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38,109,300 | comment | sanderjd | "2023-11-02T05:21:08" | null | I think you misunderstood the comment. "Cake" in this thread is just a metaphor for "that which brings you joy". It is inarguably the case that peoples' children are one of the things that bring them joy.<p>None of the rest of what you seem to have read into it is written there. | null | null | 38,107,544 | 38,063,687 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,301 | comment | bsder | "2023-11-02T05:21:12" | null | The problem isn't seizing power.<p>The problem is going to be that AI is creating an Eternal September by poisoning the well of training data.<p>Anybody who has a data or a model prior to the poisoning is going to have a defensible moat that is not accessible to those who come after. | null | null | 38,108,873 | 38,108,873 | null | [
38109354,
38109365
] | null | null |
38,109,302 | comment | consumer451 | "2023-11-02T05:21:34" | null | Yes, the Alpha Wolf myth appears to be a very damaging slice of b.s.<p><a href="https://phys.org/news/2021-04-wolf-dont-alpha-males-females.html" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://phys.org/news/2021-04-wolf-dont-alpha-males-females....</a> | null | null | 38,109,167 | 38,106,461 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,303 | comment | tomtheelder | "2023-11-02T05:21:45" | null | Which is of course something they mention in the article, but actually zero lead intake is not a viable goal. | null | null | 38,108,881 | 38,104,719 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,304 | comment | vinyl7 | "2023-11-02T05:22:10" | null | Why do you think the borders are open? | null | null | 38,108,159 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,305 | comment | PH95VuimJjqBqy | "2023-11-02T05:22:17" | null | > Ahh yes, versus the magical system where your kids get taken care of generous people for free.<p>What an odd way to say 'family'. | null | null | 38,109,169 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,306 | comment | reroute22 | "2023-11-02T05:22:22" | null | They will compare to the generation of products that yields the largest expected number of potential buyers.<p>The largest expected number of potential buyers equals "the probability of upgrading when properly advertised to" * (multiplied by) "the total number of macOS users currently owning the hardware of the generation in question".<p>Where "the probability of upgrading when properly advertised to" depends on how big the jump is, not only in performance, but cumulatively with every other change made to the product. It also depends on how old it is as people are more likely to make another expensive purchase if the previous one was long time ago, just distributing financial burden over time.<p>And where "the total number of macOS users currently owning the hardware of the generation in question" is merely measured as Apple has direct access to those statistics at any time.<p>For instance, perhaps the probability that an M2 user will upgrade is only 10%, given how recently M2 released, and how small the difference between M2 based products (as a whole, not just performance of the SoC) and M3 based products is. And perhaps there is 10 million of M2 users. Expected number of potential buyers is 10M * 0.1 = 1M.<p>Then perhaps the probability that an M1 user will upgrade is 30%. And perhaps there is 20 million of M1 users. Expected number of potential buyers is 20M * 0.3 = 6M.<p>Then perhaps the probability that an Intel user will upgrade is 40%. And perhaps there is only 10M of Intel users. Expected number of potential buyers is 10M * 0.4 = 4M.<p>Therefore: most focus is given to comparing to M1. Second tier amount of focus (only mention in speech occasionally, and show on charts) is given to comparisons with Intel. And third tier amount of focus is given to comparisons with M2 (never mention in speech, but do show on charts). Give 0 focus to anything else to keep the total amount of information presented manageable and avoid getting negative results by confusing and overloading people.<p>There is nothing malicious here. Just practicality which in this case, dare I say, benefits not only Apple themselves, but their users as well: those who are most likely to feel the need to upgrade as is will receive the most direct and clear information on what they will get out of it. | null | null | 38,094,886 | 38,093,054 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,307 | comment | m3kw9 | "2023-11-02T05:22:46" | null | Is true because if one company creates something more powerful than what military can achieve, why would it not wan to overtake its powers? | null | null | 38,108,873 | 38,108,873 | null | [
38109366
] | null | null |
38,109,308 | comment | null | "2023-11-02T05:22:57" | null | null | null | null | 38,109,151 | 38,108,873 | null | null | true | null |
