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The dataset generation failed
Error code: DatasetGenerationError Exception: ArrowInvalid Message: Failed to parse string: '27769757,27769758,27769759,27769760,27769922' as a scalar of type double Traceback: Traceback (most recent call last): File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/builder.py", line 2011, in _prepare_split_single writer.write_table(table) File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/arrow_writer.py", line 585, in write_table pa_table = table_cast(pa_table, self._schema) File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/table.py", line 2302, in table_cast return cast_table_to_schema(table, schema) File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/table.py", line 2261, in cast_table_to_schema arrays = [cast_array_to_feature(table[name], feature) for name, feature in features.items()] File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/table.py", line 2261, in <listcomp> arrays = [cast_array_to_feature(table[name], feature) for name, feature in features.items()] File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/table.py", line 1802, in wrapper return pa.chunked_array([func(chunk, *args, **kwargs) for chunk in array.chunks]) File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/table.py", line 1802, in <listcomp> return pa.chunked_array([func(chunk, *args, **kwargs) for chunk in array.chunks]) File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/table.py", line 2116, in cast_array_to_feature return array_cast( File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/table.py", line 1804, in wrapper return func(array, *args, **kwargs) File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/table.py", line 1963, in array_cast return array.cast(pa_type) File "pyarrow/array.pxi", line 996, in pyarrow.lib.Array.cast File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/pyarrow/compute.py", line 404, in cast return call_function("cast", [arr], options, memory_pool) File "pyarrow/_compute.pyx", line 590, in pyarrow._compute.call_function File "pyarrow/_compute.pyx", line 385, in pyarrow._compute.Function.call File "pyarrow/error.pxi", line 154, in pyarrow.lib.pyarrow_internal_check_status File "pyarrow/error.pxi", line 91, in pyarrow.lib.check_status pyarrow.lib.ArrowInvalid: Failed to parse string: '27769757,27769758,27769759,27769760,27769922' as a scalar of type double The above exception was the direct cause of the following exception: Traceback (most recent call last): File "/src/services/worker/src/worker/job_runners/config/parquet_and_info.py", line 1524, in compute_config_parquet_and_info_response parquet_operations, partial, estimated_dataset_info = stream_convert_to_parquet( File "/src/services/worker/src/worker/job_runners/config/parquet_and_info.py", line 1099, in stream_convert_to_parquet builder._prepare_split( File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/builder.py", line 1882, in _prepare_split for job_id, done, content in self._prepare_split_single( File "/src/services/worker/.venv/lib/python3.9/site-packages/datasets/builder.py", line 2038, in _prepare_split_single raise DatasetGenerationError("An error occurred while generating the dataset") from e datasets.exceptions.DatasetGenerationError: An error occurred while generating the dataset
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34,234,436 | null | comment | rubyist5eva | 1,672,766,422 | "go after" how exactly? | null | 34,232,331 | null | 34248964 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,437 | null | comment | bentcorner | 1,672,766,428 | I've tried playing text adventure games with ChatGPT and it leans on certain tropes very heavily, especially if you don't give it a lot of "meat" to work with. It fills out scenes really well but if you don't give it strong direction and let it "drive" you get the text equivalent of unseasoned blended potato.<p>ChatGPT's response is good because this prompt has a lot of detail. You'd still need to hand hold it through the rest of this story if you want something interesting. | null | 34,233,789 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,438 | null | comment | booleandilemma | 1,672,766,430 | Sounds like they're writing science fiction then. | null | 34,232,203 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,439 | null | comment | tkuraku | 1,672,766,430 | The monthly cost is kind of a nonstarter for me. The sublime text model seems like a good alternative. ~$100 for ~3 years of updates with perpetual ownership of the latest version at the end of your subscription. | null | 34,231,770 | null | 34236411,34235766 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,440 | null | comment | kibwen | 1,672,766,432 | <i>> I have thousands of followers on Twitter, just hundreds on Mastodon.