2023-11-02T04:21:27"
null
Yeah, but it makes a lot more sense to just incorporate that into the medical school curriculum than to make students sit through 4 years of Chemistry classes and hope that the dance class they took to fulfill the university core curriculum will erase all of their intrinsic biases
null
null
38,107,301
38,098,779
null
null
null
null
38,108,960
comment
jrumbut
"2023-11-02T04:21:39"
null
Does Kagi support queries like site, inurl, intitle, etc or have some similar capabilities?
null
null
38,108,519
38,097,938
null
[ 38109391 ]
null
null
38,108,961
story
bindidwodtj
"2023-11-02T04:22:02"
What Was New
null
https://www.math.ucla.edu/~tao/whatsnew
2
null
38,108,961
0
null
null
null
38,108,962
comment
seeknotfind
"2023-11-02T04:22:25"
null
Designing an app to emulate iOS games would be extemely difficult, let alone allowed on the app store. Backwards compatibility requires deep forethought and careful engineering as well as draconian enforcement. I think the technical difficulty plays a huge role here, when weighed against Apple&#x27;s culture (sleek, minimalist) and the impact it would have on profit.
null
null
38,108,638
38,107,413
null
[ 38108977 ]
null
null
38,108,963
comment
nonethewiser
"2023-11-02T04:22:26"
null
You people are just waiting for the next crisis to emerge and ruin your lives. This is called “anxiety.”
null
null
38,104,719
38,104,719
null
null
null
null
38,108,964
comment
Spivak
"2023-11-02T04:22:38"
null
TOTP is just PAKE with a funny way of writing the password.<p>We tricked people into using actually secure passwords and password managers by calling it 2FA and devising a scheme where the human does the challenge and the server necessarily must keep that part of the password in plaintext, but in exchange the user doesn&#x27;t have to type out the long part of the password every time.
null
null
38,108,147
38,102,082
null
[ 38109112 ]
null
null
38,108,965
story
sirkus4d
"2023-11-02T04:22:50"
null
null
null
1
null
38,108,965
null
null
null
null
38,108,966
comment
TheFreim
"2023-11-02T04:22:51"
null
I typically get 8-9 hours.
null
null
38,108,950
38,108,950
null
[ 38108984 ]
null
null
38,108,967
comment
jaxx75
"2023-11-02T04:23:02"
null
Well, to be fair, the oil weight is a result of CAFE standards. Squeezing out another .5mpg at the expense of an engine needing to be replaced at 115K miles (outside of warranty, of course) is the cost. There are other costs to improve fuel economy, like being stranded on the side of the road with no spare tire when you have a flat.
null
null
38,108,672
38,102,083
null
null
null
null
38,108,968
comment
et-al
"2023-11-02T04:23:07"
null
You&#x27;re kidding right? Apple under Jony Ive without Steve gave us the worst generation of Macbook Pros: butterfly keyboard, limited ports, and the touchbar.
null
null
38,108,737
38,102,083
null
[ 38109461, 38109247 ]
null
null
38,108,969
comment
SV_BubbleTime
"2023-11-02T04:23:08"
null
Upto 35, yea, ok.<p>Over 35? You are remembering wrong.
null
null
38,108,281
38,103,733
null
null
null
null
38,108,970
story
lermontov
"2023-11-02T04:23:34"
The Example of Seamus Heaney
null
https://hudsonreview.com/2023/11/the-example-of-seamus-heaney/
1
null
38,108,970
0
null
null
null
38,108,971
comment
ccooffee
"2023-11-02T04:23:36"
null
I wouldn&#x27;t call that a final solution to the paradox, though.<p>(Put on your tinfoil hats.)<p>Maybe the Earth-Moon system was engineered. The solar system came together from a nebular cloud 4.6 billion years ago. The great impactor hypothesis points to the mega-collision around 4.5 billion years ago. During the early days of the solar system, the system was very chaotic. By applying tiny-but-very-precisely-calculated forces in that system, you could cause an impact. Sure, it&#x27;s many orders of magnitude above what humans have accomplished, but the gravity slingshots that got the Voyager missions out of the solar system are the same principle.