38,109,309 | comment | angiosperm | "2023-11-02T05:23:09" | null | Rust will have plenty of time to invent whole new categories of mistake, if it ever catches on. It started out with a raft of old familiar mistakes, and shed them over the years leading up to the 1.0 release, such as non-contiguous stacks and green threads. Maybe the way async is specified will turn out to have been one of the mistakes. It has, anyway, mechanisms to shed old mistakes that are not relied on much. | null | null | 38,098,606 | 38,097,984 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,310 | comment | Cyphase | "2023-11-02T05:23:15" | null | It must be Anton's son. | null | null | 38,107,750 | 38,100,284 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,311 | comment | seanthemon | "2023-11-02T05:23:16" | null | "A few months later, Mei finds a shop selling the exact same bread recipe she saved on Dot, she's furious as she eats chunks of bread." | null | null | 38,104,688 | 38,101,966 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,312 | comment | fsckboy | "2023-11-02T05:23:52" | null | it is false to say in the context of general advice for people without regard to where they stand diet and healthwise that a piece of candy a day won't cause them diabetes.<p>If all people took that non-fact to heart and started eating a piece of candy a day that they weren't eating before, without changing the rest of their diet, then we would have more people with diabetes and other health conditions, all without moving any goalposts. | null | null | 38,109,255 | 38,104,719 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,313 | comment | raverbashing | "2023-11-02T05:24:10" | null | Yeah, grep '.' was broken in previous versions (maybe it's a zsh builtin, but it is broken), it would give you repeated lines | null | null | 38,104,554 | 38,104,554 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,314 | story | tryamtamtam | "2023-11-02T05:24:23" | null | null | null | 1 | null | 38,109,314 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,315 | comment | pests | "2023-11-02T05:24:37" | null | > but most cars with smart keys these days simply open without you needing to use the remote at all anyway<p>Friends new car supposedly has this feature but yet 9 times out of 10 we stand around the car for 10 seconds clicking the handles until frustration causes the fob to come out. | null | null | 38,108,304 | 38,102,083 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,316 | comment | magnio | "2023-11-02T05:24:39" | null | M3 performance so far on Geekbench: all M3 seems to have the same single-core score around 3000, which is 10% higher than M2 Max, same as i9-13900KS.<p>In terms of multi-core<p>- M3 (8-core): 11500, 10% higher than M2, in the middle of M2 and M2 Pro 10-core<p>- M3 Max (16-core): 20600, 50% higher than M2 Max (12-core), same as i9-13900KS<p>For comparison, the Snapdragon X Elite (at 23W) announced recently scores 2800 in single-core and 14000 in multi-core, same as the M2 Max.<p>In terms of graphics (OpenCL):<p>- M3: 30000, 10% higher than M2, same as AMD Radeon 780M (currently best iGPU in x86 land)<p>- M3 Max: 94000, 10% higher than M2 Max, a bit above the RTX 2070. | null | null | 38,108,235 | 38,108,235 | null | [
38109434
] | null | null |
38,109,317 | comment | thangngoc89 | "2023-11-02T05:24:57" | null | I believe that Apple Silicone is still too slow for training. The big RAM is really useful for interference of big models though | null | null | 38,109,265 | 38,108,235 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,318 | comment | reaperman | "2023-11-02T05:25:22" | null | Same. Was very confused for a second before internally realizing there's no way NASA would do that. | null | null | 38,108,991 | 38,107,297 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,319 | comment | wood_spirit | "2023-11-02T05:25:28" | null | A pet theory of mine is that google pushes SO clones because they contain ads and google gets revenue from sending users to sites with ads. Talk about perverse incentives. The pre double click acquisition search results were much better.<p>So can DuckDuckGo let me easily search for sites without ads? | null | null | 38,097,938 | 38,097,938 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,320 | comment | jeswin | "2023-11-02T05:25:58" | null | So a bit faster than 7950x in eco mode (which has a much lower tdp), and the 7950x process is two generations old. It's clear that Apple's advantage is mostly just one thing: "TSMC". | null | null | 38,108,235 | 38,108,235 | null | [
38109426,
38109393,
38109338
] | null | null |
38,109,321 | comment | null | "2023-11-02T05:26:55" | null | null | null | null | 38,108,950 | 38,108,950 | null | null | true | null |
38,109,322 | comment | ajmurmann | "2023-11-02T05:27:00" | null | You might enjoy one of my all-time favorite episodes of econtalk: <a href="https://www.econtalk.org/keith-smith-on-free-market-health-care/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.econtalk.org/keith-smith-on-free-market-health-c...</a><p>The guest is the head of the Surgical Center of Oklahoma. You can see prices of procedures very easily on their website. That's what you'll pay, even if something goes wrong. Surgeons earn more when working there than they earn at a regular hospital while patients pay less. However, no insurance wants to work with them. Supposedly because they have a price and won't negotiate with insurance who get part of their money as reward from large customers for negotiating prices down. | null | null | 38,104,893 | 38,098,779 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,323 | story | null | "2023-11-02T05:27:01" | null | null | null | null | null | 38,109,323 | null | null | true | null |