</i><p>My own take on this calculus is that those thousands of followers on Twitter are by definition comprised of the kind of people who voluntarily use Twitter, which is not the audience that I care to select for. I'd rather have ten high-quality followers than ten thousand low-quality ones. | null | 34,231,899 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,441 | null | story | orbesargentina | 1,672,766,435 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,442 | null | comment | hairysmelly | 1,672,766,440 | Nova Credit (YC S16) | San Francisco, New York | Onsite or Remote (North America only) | <a href="https://www.novacredit.com" rel="nofollow">https://www.novacredit.com</a><p>Despite having built substantial credit in their home countries, millions of immigrants have difficulty accessing credit cards, loans, mortgages, and leases without domestic credit. Nova Credit enables newcomers to share their credit history from their home country with financial service providers and others, unlocking new consumers for lenders, and new futures for immigrants. We are 80+ people and have raised over $75M in Series B funding from Kleiner Perkins, Index, General Catalyst, Sound Ventures, YC, and more.<p>To learn more about who we are, our engineering culture, and whether this is the right place for you, read our Key Values profile: <a href="https://www.keyvalues.com/nova-credit">https://www.keyvalues.com/nova-credit</a><p>Here are our open roles:<p>* Senior Software Engineer (Backend): <a href="https://jobs.lever.co/neednova/79b7fb4c-efad-46f8-8e13-8b0f4687924f?lever-origin=applied&lever-source%5B%5D=KeyValues" rel="nofollow">https://jobs.lever.co/neednova/79b7fb4c-efad-46f8-8e13-8b0f4...</a><p>* Senior Software Engineer (Fullstack): <a href="https://jobs.lever.co/neednova/5d71b677-7f0c-4124-81e7-9de34526403f?lever-origin=applied&lever-source%5B%5D=KeyValues" rel="nofollow">https://jobs.lever.co/neednova/5d71b677-7f0c-4124-81e7-9de34...</a><p>* Staff Software Engineer (Backend): <a href="https://jobs.lever.co/neednova/f8bd1605-8753-4d18-b1ed-f1176ff2dab5?lever-origin=applied&lever-source%5B%5D=KeyValues" rel="nofollow">https://jobs.lever.co/neednova/f8bd1605-8753-4d18-b1ed-f1176...</a><p>* Staff Software Engineer (Fullstack): <a href="https://jobs.lever.co/neednova/5052f35a-4c7b-41a1-b5a5-7efad4c3d576?lever-origin=applied&lever-source%5B%5D=KeyValues" rel="nofollow">https://jobs.lever.co/neednova/5052f35a-4c7b-41a1-b5a5-7efad...</a><p>* Director of Data Science: <a href="https://jobs.lever.co/neednova/b27e7f56-1905-44e0-b178-7d054f5382de?lever-origin=applied&lever-source%5B%5D=KeyValues" rel="nofollow">https://jobs.lever.co/neednova/b27e7f56-1905-44e0-b178-7d054...</a><p>* Senior Product Designer: <a href="https://jobs.lever.co/neednova/f52b212f-9cac-4879-b6c3-20eb605d7437?lever-origin=applied&lever-source%5B%5D=KeyValues" rel="nofollow">https://jobs.lever.co/neednova/f52b212f-9cac-4879-b6c3-20eb6...</a><p>Tech Stack: Node.js, TypeScript, Postgres, AWS, Terraform, Ansible, React, GraphQL | null | 34,219,335 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,443 | null | comment | idontpost | 1,672,766,443 | [dead] | null | 34,232,872 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,444 | null | comment | dazc | 1,672,766,445 | Manners cost nothing. | null | 34,234,094 | null | 34289752 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,445 | null | comment | throwawayfear | 1,672,766,446 | > If you become a public nuisance, and/or threaten or injure people due to the influence, those are also obvious offenses.<p>Too many good innocent people will be unable to fix the issue once it gets started. This view may appear well intentioned but the end result is suffering for people who are lied to by people offering prescriptions or who fall for the people who talk up legal things that they themselves like but that are actually bad for health. (Like alcohol) | null | 34,233,726 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,446 | null | comment | tenebrisalietum | 1,672,766,454 | Idk ... this is like saying your local grocery store is effectively your extremely large kitchen, it ignores the logistics and cost of access that create planning or out-of-order requirements for best performance.<p>> so memory is (effectively) an extremely large register bank.<p>This <i>was</i> true-ish however in the late 70's/early 80's/1Mhz CPU days - but registers were always better even if slightly. The 6502, for example, could load the X register with an immediate value in 2 cycles, or from zero page (first 256 bytes of RAM) in 3 cycles, or from an arbitrary 16-bit address in 4 cycles. The few register-to-register operations all work in 2 cycles. (Then you have the TMS9900 that actually did use RAM as registers - only having 3 - one for the program counter, one for the status register, and a "workspace pointer" that told the CPU where the fake 'registers' lived.)