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38,109,200 | comment | m463 | "2023-11-02T05:01:54" | null | This works very well for me. I have tried just about every type but most were not comfortable. Finally found 3M ear classic NRR 33 earplugs and have bought them 200 pairs at a time. Super comfortable and effective.<p>used to buy these but not in stock:<p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/B008MCTXJC" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.amazon.com/dp/B008MCTXJC</a><p>so now I got these:<p><a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/B008MCTOPU" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.amazon.com/dp/B008MCTOPU</a> | null | null | 38,098,175 | 38,097,184 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,201 | comment | Terretta | "2023-11-02T05:01:56" | null | To your point, server logs have the info.<p>If every web client stopped the tracking, you, as blogger, could go back to just getting analytics on server logs (real analytics, using maths).<p>Arguably state of the art in that approach to user/session/visits tracking 20 years ago beats today's semi-adblocked disaster. By good use of path aliases aka routes, and canonical URLs, you can even do campaign measurement without messing up SEO (see Amazon.com URLs). | null | null | 38,096,165 | 38,095,699 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,202 | comment | hervem | "2023-11-02T05:02:20" | null | I hate this new name of "Platform team", newcomer state that they existed for long under "System team" and mid-follower of the tech. world will state that it is the vision from "Team Topologies" book (from Matthew Skelton and Manuel Pais).. Still this post doesn't even take part of any.. Again, another miss fired direction in my 2cents. | null | null | 38,098,579 | 38,098,579 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,203 | comment | tamimio | "2023-11-02T05:02:35" | null | I just checked work.ing and it’s is $125k a year.. for ~10k a month, I can do so much more by renting more servers infrastructure. | null | null | 38,100,284 | 38,100,284 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,204 | comment | preciousoo | "2023-11-02T05:02:50" | null | I didn’t know you could use tablets as a mouse, very interesting | null | null | 38,105,704 | 38,102,023 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,205 | comment | PaulDavisThe1st | "2023-11-02T05:03:03" | null | Also, see myth #4 here: <a href="https://www.ssa.gov/history/InternetMyths.html" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.ssa.gov/history/InternetMyths.html</a><p>and myth #5 here: <a href="https://www.aarp.org/retirement/social-security/info-2020/10-myths-explained.html" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.aarp.org/retirement/social-security/info-2020/10...</a> | null | null | 38,108,948 | 38,101,388 | null | [
38109331
] | null | null |
38,109,206 | comment | agar | "2023-11-02T05:03:06" | null | Thanks for the laugh. | null | null | 38,107,645 | 38,101,328 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,207 | comment | adastra22 | "2023-11-02T05:03:08" | null | Nobody replicates work in these fields in that way.<p>Most of the time people just don’t replicate work, full stop. In the rare instances that they do, replicating the analysis from scratch is the whole point. Running the same script and getting the same result is not interesting. | null | null | 38,109,184 | 38,104,554 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,208 | comment | kazinator | "2023-11-02T05:03:09" | null | But if you're the one starting the argument, then you have all time in the world to mull over the proper defense of that argument. Weeks, months, years ...
There is no need to regret anything. Especially in a matter that isn't even an argument but basically just conveyance of facts from the public record. | null | null | 38,105,287 | 38,097,984 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,209 | comment | kelsey9876543 | "2023-11-02T05:03:10" | null | you know streaming platforms have failed when every government agency has to have one | null | null | 38,107,297 | 38,107,297 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,210 | comment | flashback2199 | "2023-11-02T05:03:17" | null | They all but said it in the original comment:<p>"My background is Biology so there were a few remarks about how "a biologist just doesn't know these things, lol"" | null | null | 38,108,227 | 38,097,984 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,211 | comment | qingcharles | "2023-11-02T05:03:18" | null | This is a good community for finding old iPhone apps and games:<p><a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/LegacyJailbreak/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.reddit.com/r/LegacyJailbreak/</a> | null | null | 38,107,413 | 38,107,413 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,212 | comment | justwalt | "2023-11-02T05:03:23" | null | If this app took off then I'm sure this would be the eventual reality. | null | null | 38,108,362 | 38,101,966 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,213 | comment | defrost | "2023-11-02T05:03:25" | null | > I don't have any specific sources that compare between Africa and South America.<p>I do, but they'll kill me (figuratively) if I publish them.<p>Which highlights the issue of dark | private data.<p>There's the public USGS <i>National Geochemical Database: Soil</i> for central north america: <a href="https://mrdata.usgs.gov/ngdb/soil/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://mrdata.usgs.gov/ngdb/soil/</a><p>There's a <i>Geochemical Atlas of Europe</i>: <a href="http://weppi.gtk.fi/publ/foregsatlas/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">http://weppi.gtk.fi/publ/foregsatlas/</a> and a "work in progress" <i>Global Geochemical Baselines</i> database under development that will <i>reference</i> the available glonal surveys in the public domain, buuuut ...<p>If you want solid usable data from across the globe you probably want to access the pooled transnational mega mining companies database of surface geochemical results, back in 2008 the <redacted> companies portion was some 16 TB of raw sample results from every conutry and territories across the globe. Not complete of course, but once you mosaic that with <i>other</i> collections of a similar size .. that's something pretty neat. | null | null | 38,109,119 | 38,104,719 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,214 | comment | duskwuff | "2023-11-02T05:03:26" | null | You can find other M3 models by searching for "mac15":<p><a href="https://browser.geekbench.com/search?q=mac15" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://browser.geekbench.com/search?q=mac15</a> | null | null | 38,108,235 | 38,108,235 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,215 | comment | Animats | "2023-11-02T05:03:46" | null | It's too late for monopolizing large language models. The technology for making them is known and the cost keeps coming down.<p>There are things to worry about, but this doesn't seem to be one of them. | null | null | 38,108,873 | 38,108,873 | null | [