38,109,324 | comment | Kim_Bruning | "2023-11-02T05:27:35" | null | > 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><i>nod</i><p>Uniprot is more useful if you're looking for the actual "bare metal" NN and AA sequences. Which is rather important in its own right, obviously: Sooner or later you DO need the actual sequences if you're going to do something with them in real life.<p>But uniprot doesn't -itself- give you an understanding of what that code is then doing. | null | null | 38,109,294 | 38,105,839 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,325 | comment | numpad0 | "2023-11-02T05:27:39" | null | Don't most Toyota cars use 2DIN form factor for nav? They should be able to be easily pulled out and replaced. | null | null | 38,109,131 | 38,102,083 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,326 | comment | zubairq | "2023-11-02T05:27:44" | null | Great rules, need to read them every 6 months to embed them in my neural circuitry! | null | null | 38,097,031 | 38,097,031 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,327 | story | bindidwodtj | "2023-11-02T05:27:47" | Formalizing 100 Theorems | null | https://www.cs.ru.nl/~freek/100/ | 1 | null | 38,109,327 | 0 | null | null | null |
38,109,328 | comment | sasaf5 | "2023-11-02T05:27:54" | null | Same here. I am not even afraid of it anymore, at least not consciously. It's actually fun trying to hold tight onto consciousness--an existential rodeo sort of thing. In any case, I just accept it and make sure I am sitting/lying down. | null | null | 38,107,678 | 38,106,257 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,329 | comment | fsckboy | "2023-11-02T05:27:59" | null | ah, the old "everything is a reddit clone-a-roo", hold my beer, I'm going in! | null | null | 38,108,705 | 38,097,938 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,330 | comment | vinyl7 | "2023-11-02T05:28:00" | null | Crime and mental health would probably be cured if people were busy raising families instead of slaving away for someone else's yacht | null | null | 38,108,668 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,331 | comment | scarface_74 | "2023-11-02T05:28:06" | null | Well, I said it was a myth that it was trust fund. The <i>fact</i> is that if you look at current demographics, the number of working age people to retirees that there is no mathematical way that current tax rates can support the commitments.<p>And why would you want more of your taxes going toward current government spending that you have no control over like social security does? | null | null | 38,109,205 | 38,101,388 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,332 | story | itsdev | "2023-11-02T05:28:24" | Squarespace Domains Is Broken | null | https://domains.squarespace.com/?channel=bd&subchannel=google-domain&campaign=&subcampaign=&source=google_domain_referral&utm_source=google_domain_referral&utm_medium=bd&utm_content=google-domain&utm_term=&utm_campaign= | 1 | null | 38,109,332 | 1 | [
38109333
] | null | null |
38,109,333 | comment | itsdev | "2023-11-02T05:28:24" | null | I've managed my domains from Google domains for a few years. They've since sold/been bought/whatever to Squarespace and the provided link is busted.<p>I was hoping to get a new .ing domain for the kicks but the squarespace site blanks out with a ton of errors in the console.<p>Not a good look. | null | null | 38,109,332 | 38,109,332 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,334 | story | totetsu | "2023-11-02T05:28:26" | The next frontier: Israel taps AI and metaverse for aid in digital diplomacy | null | https://www.timesofisrael.com/the-next-frontier-israel-taps-ai-and-metaverse-for-aid-in-digital-diplomacy/ | 2 | null | 38,109,334 | 1 | [
38109335
] | null | null |
38,109,335 | comment | totetsu | "2023-11-02T05:28:26" | null | Virtual diplomats. I am reminded of the film Generation "П" <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generation_P_(film)" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generation_P_(film)</a> | null | null | 38,109,334 | 38,109,334 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,336 | comment | lofaszvanitt | "2023-11-02T05:28:29" | null | Cloudflare slowly becomes the blackwall. | null | null | 38,100,932 | 38,100,932 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,337 | comment | petre | "2023-11-02T05:28:33" | null | Finland runs ground source water to water (geothermal) heat pumps on district heating carrying lower temperature waste heat from industrial processes. If one does that they don't need a borehole, but it needs the waste heat infrastructure and it only works where the population density is higher (apartment and office buildings). Also if one has a lake or high enough groundwater, it's easier since one only needs to put the outside pipes in the lake or pump water, or dig shallower trenches or boreholes. So the choice mostly depends on your location and what energy resources you have around you. | null | null | 38,103,782 | 38,102,636 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,338 | comment | darklycan51 | "2023-11-02T05:28:40" | null | basically it's just that they have access to the latest node before anyone else and not much more. | null | null | 38,109,320 | 38,108,235 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,339 | comment | fnordpiglet | "2023-11-02T05:28:48" | null | Amazon excels at regulatory compliance. This isn’t a moat against Amazon. It’s a moat against you. | null | null | 38,109,285 | 38,108,873 | null | [
38109427
] | null | null |