<p>Of course, x86 has elaborate caching mechanisms to help. Your freezer is still in your kitchen (cache), but you still have limited space you actually use to do work (countertop).<p>What RAM is basically a superfast I/O device (which is why memory-mapped I/O is a thing). It's funny that the IBM mainframe for RAM - "storage" - kinda made more and more sense the more that RAM speed diverged from CPU speed. | null | 34,234,255 | null | 34234657,34234576 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,447 | null | story | thedday | 1,672,766,460 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,448 | null | comment | runarberg | 1,672,766,461 | I actually wonder if they are really that antiquated, but rather that these schemes to bypass labor laws used to be called out and stopped, either by the unions in the 1890s or 1920s, or by the government in the 1950s.<p>That is, I wonder if the the deregulation era of the 1980s also deregulated labor practices to the extent that companies can now jump through these hoops in order to avoid labor laws. | null | 34,229,535 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,449 | null | comment | SketchySeaBeast | 1,672,766,461 | Yeah, fair enough. It's become synonymous with "something I don't like". | null | 34,233,892 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,450 | null | comment | sgammon | 1,672,766,469 | no. lol | null | 34,231,019 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,451 | null | comment | nh23423fefe | 1,672,766,470 | its cool that "real life" "professional" and "business" are content free buzzwords. reads like an ignorant quine | null | 34,233,581 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,452 | null | comment | mertd | 1,672,766,472 | They are overpriced by around $20k for the fit and finish.<p>Build and materials quality were ok to overlook when Teslas used to be the only sensible EV option. Now the market is full of interesting EVs. Why pay German car money to get a car that's built like a budget car? | null | 34,233,934 | null | 34245652 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,453 | null | comment | substation13 | 1,672,766,473 | I'm sure that at least some of the complexity in AWS exists because they can't go back and refactor their offerings when so many users depend on it. | null | 34,233,312 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,454 | null | comment | Hamuko | 1,672,766,475 | I don't want to pay that much for a car, especially for how little I drive. Even a used Model 3 is at least 38,000€, and the insurance premiums are crazy. I also don't think that Teslas are cool and that they look goofy. | null | 34,233,934 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,455 | null | comment | shishy | 1,672,766,475 | Posthog is one of my faves, beats the crap out of GA, especially in terms of usability / reporting! Their support is fantastic too. | null | 34,232,908 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,456 | null | comment | bcrosby95 | 1,672,766,477 | They're too expensive and I work from home so I rarely drive. I have an ICE car from 2007. It has about 30k miles on it.<p>From both a money and an environmentally friendly aspect, I'm pretty sure a shiny new Tesla would pretty much never pay for itself. And I view cars as tools not toys. | null | 34,233,934 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,457 | null | comment | null | 1,672,766,481 | null | null | 34,233,789 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,458 | null | comment | johnfn | 1,672,766,482 | Perhaps not what OP was referring to, but MacOS now supports copying text from images natively. | null | 34,234,388 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,459 | null | comment | marsupialtail_2 | 1,672,766,484 | OK I'll admit: <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=34189422" rel="nofollow">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=34189422</a> is not a real pure Python SQL engine, this one is. | null | 34,233,697 | null | 34234541 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,460 | null | comment | marssaxman | 1,672,766,484 | Thanks for the explanation! | null | 34,233,161 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,461 | null | comment | FatActor | 1,672,766,485 | I think that's the hot take here. $150k/yr for that much work and future instability compared to an office job with a ton of benefits... Hmmmm... For non-techies maybe this is the golden goose, but for people in the tech world for more than a decade it would probably be a no go, it would be for my family. | null | 34,225,640 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,462 | null | comment | AcerbicZero | 1,672,766,489 | There does seem to be a change in the way decisions are being "managed" at least from my perspective; I'm not sure how much of it is related to work from home, and how much is hangover from the "we're all in this together" COVID response, or from some other direction - but I seem to be experiencing meetings that start and end with "lets just do this thing" and almost never touch the subject of "why are we doing this thing" anymore. | null | 34,211,110 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,463 | null | comment | mdp2021 | 1,672,766,490 | <i>-- Pseudo Detective Del Spooner: "Can a robot lift that object?"