null
null
38,108,722
38,107,078
null
null
null
null
38,108,972
comment
eru
"2023-11-02T04:23:37"
null
&gt; But, here&#x27;s the deal: he&#x27;s basically going to make top dollar until he&#x27;s 65. Meanwhile, I&#x27;ll likely be seen as a dinosaur in tech by that age and will be lucky to find work at all.<p>My grandfather made good money fixing systems for y2k in the 1990s and retired shortly after.<p>There&#x27;s plenty of work for dinosaurs. Plenty of systems quickly hacked together today will be around for much longer than planned for.
null
null
38,103,393
38,098,779
null
null
null
null
38,108,973
comment
kodapoda
"2023-11-02T04:23:56"
null
GP probably means business logic, not setting background color on a div. Coupling HTML with business logic <i>inline</i> reminds me of the good old DHTML. I am really glad the industry moved on from that mess.
null
null
38,101,456
38,099,145
null
null
null
null
38,108,974
comment
resonious
"2023-11-02T04:24:16"
null
I think this could be said about pretty much any good invention. The physical world doesn&#x27;t change much, so the only barrier to invention is human. And I suspect most inventions have someone imagining it long before some other person actually builds it.
null
null
38,104,579
38,101,613
null
null
null
null
38,108,975
comment
totetsu
"2023-11-02T04:24:31"
null
How exciting! grift.ing is available.
null
null
38,106,629
38,100,284
null
null
null
null
38,108,976
comment
m463
"2023-11-02T04:24:37"
null
did you forget &#x2F;s<p>They sell it to GlaxoSmithKline and others:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;23andMe" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;23andMe</a><p>not to mention the recent data breach
null
null
38,105,829
38,097,184
null
null
null
null
38,108,977
comment
Shawnj2
"2023-11-02T04:24:42"
null
A modern iPhone sure but what about the iPhone 2&#x2F;3G? That’s basically a low power ARM chip and we have Nintendo Switch emulators with very good performance. Anything pre-security chip should not be that difficult to emulate.
null
null
38,108,962
38,107,413
null
[ 38109037 ]
null
null
38,108,978
story
teleforce
"2023-11-02T04:24:44"
Automate Your Home Using Go
null
https://pragprog.com/titles/gohome/automate-your-home-using-go/
1
null
38,108,978
0
null
null
null
38,108,979
comment
zarmin
"2023-11-02T04:25:15"
null
This happened to me recently. I was in the kitchen and decided, for whatever reason, to stretch. There was a drawer open a few feet away. I held the stretch for long enough to induce this blackout, and it went almost exactly as you describe. The next thing I remember is a ten second fade-in to awareness: I&#x27;m sideways on the floor making gibberish noises and holding the back of my head. The drawer, now above me, was knocked off its rails. As I reflexively got up from fainting, I did not have awareness of the open drawer, and bonked the back of my head on it.<p>It was an extremely interesting moment of observing conscious awareness that I think about all the time.
null
null
38,108,350
38,106,257
null
null
null
null
38,108,980
comment
vlad_angelov
"2023-11-02T04:25:33"
null
Thank you. This is certainly possible. The library I&#x27;m using for rendering the PDF (<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;react-pdf.org&#x2F;" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;react-pdf.org&#x2F;</a>) does support Node.js as well. This is a good point, I suppose a lot of people will have their resumes in GitHub.
null
null
38,105,038
38,098,404
null
null
null
null
38,108,981
story
wglb
"2023-11-02T04:25:49"
Scientists acknowledge that got solar cycle predictions off: explosive peak
null
https://www.livescience.com/space/the-sun/scientists-finally-acknowledge-that-they-got-their-solar-cycle-predictions-wrong-and-that-we-are-fast-approaching-the-suns-explosive-peak
2
null
38,108,981
0
null
null
null
38,108,982
comment
yowzadave
"2023-11-02T04:25:52"
null
Would you be willing to wager on this?