38,109,340 | comment | angiosperm | "2023-11-02T05:28:51" | null | You don't need a "trend back to using C++". C++ usage is still growing by leaps and bounds. The number of people picking up C++ for professional use, in any short interval -- used to be two weeks, now a bit longer -- is more than the total number who are coding Rust in production. That will be true for a long time.<p>Rust could still catch on. | null | null | 38,105,106 | 38,097,984 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,341 | comment | oxygen_crisis | "2023-11-02T05:29:21" | null | I've just been using .link for everything these days, it's semantically neutral and it's just under $40 for five whole years.<p>I got so sick of renewal prices rising every year I've given up on registering for less than 5 years.<p>Like you say, the TLD is so insignificant that the long-term price is just about the sole factor for me. | null | null | 38,106,995 | 38,100,284 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,342 | comment | sudeepg95 | "2023-11-02T05:29:27" | null | Equal Experts | Multiple Roles | Bengaluru/Pune, India - Hybrid/Remote | Full-time | <a href="https://equalexperts.com" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://equalexperts.com</a><p>Equal Experts is an innovative consultancy specialising in the delivery of custom software solutions for blue-chip enterprise and public sector clients across a range of industry sectors. We work on important projects for our clients, deliver market-leading propositions across the digital, online and mobile channels, and are recognised for our leadership in the application of agile and lean delivery methods to assure delivery.<p>At Equal Experts, we foster a collaborative environment where you can use your diverse skills and work closely with clients, enabling them to enhance their products and add tangible value. It's a world where you collaborate with talented individuals who share your passion, continuously learn new technologies, and implement best practices.<p>Currently, we are actively recruiting for several senior or lead roles, requiring relevant industry experience:<p><pre><code> - Front-end Engineer - 6+ yrs
- Data Engineer - 6+ yrs
- DevOps Engineer - 6+ yrs
- Tech Principal - 10+ yrs
</code></pre>
If you are interested, please send your resume to sudeep.giri@equalexperts.com and include "HN: Who is Hiring" in the email subject line. | null | null | 38,099,086 | 38,099,086 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,343 | comment | db48x | "2023-11-02T05:29:32" | null | Agreed. So many of the people who ask questions on the Emacs stackexchange have never even looked at the manual. Emacs has excellent documentation, and often there will be a whole chapter dedicated to answering that specific question. The title of the chapter will have the same key words as their question. And the manual is readable right inside Emacs!<p>But by asking the question on SE, they can get someone else to go to the trouble of doing a keyword search on the table of contents to find the relevant chapter, then paste in the first paragraph of that chapter.<p>It's laziness, pure and simple. | null | null | 38,108,249 | 38,106,424 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,344 | comment | sanderjd | "2023-11-02T05:29:47" | null | Plus I think what parents do a poor job expressing to non-parents is that kids are <i>fun</i>. Like, they're a lot of tedious work, especially in the first three or four years, but they're also like the most entertaining fun thing out there. You know how it's fun to be around people who are really having fun? It's like that, but <i>often</i>.<p>Just as a top-of-mind example: All through my adulthood, I really disliked Halloween. Just not my thing, too much pressure to pick a creative costume, then go to a tedious party. But last night I had <i>such</i> a great time taking my five-year-old trick-or-treating. Because it's so new and exciting and fun for her, and that's infectious! But that sort of thing happens a lot.<p>That's what the metaphorical "cake" is. But that doesn't mean "that's it, there is no other joy to seek in life now", like the parent comment seems to be inferring. It's just <i>one</i> source of joy, but one that is hard to capture any other way. | null | null | 38,108,221 | 38,063,687 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,345 | comment | shmerl | "2023-11-02T05:29:51" | null | I don't get what's the point for the bank to demand some level if they are getting nothing in result? I.e. isn't less than what they want still better than nothing? | null | null | 38,101,399 | 38,100,541 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,346 | comment | scarface_74 | "2023-11-02T05:30:02" | null | So it’s easy, just give the government more of your money instead of controlling it yourself?<p>You know if you increase the amount of income that is eligible for social security that means you also increase the benefit amounts.<p>How is paying more taxes that the government can use for whatever it wants better than saving your own money? | null | null | 38,109,180 | 38,101,388 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,347 | comment | saagarjha | "2023-11-02T05:30:03" | null | Massive shame, honestly. Interesting technology that basically got used once and then discarded. | null | null | 38,108,312 | 38,107,413 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,348 | comment | tw1984 | "2023-11-02T05:30:05" | null | Resting & vesting employees in Apple managing this part of the system must be worrying on their next RSU grant amount. | null | null | 38,101,328 | 38,101,328 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,349 | comment | llamaInSouth | "2023-11-02T05:30:09" | null | dont have kids | null | null | 38,107,537 | 38,107,537 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,350 | story | zooboole | "2023-11-02T05:30:13" | null | null | null | 1 | null | 38,109,350 | null | [