</i><p><i>-- Pseudo Sonny: "Can you?"</i><p><i>-- Pseudo Detective Del Spooner: "Ha-ha. So what the #!@! is a robot doing there, not doing what is required? I cannot, and I do not stand there clueless"</i><p>What is being engineered, toys for the satisfaction of some idle decadent sympathy urge? Have cats disappeared from the world?<p>> <i>We're discrediting</i><p>We are shocked that an overly large number of individuals expect stones to bleed, and intelligence to pour out of machines that do not have intelligence coded inside, and that instead have unintelligence - acritical repetition - coded inside.<p>> <i>what does it say about Average Joe</i><p>That he should catch up with his nature, if he shows the critical capacities of a simulacrum that has none.<p>> <i>not at the level</i><p>No, no, no: it is not a matter of quantity but of quality: if you do not implement it or its origin, it will not be there.<p>> <i>[Asimov]</i><p>Asimov is relevant. For example, I remember his idea that the State comes from Agriculture (~10000 BC), in the need to plan irrigation, or that the Abel vs Cain story could be a parallel of the political consequences of lands denied to pastors. Now: those seem to be good ideas, and their production can be an interesting goal. But there is something /before/ "creativity", or "advanced pattern recognition": it is /intelligence/, meaning that Asimov, after having spawned those hypoteses, has /vetted/ them as a required duly activity before confirming them in his set of founded hypotheses. You have to use intelligence, you have to have intelligence, and if you want to do AGI, you have to implement intelligence!!! | null | 34,233,679 | null | 34234884,34235029 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,464 | null | comment | StefanWestfal | 1,672,766,492 | I would argue that the Russian invasion proved the new NATO members right. At the end of the day Russia reserved itself the right to use brute force when it sees it's own interest threatened. For a lot of countries the only chance to defend themselves if attacked by Russia was and is to join NATO. | null | 34,234,297 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,465 | null | comment | bread90 | 1,672,766,493 | What does she sell on her store? | null | 34,233,819 | null | 34234621 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,466 | null | comment | planede | 1,672,766,495 | Uh, I wanted to try it with GPL v3, but no way I'm paying $111 for it. | null | 34,232,795 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,467 | null | comment | nickpp | 1,672,766,496 | Well said. Nanny state vs the sovereign individual. | null | 34,234,318 | null | 34234662 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,468 | null | comment | wonderwonder | 1,672,766,501 | I think you likely encounter the rude people on twitter hiding behind anon. accounts. My step dad lost ~30k in what he thought was a relatively safe investment (earning APY). I did tell him to be very careful as most of crypto to the uninitiated is a scam. He ended up being able to put Ethereum in but not able to take it out. Obviously if the returns appear to good to be true they probably are but this is an older guy with limited financial experience and virtually no technical knowledge. These people sit there on the sidelines approaching a tough retirement watching people get rich or "earning" 15% APR and start to panic that they are missing a once in a life time opportunity and jump in. Its sad. | null | 34,232,558 | null | 34234645,34261760,34242949 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,469 | null | comment | cheapliquor | 1,672,766,503 | I don't like them | null | 34,233,934 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,470 | null | comment | ZGDUwpqEWpUZ | 1,672,766,503 | [flagged] | null | 34,233,743 | null | 34234686 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,471 | null | comment | simonista | 1,672,766,503 | I'm excited to see where this goes because I think it is a cool application of AI. That said, two of the first three paragraph summaries are wrong in this example:<p>> [Investor Name] gave [Company Name] the right to certain shares of its Capital Stock in exchange for [Amount] on [Date].