38109264,
38109444,
38109381,
38109285
] | null | null |
38,109,216 | story | gowebly | "2023-11-02T05:03:50" | null | null | null | 1 | null | 38,109,216 | null | [
38109217
] | null | null |
38,109,217 | comment | gowebly | "2023-11-02T05:03:50" | null | I've released a big update to the Gowebly CLI project in v1.5.0 which includes Templ support for built-in net/http and all Go web frameworks: Fiber, go-chi and echo. | null | null | 38,109,216 | 38,109,216 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,218 | comment | jessriedel | "2023-11-02T05:03:59" | null | The fact that young people have gotten used to inefficiencies and have gotten good at partially working around them does not mean the inefficiencies aren't there.<p>This often works the opposite generational direction: when a young person has a flat tire they often call a road service and wait two hours, while the old guy would install the spare himself in less than 8 minutes. But either way, flat tires are inefficiencies that are best eliminated. | null | null | 38,108,547 | 38,097,938 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,219 | comment | Capricorn2481 | "2023-11-02T05:04:16" | null | That the frontend community is a monolith marching towards the same area is a weird HN old wives tale. Most people are still using React and Jquery | null | null | 38,102,802 | 38,099,145 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,220 | comment | null | "2023-11-02T05:04:17" | null | null | null | null | 38,108,875 | 38,107,711 | null | null | true | null |
38,109,221 | comment | deepinder10 | "2023-11-02T05:04:23" | null | Location: Vancouver, BC, Canada<p>Role: Senior Full Stack Engineer, Senior Frontend Engineer, Senior Backend Engineer<p>Looking for remote jobs in: USA and Canada, San Francisco Bay Area, New York, Los Angeles (PST)<p>Remote: Yes<p>Technologies: Node.js, React, PostgreSQL, MySQL, Next.js, VueJS, Nuxt.js, Javascript, Typescript, Tailwind, AWS, GraphQL, Git, MongoDB, Apollo, CI/CD, Jest, Cypress, Scalable Systems, Complex database systems<p>Experience: 6+ years<p>Joining date: Immediate<p>Resume/CV: <a href="https://tinyurl.com/bkkv4nvz" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://tinyurl.com/bkkv4nvz</a><p>Website: <a href="https://deepinder.me" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://deepinder.me</a><p>Github: <a href="https://github.com/deepinder10">https://github.com/deepinder10</a><p>Email: sdeepinder8@gmail.com | null | null | 38,099,084 | 38,099,084 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,222 | story | gone35 | "2023-11-02T05:04:23" | Memory Bandwidth Napkin Math | null | https://www.forrestthewoods.com/blog/memory-bandwidth-napkin-math/ | 1 | null | 38,109,222 | 0 | null | null | null |
38,109,223 | comment | negativelambda | "2023-11-02T05:04:58" | null | Any idea why this was flagged:
<a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38108822">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38108822</a> | null | null | 38,109,062 | 38,109,062 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,224 | comment | snvzz | "2023-11-02T05:05:02" | null | Tangentially related: Back in July 2009, a hacker (Benjamin Moody) published cracked (through a brute-force effort that took over two months) private signing keys of TI-83+ series, allowing calculator owners to e.g. replace the firmware with an open alternative.<p>Texas Instruments responded by filing several DMCA Notices[0] to websites offering the private keys.<p>EFF intervened with an open letter as well as DMCA counter notices. Texas Instruments did not reply within the allotted time, and ceased its intimidation attempts.<p><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texas_Instruments_signing_key_controversy" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texas_Instruments_signing_key_...</a> | null | null | 38,109,102 | 38,109,102 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,225 | comment | reactordev | "2023-11-02T05:05:25" | null | 100% agree that all the fluff is for the machines and not humans. The web has been broken this way since 2014. The feedback loop is real. | null | null | 38,108,879 | 38,097,938 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,226 | comment | Acrajof | "2023-11-02T05:06:01" | null | ReframeAI | 100% Remote | Full Time / Contract | Software Eng · Design · AI/ML<p>ReframeAI enables anyone to build intelligent AI agents without coding that automate repetitive workflows in datatables. Our low-code AI database allows users to create multifunctional agents that can perform research, gather data, and mimic human-level cognition leveraging state-of-the-art NLP models like GPT-3/4 under the hood.<p>We make AI accessible to a broad audience beyond just technical experts. ReframeAI saves teams time on manual tasks by applying AI to workflows like lead generation, customer research, content creation, data extraction, and more.<p>We're looking for:<p>- Frontend Engineers: to enhance our no-code web app experience. Our tech stack is TypeScript, NodeJS, ReactJS, GraphQL.<p>- Backend Engineers: to scale our agent automation engine. Our tech stack is Python, FastAPI, Postgres, GraphQL.<p>- UI/UX/Product Designers: to reimagine AI-powered workflows.<p>- Marketing / growth: help us get the word out!<p>email us: hireme-23-11@reframe.is!<p>Please state the role you are applying for. | null | null | 38,099,086 | 38,099,086 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,227 | comment | corethree | "2023-11-02T05:06:03" | null | >The supposition I'm pushing back on is that humans only generate art by regurgitating what came before them and I don't see any basis for that claim.<p>I never claimed this. Art isn't a regurgitation. It's a composition of what came before plus a random seed. Humans do this. But so do LLMs.<p>Think about it. Can you erase all forms of memory in a human until it's brain dead and expect it to produce art? No. It can't.<p>> Children draw all sorts of fanciful creatures that they've never seen in the wild or in other art.<p><a href="https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/1136039656660684880/1169501313982267442/heynairb_a_fanciful_creatures_that_has_never_been_seen_before_i_9e5cad1e-88ab-405a-ae9c-ee5d17f58899.png?ex=6555a1f9&is=65432cf9&hm=4cca061fe55001ff3302742da263def6514c68757e74611b8fd6c8818ec64b1c&" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/1136039656660684880/1...</a><p>>We have art formed by completely isolated societies in very distinct styles<p>prompt: Draw art in the style of a society or civilization that has never existed. Make the art very distinct in style such that the style is very divergent from anything that has been seen before.