38109351
] | null | null |
38,109,351 | comment | zooboole | "2023-11-02T05:30:13" | null | Hi guys,
Learn HTML, CSS, PHP & JS Building Your Portfolio Website<p>Part 4 - Pages layout<p><a href="https://youtu.be/OXfuDDe7ddI" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://youtu.be/OXfuDDe7ddI</a> | null | null | 38,109,350 | 38,109,350 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,352 | comment | cosmojg | "2023-11-02T05:30:15" | null | Eh, the strong market for virtual goods and the existence of significant virtual economies[1] like those found in Roblox and Second Life lead me to believe that markets can and will always exist, regardless of how far we progress into and beyond post-scarcity (assuming humanity persists in its current form and consumption preferences remain stable). I'm less certain about the capitalist model in particular, but it too may continue to exist, although maybe just for fun.<p>[1] <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_economy" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_economy</a> | null | null | 38,109,151 | 38,108,873 | null | [
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38,109,353 | comment | hiddencost | "2023-11-02T05:30:29" | null | Bankruptcy. Regulation. Trust busting. Saboteurs. | null | null | 38,109,151 | 38,108,873 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,354 | comment | chongli | "2023-11-02T05:30:45" | null | First of all, “pre-poisoned” data sets are freely available in archives such as common crawl. Secondly, I doubt the usefulness of that data in the long run. A model trained on only that old data will forever be stuck in the past. It’ll be like the stereotypical senile grandpa who only talks about the old days and doesn’t know anything about current events. | null | null | 38,109,301 | 38,108,873 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,355 | story | mford4065 | "2023-11-02T05:30:51" | null | null | null | 1 | null | 38,109,355 | null | [
38109356
] | null | null |
38,109,356 | comment | mford4065 | "2023-11-02T05:30:51" | null | [dead] | null | null | 38,109,355 | 38,109,355 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,357 | comment | rhizome | "2023-11-02T05:30:56" | null | It doesn't have to be personal to be condescending and/or dismissive. | null | null | 38,108,083 | 38,101,613 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,358 | comment | albert_e | "2023-11-02T05:31:03" | null | Is it already live?<p>I went on a circular loop clicking "Learn More" and landing up where I started. I haven't found any actual video streaming content other than the launch video / teaser of NASA+ itself.<p>What exactly is the URL for this new service? | null | null | 38,107,297 | 38,107,297 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,359 | comment | mholt | "2023-11-02T05:31:09" | null | Check out familyphotos.zip | null | null | 38,106,704 | 38,100,284 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,360 | comment | t-3 | "2023-11-02T05:31:26" | null | I seem to sleep more (8-10+ hours) and tend nocturnal in the hottest and coldest parts of the year, while in fall and spring I sleep much less and more of that at night (5-6 hours). | null | null | 38,108,950 | 38,108,950 | null | [
38109466
] | null | null |
38,109,361 | comment | lamontcg | "2023-11-02T05:31:29" | null | Due to incredibly low interest rates for the past decade the loan payments haven't been very high so they've been able to kick the can down the road.<p>Interest rates are high now, but those new rates don't kick in until the loans hit their maturity dates. As rate are kept high, more loans will refinance to higher rates and more of these borrowers will go under. | null | null | 38,101,879 | 38,100,541 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,362 | comment | sroussey | "2023-11-02T05:31:48" | null | The solution is to put in a massage parlor. | null | null | 38,107,989 | 38,100,541 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,363 | comment | nceqs3 | "2023-11-02T05:31:52" | null | FSP required? | null | null | 38,101,903 | 38,099,086 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,364 | comment | paulddraper | "2023-11-02T05:31:57" | null | > It seems like it should be possible, in theory, but it takes too much work.<p>Biologists don't model behaviors based on the four fundamental forces of physics.<p>It seems like it should be possible, in theory, but it takes too much work. | null | null | 38,104,412 | 38,102,096 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,365 | comment | photonbeam | "2023-11-02T05:32:16" | null | Data will become stale | null | null | 38,109,301 | 38,108,873 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,366 | comment | stagger87 | "2023-11-02T05:32:20" | null | I wouldn't worry about that. I'm sure the military can unplug some computers. | null | null | 38,109,307 | 38,108,873 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,367 | comment | enceth | "2023-11-02T05:32:57" | null | SEEKING WORK | Malaysia | Remote (GMT+8)<p>I help new to existing business owners build a better looking face for their company.<p>Since 2008, I started with no experience to a self-taught designer to improve style and the looks of businesses around the world.