<p>This is backwards<p>> The Post-Money Valuation Cap is a number that is written in Section 2.<p>This isn't true, the number is here, "additional defined terms" are later. | null | 34,232,796 | null | 34235092 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,472 | null | comment | sgammon | 1,672,766,511 | i would absolutely never trust Facebook-run infra, ever, in a million trillion years | null | 34,231,019 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,473 | null | comment | xedrac | 1,672,766,516 | > Everyone wants buy once, updated forever software.<p>Actually, I prefer buy never, updated forever software. Somehow free* software fills all my needs these days. I wouldn't mind paying for exceptionally good software, if it came with source code and the ability to build new versions of it. | null | 34,233,995 | null | 34234844 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,474 | null | comment | zopa | 1,672,766,517 | Sure, but these are low-paid jobs with no agency. Of course turnover is high. If customer service were a priority companies could figure out how to build a trustworthy workforce. | null | 34,233,762 | null | 34236299 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,475 | null | comment | matt1 | 1,672,766,518 | Maybe one day! | null | 34,234,431 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,476 | null | comment | eh9 | 1,672,766,521 | [flagged] | null | 34,234,413 | null | 34234719 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,477 | null | comment | bigbacaloa | 1,672,766,522 | What this shows is that the intelligence of who writes typical news articles is quite low. | null | 34,231,634 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,478 | null | comment | aww_dang | 1,672,766,523 | Headline says terrorism, but the content speaks to the ongoing war on disinformation/misinformation and the truthiness meme. These both boil down to the premises of censorship and an infallible expert class.<p>Perhaps a better title would have been: "Disagreeing with experts is terrorism" | null | 34,231,883 | null | 34243481 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,479 | null | comment | someguydave | 1,672,766,523 | Unfortunately very few are willing to pay a high price up front for quality software. | null | 34,233,054 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,480 | null | comment | eeemmmooo | 1,672,766,526 | Thanks for your help. Especially on New Years Eve. My goal was always to try to find someone at Stripe that could help me get through the automated process churn and you were very helpful in that. It was not to slam Stripe overall because you all have been very good to us for years. Which is also why I’m trying to be as fair as I can be to both sides and also why I didn’t just jump to lawyer calling levels etc. I knew eventually Stripe would do the right thing. Just figuring out how to make that happen was the hard part. | null | 34,234,079 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,481 | null | comment | traceroute66 | 1,672,766,534 | > You say "The summaries are to help inform conversations with actual lawyers", but would a lawyer give a rats ass about a layman's interpretation of an AI-backed translation of a legal doc<p>Indeed.<p>We all know what the medical profession quite rightly thinks about patients who turn up having (supposedly) self-diagnosed themselves with the help of Doctor Google. | null | 34,234,024 | null | 34236600 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,482 | null | comment | beaconai | 1,672,766,537 | Beacon AI | <a href="https://beaconai.co" rel="nofollow">https://beaconai.co</a> | Offices in SF and SF Peninsula | Full-Time | SF Bay Area Hybrid<p>Beacon AI is building the aviation platform for the future of flight. Our team has expert relevant industry expertise in aviation and autonomy. We are building systems that improve flight safety and efficiency in a progressive approach. We earned three new contracts recently and have runway through 2025.<p>Join a founding team of two ex-Cruise AI engineers and three former fighter pilots, with a world-class advisor team, talented developers, and amazing investors including Sam Altman, Zach Perret, JetBlue Technology Ventures, and Countdown Capital. Learn (a little bit) more at <a href="https://www.beaconai.co" rel="nofollow">https://www.beaconai.co</a><p>We have the following openings with many more opening later this year:
<a href="https://www.beaconai.co/careers" rel="nofollow">https://www.beaconai.co/careers</a> (some roles listed below are not yet posted, email info@ if the role you are interested in is not yet posted)<p>* SWE Infra IoT (Experience in delivery robots, self-driving car, etc.)<p>* Robotics (Sensor integration, computer vision, C++)<p>* Path Planning/Routing (Route optimization, RL development)<p>* Software EM (Robotics/AI/DS)<p>Email info@beaconai.co for any questions or apply directly at <a href="https://beaconai.co/careers" rel="nofollow">https://beaconai.co/careers</a> and mention that you found this post on HN! | null | 34,219,335 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,483 | null | comment | izolate | 1,672,766,542 | Besides the fact that I prefer ICE, and need a 4WD off-road vehicle, I don't want to further enrich Elon Musk. | null | 34,233,934 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,484 | null | comment | booleandilemma | 1,672,766,546 | And so as AI advances, the goal posts for what counts as intelligence are moved yet again. | null | 34,232,431 | null | 34276004,34275927 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,485 | null | story | iandev | 1,672,766,547 | null | null | null | null | 34235630,34235492,34239415,34235988,34235098,34235211,34235123,34235229,34235980,34235100,34235268,34235730,34235079,34240202,34235532,34235304,34236176,34238746,34239483,34235995,34235150,34235275,34235381,34235339,34240085,34236359,34236286,34235608,34238385,34237806,34240371,34235544,34235215,34236426,34235469,34235421,34235370,34240498,34249806,34238384,34235793,34236481,34235440,34236082,34237629,34235321,34239633,34235953 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,486 | null | comment | rvz | 1,672,766,547 | If there is anything that is worth the criticism or daily schadenfreude here on HN about Musk, it is hardly Twitter which is a harmless distraction, nor SpaceX, or Starlink which are both fine. It is the blatant fraud and the dangerous Fools Self Driving (FSD) system which is a total scam sold to its customers with its false advertising and broken promises of robo-taxis [0] like I said before. [1]<p>This system is rightfully under investigation by the NHTSA [2] as it puts the lives of drivers on the road at risk. Tesla Cars are fine without FSD.<p>[0] <a href="https://www.motortrend.com/news/tesla-autonomous-driving-level-5-model-3-robotaxi/" rel="nofollow">https://www.motortrend.com/news/tesla-autonomous-driving-lev...</a><p>[1] <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=28000436" rel="nofollow">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=28000436</a><p>[2] <a href="https://www.cnbc.com/2022/12/22/nhtsa-initiates-two-more-tesla-crash-investigations.html" rel="nofollow">https://www.cnbc.com/2022/12/22/nhtsa-initiates-two-more-tes...</a> | null | 34,233,739 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,487 | null | comment | simongray | 1,672,766,558 | The original Web 3 was the Semantic Web. | null | 34,233,941 | null | 34236048 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,488 | null | comment | artificialLimbs | 1,672,766,560 | Emailed you. | null | 34,234,322 | null | 34235065 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,489 | null | comment | theandrewbailey | 1,672,766,563 | Because the Honda Accord I've had for a few years runs fine and meets my needs. I plan on driving it until it won't anymore (almost 100k miles down, 100k-300k to go).<p>And for you CO2 nerds: a new car costs a lot of CO2 just to manufacture, no matter what it runs on. Running my existing 100% ICE car until its inoperable will produce less CO2 than manufacturing an electric one. I also live in an area whose electricity is still mostly powered by fossil fuels. | null | 34,233,934 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,490 | null | comment | lalaithion | 1,672,766,564 | Really? About 30% of the bugs we find in our entirely-Golang codebase are something that is trivially solved by a more advanced type system, and it was even higher back when I worked on Python. | null | 34,230,629 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,491 | null | comment | itake | 1,672,766,568 | Teslas are not great daily drivers, because maintenance can put the vehicle out for weeks. | null | 34,233,934 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,492 | null | comment | notduncansmith | 1,672,766,570 | One has to wonder if it produces better responses (or worse ones). | null | 34,234,094 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,493 | null | comment | fooblaster | 1,672,766,579 | what do you think of the ionique 6? - <a href="https://www.hyundaiusa.com/us/en/vehicles/ioniq-6" rel="nofollow">https://www.hyundaiusa.com/us/en/vehicles/ioniq-6</a> | null | 34,234,406 | null | 34234543 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,494 | null | comment | evan_ | 1,672,766,579 | I don't understand how someone who's seen anything out of Apple, let alone spent years following Apple, would believe half of those "leaks" to be remotely credible.