<p><a href="https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/1136039656660684880/1169501897967804436/heynairb_Draw_art_in_the_style_of_a_society_or_civilization_tha_eb148cef-ec66-413f-8e7d-5e7366617e12.png?ex=6555a284&is=65432d84&hm=336879f2783887c663352850db104c1ef885420f4ca0bb89ad77a0719b1a0d35&" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/1136039656660684880/1...</a><p>>It seems to me this whole argument hinges on saying humans and these image generation tools work the same way. If they do, then teach one of these programs what it means to draw, give them a sensor network to the outside world, and let's see what they generate.<p>No. The argument hinges on something far more insidious. If I showed you two pieces of art side by side.... One was AI generated in seconds and the other one was created through pure passion and hours and hours of hard work and toil. If you can't tell one was AI generated then all that toil and passion is useless. | null | null | 38,104,337 | 38,076,903 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,228 | comment | jppope | "2023-11-02T05:06:15" | null | yes, LLMs will have a massive impact on SEO<p>but the dirty secret here... GPT is trained pretty heavily on reddit data. theres a reason why there hasn't been an IPO and their api got crazy expensive. OpenAi is trying to build a moat with Reddit and with regulation. I really don't think its going to be that long till people figure it out, but who knows | null | null | 38,097,938 | 38,097,938 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,229 | comment | smsm42 | "2023-11-02T05:06:16" | null | One good thing that came out of this myth, at least. That game is awesome. | null | null | 38,108,104 | 38,106,461 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,230 | comment | nneonneo | "2023-11-02T05:06:45" | null | Yes, macros: <a href="https://github.com/hikari-no-yume/touchHLE/blob/trunk/src/objc/classes.rs#L184">https://github.com/hikari-no-yume/touchHLE/blob/trunk/src/ob...</a>. | null | null | 38,109,085 | 38,107,413 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,231 | comment | nextos | "2023-11-02T05:07:05" | null | Came here to say the same thing. Nix can even configure Emacs with all packages, so that everything is static, deterministic, and reproducible. I am actually looking forward to the possibility of running NixOS on MacBooks. | null | null | 38,108,935 | 38,104,554 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,232 | comment | xmprt | "2023-11-02T05:07:28" | null | To be fair, you're comparing 55 year olds with 65 year olds. Every 55 year old in tech I've spoken with is talking about retiring "soon" (although soon always ends up being 2 years later every time they mention it). Every 55 year old doctor I know doesn't even have retirement on their radar and would probably work till they're 70+ if they could.<p>Ageism in tech starts at 50+ (probably even earlier). Ageism in healthcare probably starts at around 80 and at that point it's only because the doctor's not physically able to perform safely. | null | null | 38,105,008 | 38,098,779 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,233 | comment | smcin | "2023-11-02T05:07:33" | null | Can you explain the <i>"Another thing to look for is development around big box stores. If your only option is to drive there, somebody’s trying to offset or unload."</i> part?<p>I think there are some stores that make lots of sense colocated beside a Home Depot/CostCo/Best Buy/Walmart/Sam's Club/Target/outlets, and some that don't. But of course walkability/car ownership levels are changing. | null | null | 38,102,391 | 38,100,541 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,234 | comment | imbusy111 | "2023-11-02T05:07:34" | null | I haven't laughed this hard in a while. Thank you. | null | null | 38,108,891 | 38,108,891 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,235 | comment | lxgr | "2023-11-02T05:07:56" | null | Vaultwarden never sees the unencrypted vault contents though, does it? The way to export would be in the client applications, not the storage implementation. | null | null | 38,106,180 | 38,102,082 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,236 | comment | m463 | "2023-11-02T05:08:17" | null | I have slowly moved to macos as my "front end" to all the other machines. | null | null | 38,108,048 | 38,104,554 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,237 | story | jruohonen | "2023-11-02T05:08:56" | Cognitive Warfare as Part of Society [pdf] | null | https://hcss.nl/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/04-Cognitive_Warfare_as_Part_of_Society__Never_Ending_Battle_for_Minds.pdf | 2 | null | 38,109,237 | 1 | [
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] | null | null |
38,109,238 | comment | jruohonen | "2023-11-02T05:08:56" | null | New terms but the same old. | null | null | 38,109,237 | 38,109,237 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,239 | comment | cjfd | "2023-11-02T05:09:59" | null | I did study HOL Light. Although it is very simple, I found parts of it to be a bit ugly. It treats the left of the turnstyle (|-) as a kind of set where you sometimes have to remove all alpha-equivalent terms. I.e., the DEDUCT_ANTISYM_RULE in <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HOL_Light" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HOL_Light</a>. Another thing that I found ugly in HOL Light is that if one looks at the very basic code that is the kernel of the system all variables carry their type around with them. I think the lambda calculus where (\x: T, body) just has the type of x in the lambda and not in every instance of x inside body is just nicer. | null | null | 38,107,862 | 38,102,096 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,240 | comment | kjs3 | "2023-11-02T05:10:04" | null | I thought the same, and then thought "the most efficient goatse spreader ever". | null | null | 38,108,389 | 38,107,711 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,241 | comment | mikhailfranco | "2023-11-02T05:10:20" | null | Yes, you are completely correct.