I have worked with numerous startups & businesses such as Notedock, VideoReviewLabs, Synup, Captivation Software, Eksdyne, Aviation, & KPAway Skincare, and more.<p>SERVICES<p>· Logo Design<p>· Social Media Kit<p>--<p>Portfolio: <a href="https://bento.me/terencethien" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://bento.me/terencethien</a><p>Instagram/Threads: @terencethien<p>LinkedIn: <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/terencethien/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.linkedin.com/in/terencethien/</a><p>Contact: thienforge@gmail.com (24/7) | null | null | 38,099,085 | 38,099,085 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,368 | comment | sneak | "2023-11-02T05:33:13" | null | Yes. | null | null | 38,104,163 | 38,102,082 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,369 | comment | sroussey | "2023-11-02T05:33:31" | null | The police consider that a landlord problem. | null | null | 38,108,205 | 38,100,541 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,370 | story | canopas_user | "2023-11-02T05:33:32" | null | null | null | 1 | null | 38,109,370 | null | [
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38,109,371 | comment | canopas_user | "2023-11-02T05:33:32" | null | We developed mobile apps for iOS, Android, and Huawei's App Gallery and web apps for Mac and Windows that help you generate more revenue, acquire new users, and deliver an exceptional user experience. | null | null | 38,109,370 | 38,109,370 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,372 | story | useDeep | "2023-11-02T05:33:57" | Reverse Ageing in Rats | null | https://innovationorigins.com/en/groundbreaking-study-reverses-ageing-in-rats/ | 3 | null | 38,109,372 | 0 | null | null | null |
38,109,373 | comment | sgu999 | "2023-11-02T05:34:33" | null | Abundance for who? Our entire specie could live comfortably with goodies the last roman emperor wouldn't even have dreamed of, just with our current means of production. Yet we still have people not able to feed their children, dying of exhaustion at work or killing each other for land. | null | null | 38,109,151 | 38,108,873 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,374 | comment | quyleanh | "2023-11-02T05:34:42" | null | Check availability of googl.ing and search.ing. They are taken. Guess by who. | null | null | 38,100,284 | 38,100,284 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,375 | comment | ajmurmann | "2023-11-02T05:34:57" | null | Where do doctors in Europe end up in terms of salary compared to other professions in Europe? Are they in the same percentile as US doctors, but just everyone in Europe earns less or do European doctors also earn less than some other professions that earn less in the US than US doctors? | null | null | 38,102,920 | 38,098,779 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,376 | comment | sanderjd | "2023-11-02T05:35:46" | null | Just to clarify, I didn't mean regulatory friction makes it <i>easier</i> to do things that are risky. I think regulation is pretty much entirely successful at making that harder. What I meant is that, in my view, regulations that reduce the chance of tail risks by let's say X% often seem to increase the friction on making improvements by more like say 2X%. Of course this isn't scientific or anything, but it's my intuition, that the trade-off doesn't seem to be 1:1 when you take on some friction to reduce the likelihood of some tail risk. | null | null | 38,090,984 | 38,058,638 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,377 | comment | wdr1 | "2023-11-02T05:35:48" | null | YouTube itself offers a subscription version without ads.<p><a href="https://www.youtube.com/premium">https://www.youtube.com/premium</a> | null | null | 38,101,849 | 38,101,310 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,378 | comment | sroussey | "2023-11-02T05:36:24" | null | Insurance for vacant building is e pensive and net impossible to acquire. | null | null | 38,104,239 | 38,100,541 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,379 | comment | stonogo | "2023-11-02T05:36:56" | null | No, that's what I'm saying here: having <i>too low</i> a debt to credit-limit ratio (i.e. high-limit cards with no debt on them, termed 'credit utilization') can <i>hurt</i> your FICO score. From what I can tell, a credit utilization around 10-20% is optimal for FICO, but a credit utilization of, say, zero, will hurt. | null | null | 38,107,574 | 38,105,299 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,380 | comment | gavinhoward | "2023-11-02T05:36:59" | null | Would you be okay if someone applied who could only do part time? | null | null | 38,105,461 | 38,099,086 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,381 | comment | nextaccountic | "2023-11-02T05:37:35" | null | Training is still very expensive.. and if it becomes cheaper, then a next-gen model with better performance will be expensive again.<p>It may be very hard to train cutting edge models if you only have consumer hardware | null | null | 38,109,215 | 38,108,873 | null | [
38109471,
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] | null | null |
38,109,382 | comment | sho | "2023-11-02T05:37:35" | null | Counterintuitively, having messed around with building mruby for a project a few months ago, I found it <i>harder</i> to deal with. It's a lot more hardcore, with vastly fewer resources and more sharp edges, and is orders of magnitude less popular, so you find yourself hitting basic problems you would think would have been solved years ago.<p>I'd stay away from it unless you have a <i>very</i> pressing need. | null | null | 38,107,029 | 38,101,613 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,383 | comment | hereme888 | "2023-11-02T05:37:39" | null | It's common for someone who finished his 10,000 hours to look back and say "I'm actually not that smart. It's simpler than it looks. It just takes time. Anyone can do it, really."