<p>They're going to put an OLED screen on the <i>outside</i> that just shows the wearer's <i>eyes</i>? That would be the creepiest-looking thing on the planet and there's simply no way to dress it up in marketing. A hip-worn battery pack that lasts two hours, and you have to swap batteries out to use it longer? Not something Apple would ever release.<p>If Apple ever comes out with a headset, and I'm not really sold on the entire concept being true, it will not resemble what's described here in any way. | null | 34,234,264 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,495 | null | comment | stephenhuey | 1,672,766,584 | Now that sounds interesting. I assume you're not counting each API endpoint as a service, so can you shed any more light on this? The scale sounds mind-boggling. Thousands of separate services being pulled (more) together. Can you give an idea of the size or scope of these services? | null | 34,233,430 | null | 34238259 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,496 | null | comment | andsoitis | 1,672,766,584 | The person you replied to didn’t say CL is statically typed. They said “powerful”.<p>While CL (the standard) doesn’t require compile time type checking AFAIK, certain implementations, such as SBCL (probably the most popular non-commercial implementation), does offer compile time type checking.<p>More on CL types, type checking, etc.: <a href="https://lispcookbook.github.io/cl-cookbook/type.html" rel="nofollow">https://lispcookbook.github.io/cl-cookbook/type.html</a> | null | 34,233,959 | null | 34235509 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,497 | null | comment | salawat | 1,672,766,585 | An extinction level asteroid hitting the Earth'll hose an underwater settlement just as sure as an aboveground one. | null | 34,219,794 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,374 | null | comment | cozzyd | 1,672,766,221 | NumPy/matplotlib make perfect sense for Matlab users (it's basically a port of Matlab semantics). If Matlab were free and didn't suck so much as a general purpose language, I wonder to what extent Python would have been adopted in scientific computing (Matlab is still pretty strong in some communities, to be fair). | null | 34,229,235 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,375 | null | comment | watwut | 1,672,766,222 | I mean, what you think doctor should tell you about what you should be doing while wife is pregnant? If the wife wants your support, I would expect the wife to tell you what kind of support she needs. She does not need doctor to be her speaker, presumably. And doctor giving you instructions on what she should be doing in pregnancy would be patronizing toward wife. | null | 34,233,351 | null | 34236637,34237054 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,376 | null | comment | xrrocha | 1,672,766,223 | Yeah, Implementing the framework as such in Java with no other dependencies is a sound decision, imho.<p>Laying out a Kotlin DSL on top of it could be an excellent opt-in feature to leverage the core in a more declarative way | null | 34,234,287 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,377 | null | story | evo_9 | 1,672,766,234 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,378 | null | comment | allears | 1,672,766,236 | I don't need another car -- one is enough for me and my wife. If I did need a car, I couldn't afford a Tesla. If I could afford a Tesla, I wouldn't buy one because of poor fit and finish, buggy and unstable software, and general disgust at Elon's antics. Besides, there's plenty of other choices for an EV, and many more on the way. | null | 34,233,934 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,379 | null | comment | null | 1,672,766,239 | null | null | 34,233,934 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,380 | null | comment | JoshTko | 1,672,766,240 | “ChatGPT joins a newest writer for the onion” | null | 34,231,634 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,381 | null | comment | runarberg | 1,672,766,255 | So if people insist YouTube does not employ the creators of the products that make them money, then at best YouTube is their land lords. I don’t know if that is any better, particularly if this land lord is not asking for rent, but rather, is asking their creators to work for them.<p>No, this is an even further stretch. | null | 34,229,540 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,382 | null | comment | MuffinFlavored | 1,672,766,256 | 1. I think V8 twin turbo German luxury sedans are cool (exhaust notes, torque curve, modifications, etc.)<p>2. cars can be a hobby (even if they aren't cheap and not the greatest for the environment) (detailing them, modifying them, going to car meets/clubs with owners loyal to the brand for years who have specific history and knowledge/experiences/stories)<p>3. I'm too much of a control freak to be able to "relax" while the car "drives itself" (to any degree).