null
null
38,100,737
38,099,506
null
null
null
null
38,108,983
comment
wly_cdgr
"2023-11-02T04:25:52"
null
Bikes. Kids? Bikes for them too. Wife? Another bike for her. Mother-in-law? She can walk.
null
null
38,102,083
38,102,083
null
null
null
null
38,108,984
comment
toombowoombo
"2023-11-02T04:26:05"
null
What time interval? And how regular is your sleep?
null
null
38,108,966
38,108,950
null
null
null
null
38,108,985
comment
kristianp
"2023-11-02T04:26:21"
null
Thread from 5 years ago, 307 comments: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=19091778">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=19091778</a>
null
null
38,103,919
38,103,919
null
null
null
null
38,108,986
comment
xyzelement
"2023-11-02T04:26:43"
null
&#x2F;&#x2F;People don&#x27;t learn how to use them. They won&#x27;t read the manuals or give a shit.<p>It&#x27;s the psychological concept of &quot;maximizing vs satisficing&quot; The former means to squeeze out the most of some item&#x2F;experience while the later means being totally good once a thing is &quot;good enough.&quot; We maximize or satisfice on different topics.<p>So I read the manual and I know stuff about our car that my wife doesn&#x27;t. But because the car is safe, fast, and comfortable - it&#x27;s maxing our her pleasure even if she doesn&#x27;t know that some setting exists.
null
null
38,105,740
38,102,083
null
null
null
null
38,108,987
comment
m463
"2023-11-02T04:26:50"
null
Don&#x27;t eat near bedtime, and you might want to consider tilting your bed a few degrees.
null
null
38,101,259
38,097,184
null
null
null
null
38,108,988
comment
TedDoesntTalk
"2023-11-02T04:26:59"
null
They reviewed sunscreens this past summer. Not a SINGLE mention of the numerous recalls due to benzene. In fact, some of the recalled products were in their article! And the article came out AFTER the first wave of recalls.
null
null
38,108,743
38,104,719
null
null
null
null
38,108,989
comment
snailmailman
"2023-11-02T04:27:11"
null
Third party apps can integrate with iOS’s native password autofill, just like how keychain works. Bitwarden supports this as well. I’ve been using Bitwarden seamlessly on all my devices, iOS included, for a while now. It works in apps other than safari too. Anywhere where the native iOS password manager would appear, my Bitwarden passwords appear as well.<p>I don’t think apps can turn on autofill automatically, you might have to manually turn it on in Settings-&gt;Passwords-&gt;Password Options
null
null
38,107,888
38,102,082
null
null
null
null
38,108,990
comment
msla
"2023-11-02T04:27:17"
null
If mathematics were the study of real objects, why didn&#x27;t Platonists realize set theory was ill-founded a long time before Russell did? After all, Plato predates Russell by a few years.
null
null
38,104,381
38,102,096
null
[ 38109045 ]
null
null
38,108,991
comment
ChrisArchitect
"2023-11-02T04:27:19"
null
Yeah immediately assumed it was a paid streaming service (which I wasn&#x27;t against but pleasantly surprised)
null
null
38,108,058
38,107,297
null
[ 38109318 ]
null
null
38,108,992
comment
jancsika
"2023-11-02T04:27:21"
null
If 99% of the drivers in the U.S. are indeed terrible, then anything that makes 100% of the drivers strap into their seatbelt upon entering the vehicle is improving safety. In that case, the regulators would be competent.<p>Enshittification would be something like selling third-party access to drivers eyeballs in a way that fucks up the infotainment UX, or selling driver data in a scummy way that encourages phishing attacks from within the infotainment screen.<p>Not sure how it would actually continue from there, but eventually this process of screwing up the end product in the interest of rent-seeking would make it difficult for the person to actually drive from point and to point b, which is the whole purpose the car was designed for. And at that point people would start questioning Kia (or whatever) as an actual vehicle useful for transportation, and the company would then fail.<p>That would be enshittification. What you describe is just an annoying safety feature.