Good luck finding those monkeys willing to put in the 10,000 grueling hours, endless practice questions always criticizing your performance, and a social environment that make you feel like you're the only one who is dumb, to get there in such a competitive field. | null | null | 38,108,999 | 38,098,779 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,384 | comment | instagraham | "2023-11-02T05:37:43" | null | The power of selfless development on open source AI will become so crucial to avoiding this scenario. I do think that even today, open AIs are capable of filling in a lot of the gaps you'd have if you didn't want to use OpenAI's work. | null | null | 38,108,873 | 38,108,873 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,385 | comment | ericmcer | "2023-11-02T05:37:49" | null | Hersheys actually has very few heavy metals. They come from cacao so cheap milk chocolate has far fewer than boutique dark ones. | null | null | 38,108,898 | 38,104,719 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,386 | story | CIAvash | "2023-11-02T05:38:00" | App: Rak – 21st century grep / find / ack / ag / rg on steroids | null | https://github.com/lizmat/App-Rak | 1 | null | 38,109,386 | 0 | null | null | null |
38,109,387 | comment | fragmede | "2023-11-02T05:38:02" | null | You're assuming that the incident's impact is perfectly known from the very start. Suffice to say, that's not the case. | null | null | 38,108,880 | 38,100,932 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,388 | comment | charcircuit | "2023-11-02T05:38:40" | null | The server is not checking if you have a piece of paper. It is checking if you can produce a piece of information.<p>If someone steals your paper, copies the password to their phone, and then returns your paper, then the attacker can log in without that piece of paper. In a true "something you have" if you have that something then it is impossible for someone to login to your account. | null | null | 38,108,724 | 38,102,082 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,389 | comment | prakhar897 | "2023-11-02T05:38:47" | null | I spent some time figuring out how to buy:<p>1. You have to spend like obscene amount of money to get the domain right now. The amount decreases every day till Dec 5.<p>2. In Godaddy, You pay for pre-registration of the domain, when it opens on Dec 5 and assuming nobody grabbed it before, you'll have a chance at the lottery with other bidders of purchasing it.<p>3. Godaddy priority registration is showing wrong pricing. The Phase 1 and 2 are already over and hence showing 20$ prices. From Phase 3 the actual prices start. | null | null | 38,100,284 | 38,100,284 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,390 | comment | seoulmetro | "2023-11-02T05:39:02" | null | I don't think people are seeking to be housed (only) and working on passion projects. More people have passion in a comfortable lifestyle. | null | null | 38,107,844 | 38,101,328 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,391 | comment | zargon | "2023-11-02T05:39:08" | null | Yes. | null | null | 38,108,960 | 38,097,938 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,392 | comment | zamadatix | "2023-11-02T05:39:17" | null | Theoretically but e.g. google.com has a TTL of 5 minutes, TLD responses usually have something like a 48 hour TTL associated. Drop that cache timer then multiply by a huge factor because everyone is hitting TLD lookups for random things like "sausage" instead of ".com" and it's easy to imagine the majority of the root traffic volumes becomes bogus lookups instead of actual requests. Once it's into ".com" it's off the public infrastructure and volume becomes a problem of the current pay to operate TLD system.<p>Could that be done right? Sure, at which point Google would probably want to keep the 5 minute TTL instead. | null | null | 38,109,170 | 38,100,284 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,393 | comment | leptons | "2023-11-02T05:39:51" | null | Don't forget, they also have the on-die RAM that cannot be upgraded and you can't get any more than what Apple offers, at exorbitant prices. | null | null | 38,109,320 | 38,108,235 | null | [
38109480
] | null | null |