<p>It only works for fruit trees. | null | null | 38,103,623 | 38,097,031 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,242 | comment | randomdev3 | "2023-11-02T05:10:32" | null | Yeah it has been pretty bad for a decade. I wish it just searched exactly for what I type in without assuming anything. | null | null | 38,097,938 | 38,097,938 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,243 | comment | sheepscreek | "2023-11-02T05:10:43" | null | Well said. In reality, it has been more about supporting common system level APIs (think read, write, fork, etc). | null | null | 38,109,142 | 38,101,613 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,244 | comment | notbeuller | "2023-11-02T05:10:43" | null | There’s a character in “the truth” by Terry pratchett that ostensibly swears a lot in the book - “I don’t have any -ing friends”, etc. but it turns out he’s literally saying -ing (that being the joke). And I will never not think about if I encounter a .ing domain. | null | null | 38,100,284 | 38,100,284 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,245 | comment | Kim_Bruning | "2023-11-02T05:10:44" | null | TL;DR: I explain what proteins are and why they're important, show some biological "flowcharts" , and end up with one "function definition" from the "source code" that makes you you, and has to do with you eating and breathing.<p>Long:<p>This is the bit that makes biology awesome to me, so excuse me for the small essay ;-)<p>Proteins are basically extremely advanced nanomachines which work together in larger systems to ultimately form a cell. Having a listing of all the proteins in a cell (the sum of the parts) is insufficient to grok the whole, but it's pretty darn important. The abilities and limitations determine and constrain what a cell can do, and ultimately influence what organisms and ecosystems are and are not capable of. Which is a big chunk of the science of biology.<p>Uniprot lists many/all of the genes/proteins that have been decoded so far. It's a bit odd to call that a "niche" in the context of the field of biology.<p>I'm not going to discourage you though: Proteins and protein systems are pretty darn awesome!<p>Example:<p>(using KEGG rather than uniprot, since it's got graphical maps, which is handy to get an intuition)<p>For instance, if you want to know why you need to eat and why you need to breathe (flowchart for what your cells do with starch and oxygen):<p>* <a href="https://www.genome.jp/pathway/map00500" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.genome.jp/pathway/map00500</a> start by finding starch on this map (gets split into glucose)<p>* <a href="https://www.genome.jp/pathway/map00010" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.genome.jp/pathway/map00010</a> which gets broken down into 2* pyruvate<p>* <a href="https://www.genome.jp/pathway/map00020" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.genome.jp/pathway/map00020</a> which gets processed<p>* <a href="https://www.genome.jp/pathway/map00190" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.genome.jp/pathway/map00190</a> and ultimately "burned" with oxygen.<p>Each step is a 'chemical reaction catalyzed by proteins'[1] (in the rectangles). You can dig in deeper to find your actual source code:
Say we click on a random step (in this case near the top of glycolysis on map 00010)<p>* <a href="https://www.genome.jp/entry/K01810+K06859+K13810+K15916+5.3.1.9+R13199" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.genome.jp/entry/K01810+K06859+K13810+K15916+5.3....</a><p>At the bottom you can find the gene listed for Homo Sapiens (HSA)<p>* <a href="https://www.genome.jp/entry/hsa:2821" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.genome.jp/entry/hsa:2821</a><p>And this lists the amino-acid (AA) sequence for the protein, and the nucleotide (NT) sequence found in humans. Since this is highly preserved functionality, that's probably (almost) exactly the source code that you have in each of your cells.<p>KEGG is nice to get an overview of some of the pathways that are fully understood with the maps.<p>[1] calling it a "chemical reaction" is sort of underselling many proteins. Proteins can have moving parts and can work together. I prefer to think of them as sophisticated nanomachines. | null | null | 38,108,406 | 38,105,839 | null | [
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38,109,246 | comment | mise_en_place | "2023-11-02T05:10:48" | null | The state of laptop and desktop computing is abysmal. I use Ubuntu as a daily driver for desktop and macOS for my laptop, but all three major OSes, including Windows, have many issues.<p>Gnome is relatively stable but not foolproof, there are strange behaviors like file picker previews not working. There are services running in the background that do who knows what. I have built a custom distribution using build root, I will be attempting to use that as my daily driver. | null | null | 38,108,048 | 38,104,554 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,247 | comment | enraged_camel | "2023-11-02T05:10:48" | null | What about his positive contributions to the rest of the Apple product family? | null | null | 38,108,968 | 38,102,083 | null | [
38109279,
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] | null | null |
38,109,248 | comment | NikkiA | "2023-11-02T05:10:49" | null | The human eye might not, but they show up just fine in astrophotography, amateur or professional, all night long. | null | null | 38,106,375 | 38,105,629 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,249 | comment | tamimio | "2023-11-02T05:11:04" | null | > store and sync passwords wherever is best for you<p>So, how would you access that cloud account in the first place? Unless you remember the password and disable 2FA for that cloud account, unless of course you add another 2FA manager which is just an extra non-needed complexity. | null | null | 38,103,798 | 38,102,082 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,250 | comment | parzifal1 | "2023-11-02T05:11:11" | null | Location: San Diego, CA
Remote: Yes or on-site
Willing to relocate: No
Technologies: C/C++, Embedded, Linux, PHY/HW drivers, satellite communications, system integration, agile/scrum<p>Résumé/CV: <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeff-hildebrand-87479a1a/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeff-hildebrand-87479a1a/</a><p>Software engineer with over 17 years experience developing consumer and defense embedded devices and systems: embedded cryptos, cable boxes, modems, and military radios to name a few. Experience with the full produce life-cycle, initial proposal, design, features, implementation, to bug fixes, board bring up / integration, sustaining engineering, on-site support, and always ready to start the next big thing! Connect with me on LinkedIn. | null | null | 38,099,084 | 38,099,084 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,251 | comment | verdverm | "2023-11-02T05:11:14" | null | I'm planning to do dev work while in the Immersed app | null | null | 38,109,107 | 38,102,458 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,252 | comment | angiosperm | "2023-11-02T05:11:16" | null | They probably totally forgot the conversation only seconds later, and did not intend humiliation or perceive any humiliation. He said something not usefully correct for the circumstances under discussion, and was corrected without fuss.