null
null
38,104,606
38,102,083
null
null
null
null
38,108,993
comment
clove
"2023-11-02T04:27:28"
null
My ring - thus far - has been extremely correct about my sleep, as far as my wife and I can tell.<p>However, its activity recording is extremely inaccurate. I get moderate&#x2F;low activity scores every day despite engaging in intensive weightlifting sessions, riding bicycles, and going to jujutsu class. I lift till I cannot lift; I roll until I gas out... yet my ring tells me, day after day, I need to be more active.
null
null
38,100,528
38,097,184
null
null
null
null
38,108,994
comment
lobochrome
"2023-11-02T04:27:34"
null
That’s how I felt the system worked. I don’t actually know if there are financial punishments for companies with insufficient waistlines.
null
null
38,107,334
38,094,768
null
null
null
null
38,108,995
comment
robgarn
"2023-11-02T04:27:43"
null
The Intel 82586 was co-architected by Bob Beach (Intel Santa Clara) and Dono Van-Mierop (Intel Haifa). Bob had previously designed the iSBC 550 10-Mb (dual-board) Multibus Ethernet adapter, deployed in Intel&#x27;s MDS-80 microcomputer development systems. The AMD LANCE&#x2F;Am7990 Ethernet controller chip was architected at DEC Tewksbury and designed at AMD Santa Clara. I&#x27;ve spoken with all the key players.<p>My technical history book will cover the Ethernet&#x27;s first 15 years, from Alohanet inspiration, invention at PARC, initial chip and system products, CSMA&#x2F;CD, IEEE 802.3 standardization, and appearance of twisted pair. I’ve spoken with over 120 participants so far. (Btw, the Alto-I 3-Mb Ethernet adapter was primarily designed by David Boggs, although, as they jointly debugged it, Bob Metcalfe knew even gate. Bob authored the Alto-I Ethernet adapter microcode and the initial PUP protocol layer.)
null
null
38,091,670
38,086,894
null
null
null
null
38,108,996
comment
OnionBlender
"2023-11-02T04:27:56"
null
Measuring for what? Who care how many stars or issues an open source project has?
null
null
38,107,632
38,106,700
null
null
null
null
38,108,997
comment
dxroshan
"2023-11-02T04:27:58"
null
:-) I also thought the same.
null
null
38,108,389
38,107,711
null
null
null
null
38,108,998
comment
ryan_lane
"2023-11-02T04:28:06"
null
&gt; You&#x27;d have no trouble buying a home on a $30k income 20 years ago. They could barely give houses away back then.<p>I made a bit more than that 20 years ago and can guarantee you it wasn&#x27;t anywhere near enough money to buy a house. Finding affordable apartments to rent on that salary was difficult enough. I lived in New Orleans, which wasn&#x27;t a high cost of living city at the time. Maybe if you lived in the middle of nowhere that would be doable, but almost certainly not in a city.
null
null
38,106,898
38,098,779
null
null
null
null
38,108,999
comment
firejake308
"2023-11-02T04:28:30"
null
&gt; surgeons... are doing work that is extremely challenging and realistically only a tiny amount of people are able to do<p>As a medical student, I&#x27;d like to dispel this myth. The surgeons tell us all the time that they could teach a monkey to do surgery. What matters is putting in the 10,000 hours if takes to become proficient at surgery, and not everyone has the time&#x2F;resources&#x2F;opportunity to get that training. However, I believe that almosy anyone taken from the streets and given 10,000 hours of training could become a world-class surgeon
null
null
38,099,256
38,098,779
null
[ 38109383 ]
null
null