38,109,394 | comment | reroute22 | "2023-11-02T05:40:14" | null | The answer to these sort of questions (OP) is always the same: it was done because it made all the sense in the world to do.<p>Most likely, 150 GB/s -> 200 GB/s results in a fairly small improvement (when paired with a processor of M2 Pro / M3 Pro overall capability) only in a fairly small and specific subset of GPU applications. In particular, it's pretty much the matter of fact that that extra bandwidth achieves nothing in CPU-bound applications. It's also a matter of fact that only some of the GPU applications benefit, I just can not attest to exactly how big (or rather, small) and important that subset is.<p>With every new process node nowadays the following happens:<p>1. The cost per unit of area increases substantially. Decades ago the cost per unit of area was practically staying the same, resulting in 2x smaller node being 2x cheaper for the same design as the same design would take up 2x less area. Not anymore. The cost per unit of area is higher, therefore, if a portion of the design doesn't shrink much, it's actually more expensive on newer node. It takes a large shrink for the design to get cheaper or even merely stay the same in per-unit manufacturing cost.<p>2. IO shrinks very little. 4nm -> 3nm resulted in only 10% IO shrink. 1.25x SRAM, and 1.7x logic.<p>3. DRAM bandwidth is just a product of bus width * DRAM frequency, where bus width is really just a number-of-DRAM-controllers * 32.<p>4. DRAM controllers is IO. It barely shrinks in area going 4nm -> 3nm. But 3nm is more expensive per unit of area to manufacture. Therefore, DRAM controllers of the same design and the same count and the same bandwidth cost more money now on 3nm.<p>Most likely, that very marginal and situational performance benefit in a subset of GPU applications that M2 Pro saw going from 150 GB/s to 200 GB/s was still large enough to justify the relatively low (on 5nm) cost of 8 DRAM controllers (in traditional 32-bit-bus-per-controller terms). On M3 Pro that performance gain probably just dropped below the threshold and became unjustifiable against the increased cost of DRAM controllers, and the number of DRAM controllers was reduced to 6. | null | null | 38,095,021 | 38,093,054 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,395 | comment | ars | "2023-11-02T05:40:50" | null | Yes, there's a big difference. The "ethically sourced, tester boutique chocolate" is likely to have higher levels of heavy metals.<p>The larger companies are better able to setup processes to avoid the metals - go look at the original data and see. | null | null | 38,108,898 | 38,104,719 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,396 | comment | sroussey | "2023-11-02T05:40:58" | null | This is Macys | null | null | 38,104,476 | 38,100,541 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,397 | comment | mg | "2023-11-02T05:41:39" | null | The moat he describes the one-percenters might aquire is government regulation. Creating an environment where only an exclusive club of companies is able to work on AI.<p>Is that possible? Has that happened in any other industry?<p>I can imagine it happening in a single country. But wouldn't research route around that country then? How is the situation in Europe, China, India, Canada, Japan ... ? | null | null | 38,108,873 | 38,108,873 | null | [
38109437,
38109424,
38109416
] | null | null |
38,109,398 | comment | harry8 | "2023-11-02T05:41:39" | null | I think you may have missed the point of my raising that fwiw. I genuinely don't care who is right [1]. Bjarne's attitude and manner is very wrong and very normal amongst c++ people. That's a shame. He could have explained his point of view forcefully, without being a jerk. Bjarne made his choice.<p>Maybe it's why there have been so many terrible decisions in C++ over the years because being an asshole and right might scare off discussion but it doesn't make even Bjarne infallible.<p>[1] If you care about performance you take full responsibility for all code used including all libraries like the stl, which might well mean you don't use the stl and vector and write something optimised for your specific purpose, and not for every possible purpose. But I don't want to be an ass about saying it. | null | null | 38,109,187 | 38,097,984 | null | null | null | null |
38,109,399 | comment | imetatroll | "2023-11-02T05:42:03" | null | I became faint, I would say, after I got my first covid shot a couple years ago. It wasn't immediately after the shot but within the 15 minute time frame post-injection when they would have you wait around to see how you feel. It was a strange sensation and there was a place where I was allowed to lie down. I don't know why it happened and it hasn't happened since with further vaccinations. I am glad they were so kind about the whole process. | null | null | 38,107,532 | 38,106,257 | null | [
38109478
] | null | null |