<p>Then he carried a grudge. | null | null | 38,100,552 | 38,097,984 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,253 | comment | incompleteCode | "2023-11-02T05:11:21" | null | I’m a huge fan of <a href="https://lunchmoney.app" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://lunchmoney.app</a>. Small (1?) team and gets the job done for me. | null | null | 38,105,299 | 38,105,299 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,254 | comment | al_borland | "2023-11-02T05:11:35" | null | There was a recently 99% Invisible podcast about how turning office space into housing isn't as straightforward as it sounds.<p><a href="https://99percentinvisible.org/episode/office-space/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://99percentinvisible.org/episode/office-space/</a> | null | null | 38,108,292 | 38,108,292 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,255 | comment | batch12 | "2023-11-02T05:11:53" | null | You moved the goalposts from a piece a day to a bell curve of volume-- and added metal poisioning. No, a piece of chocolate a day would alone cause neither obesity nor diabetes. | null | null | 38,108,742 | 38,104,719 | null | [
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38,109,256 | comment | lxgr | "2023-11-02T05:11:58" | null | > But essentially it's a certificate... so I wonder why no private key export? Maybe because current implementation uses some CA that binds you to the issuer?<p>It's a private key, not a certificate (at least not without using attestation).<p>But there is currently no portable specification of WebAuthN credentials; each authenticator is free to implement its own storage backend, and in fact some hardware authenticators deterministically re-derive the private key from an internal secret and the key handle before each signature.<p>Others store a randomly generated key in local storage, indexed by the key handle; yet others encrypt a randomly generated key and make that encrypted key part of the key handle.<p>The point being: Not all implementations can even support key imports, and there's no standardized serialization format for key exports yet. | null | null | 38,104,533 | 38,102,082 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,257 | comment | petre | "2023-11-02T05:12:06" | null | The pipes that run into the ground are not filled with refrigerant, but with a water and antifreeze mixture. | null | null | 38,105,034 | 38,102,636 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,258 | comment | codeforafrica | "2023-11-02T05:12:10" | null | SEEKING WORK | local or REMOTE<p>Contract, part-time or volunteer<p>Location: Africa or REMOTE<p>Willing to relocate: yes, to any location in Africa, where i can get the necessary permission to live and work.<p>Technologies: Linux, Fullstack, System Administration.<p>Résumé/CV: on request (software development, CTO, mentoring, training, fluent in English and German)<p>Like this Ask HN: Recommend employers with positive social impact [<a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31518945">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31518945</a>], I am looking for similar work. I am a European software developer who has lived and worked on four continents. Now it's time to move on and so i am in the process to relocate to Africa.<p>While i could find a job elsewhere i believe that the experience living in an area where my work is going to have an impact gives me a better understanding of the needs of the location i am serving. Whether it is through direct contact with clients and users or just by being part of a local community and learning about the reality of living there.<p>I have more than a decade of experience running a company, doing software development, support and training and mentoring adults and students, as well as working on educational projects, and i am willing to take on a mixture of roles as needed to support a project.<p>I am also open to work for companies anywhere as long as the work can be done fully remote from Africa.<p>In addition, my plan is to hire local interns and junior developers and train them in order to pass on my experience. If you want to support this, i would love to work with you. | null | null | 38,099,085 | 38,099,085 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,259 | comment | codeforafrica | "2023-11-02T05:12:50" | null | Contract, part-time employment or volunteer<p>Location: Africa or REMOTE<p>Remote: yes<p>Willing to relocate: yes, to any location in Africa, where i can get the necessary permission to live and work.<p>Technologies: Linux, Fullstack, System Administration.<p>Résumé/CV: on request (software development, CTO, mentoring, training, fluent in English and German)<p>Like this Ask HN: Recommend employers with positive social impact [<a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31518945">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31518945</a>], I am looking for similar work. I am a European software developer who has lived and worked on four continents. Now it's time to move on and so i am in the process to relocate to Africa.<p>While i could find a job elsewhere i believe that the experience living in an area where my work is going to have an impact gives me a better understanding of the needs of the location i am serving. Whether it is through direct contact with clients and users or just by being part of a local community and learning about the reality of living there.<p>I have more than a decade of experience running a company, doing software development, support and training and mentoring adults and students, as well as working on educational projects, and i am willing to take on a mixture of roles as needed to support a project.<p>I am also open to work for a company anywhere as long as the work can be done fully remote from Africa.<p>In addition, my plan is to hire local interns and junior developers and train them in order to pass on my experience. If you want to support this, i would love to work with you. | null | null | 38,099,084 | 38,099,084 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,260 | comment | ido | "2023-11-02T05:13:02" | null | If you don’t mind asking - what is the order of magnitude for your perception of “high $ gig”? I’m asking because I’ve seen wildly different opinions on what people consider highly-paid (from $100k+ to $1.5M) | null | null | 38,108,569 | 38,098,779 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,261 | comment | stateofinquiry | "2023-11-02T05:13:23" | null | Serious question, where is the effort going on each of these annual OS releases? I truly don't know, probably out of ignorance. Comparability with new HW? Supporting new file formats? As far as I can tell the headline feature of the latest MacOS is a screensaver with very large file sizes. Perhaps Apple and its many developers efforts would be better employed updating these essential tools and QA of the same. | null | null | 38,107,123 | 38,104,554 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,262 | comment | scottydelta | "2023-11-02T05:13:37" | null | I have been self hosting bitwarden/vaultwarden for 4 years now and my setup is hosted behind two self hosted vpns(openvpn and wireguard where one acts as backup vpn).<p>This ability to self host in itself is worth so much. | null | null | 38,102,082 | 38,102,082 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,263 | comment | riwsky | "2023-11-02T05:14:06" | null | “If you’re so smart, then why aren’t you rich?” | null | null | 38,108,263 | 38,105,839 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,264 | comment | jszymborski | "2023-11-02T05:14:13" | null | Two thoughts on that:<p>1. GPU prices aren't as high as they were during the mining peak, but you can still buy a car with the money it takes to buy a pod of A100s. Further to that point, Google et al. are making the next generation of ML accelerators and they won't even sell the best ones.<p>2. Compute is only half the problem. Access to data (e.g. in the form of email and smart assistant queries and ring door bells) is a much under appreciated second half of that equation. | null | null | 38,109,215 | 38,108,873 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,265 | comment | ex3ndr | "2023-11-02T05:14:15" | null | That's not bad actually because bottleneck in training is in RAM and we can have 128gb... | null | null | 38,109,186 | 38,108,235 | null | [
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38,109,266 | comment | Turing_Machine | "2023-11-02T05:14:34" | null | > Warped logic. The person dropping the bomb is always at fault.<p>Not under international law. If you hide among civilians, using them as human shields, any civilian deaths or injuries are deemed to be war crimes committed by you, not the opposing force.<p>Look it up. | null | null | 38,100,915 | 38,096,076 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,267 | comment | sjjrjrkkt | "2023-11-02T05:14:54" | null | Jrjtkykyk | null | null | 38,107,537 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,268 | story | The_News_Crypto | "2023-11-02T05:15:06" | null | null | null | 1 | null | 38,109,268 | null | [
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38,109,269 | comment | The_News_Crypto | "2023-11-02T05:15:06" | null | The announcement follows BitGo’s Series C fundraising round in August 2023.
The business received $100 million at an estimated valuation of $1.75 billion.
The German Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin) has issued a cryptocurrency custody license to BitGo, a company based in the United States.<p>Headquartered in Palo Alto, California, BitGo initially established two regulated custodial organizations in Germany and Switzerland in February 2020. Also, BitGo Deutschland, a German affiliate, began offering custody services in Germany immediately and was expected to file for regulatory authorization in November 2020. | null | null | 38,109,268 | 38,109,268 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,270 | comment | jotato | "2023-11-02T05:15:07" | null | Mine isn't listed. My takeaway is that it isn't rated for cold climates. For what it is worth, I know the HSPF rating is 8.8 but I don't know at what temperature that is calculated at. | null | null | 38,105,605 | 38,102,636 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,271 | comment | whutsurnaym | "2023-11-02T05:15:08" | null | You can use celebrities in your code as long as they're open source. | null | null | 38,109,038 | 38,105,463 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,272 | comment | userbinator | "2023-11-02T05:15:17" | null | I think it's even more so now that they've switched to a CPU and proprietary platform architecture that's widely used in media consumption devices --- i.e. smartphones and tablets. IMHO when they were basically PCs with some small differences, they could be considered serious business computers; but now they're just oversized smartphones. | null | null | 38,108,565 | 38,104,554 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,273 | comment | sgu999 | "2023-11-02T05:15:20" | null | Thanks for that honest answer ;) It's indeed my experience from using it to learn Chinese, helpful but not transcending... I didn't look into it much so I was wondering if I was just doing it wrong. | null | null | 38,090,239 | 38,073,956 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,274 | comment | novalis78 | "2023-11-02T05:16:23" | null | Regulatory capture and cartel structures. | null | null | 38,098,779 | 38,098,779 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,275 | comment | barrysteve | "2023-11-02T05:16:34" | null | We are entitled to it.<p>The system cannot be compromised by a developer retracting their code from the machine. A developer cannot be allowed authority over the machine. Code is powerful, unlike ScarJo's likeness.<p>Knowledge workers are permanently forced to lose control of their own labour.<p>It's how it is. | null | null | 38,109,038 | 38,105,463 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,276 | comment | cjfd | "2023-11-02T05:17:18" | null | Well, inductive constructions need positivity conditions to be consistent. These are complicated enough to suggest that they need to be proven instead of accepted as part of the formal system. | null | null | 38,105,170 | 38,102,096 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,277 | comment | PH95VuimJjqBqy | "2023-11-02T05:17:27" | null | another is that if you do a search then click on an entry and do another search, the entry details displayed and what's in the search box don't match and it's not clear unless you're paying attention. | null | null | 38,105,852 | 38,102,082 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,278 | story | jitl | "2023-11-02T05:17:27" | M3 Max Chip Around as Fast as M2 Ultra in Early Benchmark Results | null | https://www.macrumors.com/2023/11/01/m3-max-chip-benchmark-results/ | 9 | null | 38,109,278 | 0 | null | null | null |
38,109,279 | comment | tuatoru | "2023-11-02T05:17:42" | null | Non-replaceable batteries and weird screens? | null | null | 38,109,247 | 38,102,083 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,280 | comment | freetime2 | "2023-11-02T05:17:45" | null | Have you replaced your battery? Because letting your battery drain fully even once can damage the battery. And if you’ve needed to boost it more than a dozen times, then it almost certainly sounds like it is time to replace.<p><a href="https://vehicleanswers.com/does-draining-a-car-battery-damage-it/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://vehicleanswers.com/does-draining-a-car-battery-damag...</a> | null | null | 38,109,131 | 38,102,083 | null | [
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38,109,281 | comment | invalidname | "2023-11-02T05:17:52" | null | > Settlers are protected by the police AND the army when they commit the crimes<p>Again. I won't defend those a*holes. They put soldiers in a problematic spot lots of times. Some soldiers make the mistake of enabling them and yes that's due to bad policy. I'm 100% for a Palestinian state and clearing the occupied territories.<p>But... Gaza doesn't have settlers anymore. Look what happened there... Furthermore, Israel tried to remove settlements and sign a long term peace accord. The Hamas is the group that blew that up.<p>If you're against the settlements and for peace then the first stop needs to be with ending the Hamas. Otherwise, any agreement would be sabotaged again.<p>> they are all equally bad<p>Chopping off the hand of an 8 year old girl isn't on the same scale: <a href="https://x.com/EylonALevy/status/1719667140209316316?s=20" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://x.com/EylonALevy/status/1719667140209316316?s=20</a><p>This is just one small bit. But the Hamas is on a completely different scale here. As I said, in normal cases and when it comes to the west bank I'm 100% with you on the "Israel is bad" bandwagon. But the situation in Gaza is very different and separate.<p>> I can go list hundreds of cases, even thousands, media and videos and more, that will need a whole encyclopedia to lost them all, but I will leave this video only if you are looking for the truth<p>You know who listed these cases?<p>Israeli's did. Including soldiers see:<p><a href="https://www.btselem.org/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.btselem.org/</a><p><a href="https://www.ahimlaneshek.org/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.ahimlaneshek.org/</a><p>These are Israeli driven organizations that are working hard to get the truth out there within and without of Israel. Unfortunately, killing civilians in such a brutal attack sets back all of these efforts.<p>A few years ago I was having a talk with a friend who lives in a city that gets a lot of missiles. He was talking in a very militant tone about the trauma and panic his kids are suffering as a result of the missiles. He said he doesn't care about a single Palestinian life because of the fear in his kids.<p>When I talked to him about the Palestinian people and the fathers on the other side who obviously have it worse he calmed himself down and agreed with that viewpoint. Unfortunately, this is a hard discussion to have under fire with bad leadership and at mass scale. In peaceful times the majority of both Israelis and Palestinians are for a two state solution. Israel even offered that to the Palestinian authority on more than one occasion.<p>This was sabotaged by extremists. To be fair, there are extremists on both sides to varying degrees. But of all these extremists the Hamas has been consistently the worse. It has complete disregard to Palestinian lives and uses them as human shields <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B8YYmrgAeqw">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B8YYmrgAeqw</a><p>It has specifically stated that it is interested in repeating October 7th: <a href="https://www.ynetnews.com/article/r1y31101m6" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.ynetnews.com/article/r1y31101m6</a><p>They are stealing humanitarian aid: <a href="https://www.ynetnews.com/article/hjhcwfl7p" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.ynetnews.com/article/hjhcwfl7p</a><p>Yes, I know the last two are Israeli sources but notice that there are recordings... If you are pro-Palestinian and pro-peace then the Hamas is the biggest roadblock in that direction. The second roadblock is Benjamin Netanyahu who I hope would end up in prison. But the Hamas is still well ahead as we wouldn't have Netanyahu in power without their constant attacks. | null | null | 38,109,113 | 38,096,076 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,282 | comment | jbverschoor | "2023-11-02T05:17:55" | null | Just run orbstack. Gives you nix or Debian. Or use a persistent docker. | null | null | 38,108,409 | 38,104,554 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,283 | comment | tuatoru | "2023-11-02T05:17:59" | null | Non-removeable batteries and weird screens? | null | null | 38,109,247 | 38,102,083 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,284 | comment | jasrusable | "2023-11-02T05:18:10" | null | I’m building FinWise as a Mint alternative, has most of the same features as Mint, you can check it out here: <a href="https://finwiseapp.io" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://finwiseapp.io</a><p>If you have any feedback, I’d love to hear it! | null | null | 38,105,299 | 38,105,299 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,285 | comment | echelon | "2023-11-02T05:18:36" | null | > It's too late for monopolizing large language models. The technology for making them is known and the cost keeps coming down.<p>Not so sure non-institutional folks can catch up.<p>OpenAI is trying to regulatory capture LLMs to prevent the Amazons and the well-funded unicorns from following. Everyone left in the lurch after these players crystalize is SOL.<p>You, average HN reader, cannot possibly compete with OpenAI. They're trying to stem venture dollars from standing up more well-funded competition so they take as much of the pie as possible.<p>The hype/funding cycle for LLMs is mostly over now. You're not Anthropic and you're more than likely too late to get in on that game. | null | null | 38,109,215 | 38,108,873 | null | [
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38,109,286 | story | altstreetjourno | "2023-11-02T05:18:39" | null | null | null | 1 | null | 38,109,286 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,287 | comment | Turing_Machine | "2023-11-02T05:18:58" | null | You're talking about "rules" as if they were some immutable dictate sent down from the gods.<p>The rules in many areas used to forbid selling houses to black people.<p>Those rules were changed. By force. | null | null | 38,106,445 | 38,089,356 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,288 | comment | spease | "2023-11-02T05:19:11" | null | Nix is great in theory, but the user experience is unacceptably bad, especially for anyone who isn’t a software engineer.<p>While it does do an excellent job of reproducibility if the inputs are the same, I’ve found it to be prone to be breaking if you switch to newer versions.<p>Part of the reason that it’s painful to use is because while it’s marketed as “declarative”, in actuality it’s functional, which results in a lot of convoluted syntax to modify parameters for a package, which varies based on the language of the package.<p>There seems to be some awareness of the usability issues, but the changes have seemed both a step forward and backwards. For instance, you used to be able to use the “nix search” command to look up package names; now it’s gated behind some arcane syntax because it’s “experimental” and something to do with flakes. And flakes seems like it has the consequence of fragmenting the package repositories and making it impractical to improve the language.<p>I still have helper functions to wrap desktop applications that I had to set aside, because some upstream changes broke it and neither I nor anyone on the nix forums could figure out if there was even a way to include them in the “darwin” namespace with an overlay. My goal was to make it as easy as homebrew to add an app to nix’s repository.<p>Another evening I sat down to make a minor feature to a Python library and decided to use a nix environment. In theory, this should have been better than a virtualenv. In practice, there’s no in-tree support for specifying specific versions of Python libraries, and mach-nix had trouble with the dependencies, so I wound up just filing a bug report and gave up on the feature I was trying to implement.<p>On the plus side, NixOS finally has a graphic installer, but I don’t think that helps macOS.<p>I’m still hopeful that the community will decide to prioritize usability, but after spending an aggregate of months of time trying to get things to work and continually running into time-consuming roadblocks, it’s not something I would recommend lightly to someone who wants to be more productive. | null | null | 38,108,769 | 38,104,554 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,289 | comment | petre | "2023-11-02T05:19:13" | null | What heating elements or output temperature are you runnng your HP at, and do you have buffer storage or not? | null | null | 38,104,373 | 38,102,636 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,290 | comment | db48x | "2023-11-02T05:19:18" | null | I'd actually read that if it wasn't $110. | null | null | 38,107,096 | 38,107,096 | null | [
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38,109,291 | comment | jcutrell | "2023-11-02T05:19:39" | null | I can cosign here as a former PBS employee. If you're considering, please apply. It's a fantastic place to work. | null | null | 38,102,898 | 38,099,086 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,292 | comment | billconan | "2023-11-02T05:19:41" | null | And yet, their papers are full of jargon. | null | null | 38,108,873 | 38,108,873 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,293 | comment | Animats | "2023-11-02T05:19:59" | null | The ground-floor retail thing in residential developments seems to be a dud. There's a huge amount of such retail being built in Silicon Valley, but not much interesting moves in. I've been looking at Google Earth. Nail salons, phone stores, ice cream, and rental offices that stretch half a block to fill up the space. No place to park, and the buildings themselves won't generate enough traffic for their ground floor retail.<p>Even in areas with much foot traffic, such as downtown Redwood City, about a third of the retail space is vacant. | null | null | 38,109,153 | 38,100,541 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,294 | comment | riku_iki | "2023-11-02T05:20:03" | null | > Uniprot lists many/all of the genes/proteins that have been decoded so far. It's a bit odd to call that a "niche" in the context of the field of biology.<p>I actually checked uniprot, yes, it lists proteins (probably most of them), but ontology is raither narrow, it has few dozens properties, you can't for example query that DB with question: give me diseases which can be attributed to broken pathways synthesizing protein X, you would need to do a lot of manual work and check external databases of uncertain quality.<p>Another question is quality of that dataset, why it is so obvious that all those millions of pathways for hundreds thousands pathways researched and described with 100% accuracy? | null | null | 38,109,245 | 38,105,839 | null | [
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38,109,295 | comment | tomtheelder | "2023-11-02T05:20:11" | null | Literally from the article:<p>> JECFA most recently concluded that it was not possible to determine the health-protective limit. No level of lead is safe, per se.<p>There is no safe level, but zero lead intake is also practically impossible, and the amount in chocolate is extremely low. That is the point they are making. | null | null | 38,108,890 | 38,104,719 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,296 | comment | PH95VuimJjqBqy | "2023-11-02T05:20:12" | null | because it's assuming that a family that can't afford child care is on welfare. | null | null | 38,108,384 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,297 | comment | corethree | "2023-11-02T05:20:14" | null | ><a href="https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/1136039656660684880/1169503430079955006/heynairb_something_illogical_765b59f4-9aa0-4db7-b498-c0d867ed12a7.png?ex=6555a3f2&is=65432ef2&hm=d0ba29b2aebec36ad0f4210875b25a3d9bcf8a217b3be5d5bc7043611c49daaf&" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/1136039656660684880/1...</a><p>Take a look at the image on the lower right hand corner. That is indisputably original. The badge doesn't exist anywhere else and the alien form with one entire leg jutting out of the torso has never been done before. We know that this one legged creature is entirely original because it doesn't exist in any of the shows.<p>This is the key how you know LLMs aren't regurgitating stuff. It's trying to reproduce something from a flawed understanding of reality. A regurgitation would get things truly correct, but a one legged human is a creative error due to a lack of understanding. The LLM doesn't understand reality as completely and as cohesively as we do but it understands an aspect of it enough that it can produce art that mostly works. The LLM is definitely creating stuff from pure thought. These things are not copies and that's what you don't get.<p>The hype for LLMs is so over the top that it looks like the latest outrage from something that occurred on social media. What you and other people are missing is that we crossed a certain AI threshold here. This isn't mere regurgitation. | null | null | 38,104,337 | 38,076,903 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,298 | comment | ludwigvan | "2023-11-02T05:20:33" | null | Thanks for the explanation! | null | null | 38,103,272 | 38,096,955 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,299 | comment | gagansuri | "2023-11-02T05:20:56" | null | Location : Austin Texas US
Remote: Yes
Technologies : Java, Spring, OCI, AWS
Experience : 18 + years
Resume : <a href="https://bit.ly/gagansuri_resume" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://bit.ly/gagansuri_resume</a>
linkedin : <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/gagansuri/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.linkedin.com/in/gagansuri/</a>
Email : gagan.suri@gmail.com | null | null | 38,099,084 | 38,099,084 | null | null | null | null |