<p>4. I kind of like "being a hipster" and avoiding what's mainstream. I don't see how one can have a strong sense of identity when everybody has a Tesla. | null | 34,233,934 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,383 | null | comment | null | 1,672,766,259 | null | null | 34,233,054 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,384 | null | comment | naniwaduni | 1,672,766,262 | I mean, maybe it wasn't quite as clear in 2008, but the Perl 6 fiasco was an <i>obvious disaster</i> that's widely perceived to have killed Perl. It's not a precedent you should want to follow just because it's there. | null | 34,233,663 | null | 34234529 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,385 | null | story | ehoneahobed | 1,672,766,267 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,386 | null | story | com2kid | 1,672,766,268 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,387 | null | comment | null | 1,672,766,269 | null | null | 34,231,770 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,388 | null | comment | gardenhedge | 1,672,766,278 | If you have a solution why don't you suggest it? | null | 34,234,107 | null | 34234458 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,389 | null | comment | jstx1 | 1,672,766,279 | > Class invariants — consistency constraints preserved by ev-
ery operation on objects of a given type — are fundamental to building,
understanding and verifying object-oriented programs.<p>I think calling them "consistency constraints" would have made everything much easier to understand.<p>Although I'll admit that I have a strong bias against nouns that can also be adjectives in programming terminology (invariant, generic, atomic, primitive etc). There's something about them that makes my brain spin an extra cycle to process them. | null | 34,232,732 | null | 34234825,34239461 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,390 | null | comment | karamanolev | 1,672,766,280 | I generally agree. My argument is that 10K lines written one way can certainly be more readable than 10 files x 1K lines written in a different way, so the real differentiator is the encapsulation and code style, not KLOC/file per se. | null | 34,232,268 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,391 | null | comment | garyfirestorm | 1,672,766,281 | ah makes sense now | null | 34,233,651 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,392 | null | comment | taylorhou | 1,672,766,283 | Honestly, the biggest reason was interest rates. Secondarily - they haven't changed their appearance literally since they launched. I took delivery of my Rivian R1S in December instead of a Model X and I haven't been this excited about a new car since my first Model 3. This coming from an owner of a model 3 and 2 model Y's. | null | 34,233,934 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,393 | null | comment | mmcnl | 1,672,766,284 | Annoying indeed. Very childish. | null | 34,233,889 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,394 | null | comment | keewee7 | 1,672,766,288 | Most heavy US military vehicles like the Abrams can run on gasoline, diesel and jet fuel. | null | 34,231,563 | null | 34234996 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,395 | null | comment | bbbbb5 | 1,672,766,290 | >So no, this isn't a lapse of justice. just good negotiating or good lawyers.<p>Nothing suggests that it's even either of those, this is just an entirely predictable outcome. | null | 34,233,796 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,396 | null | comment | synergy20 | 1,672,766,290 | I don't know why is this downvoted, a genuine question from me actually, if it's truly revolutionary and helpful I'm willing to purchase then. | null | 34,233,863 | null | 34234855,34234738 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,397 | null | comment | vel0city | 1,672,766,291 | Language ambiguities are leading to confusion, my bad. I get it. With this sentence:<p>> You're foregoing safety equipment which is proven to make you far safer on the roads because you can't access the firmware of the device<p>The "because you can't access" is relating back to the "you're foregoing safety equipment" part of the sentence. You're choosing to not use proven safety equipment <i>because</i> you can't access the firmware of the ABS controller. I do agree it is not the fact that the ABS system is closed that makes it safer; it could easily be an open-source/FLOSS firmware and still provide similar safety features.<p>> I do not want to learn any proprietary framework.<p>I don't need to learn about the intricate details of how ABS systems work in order to benefit from having one. The doctors using those machines aren't necessarily knowing about how the ECG monitor actually takes the samples from the leads and renders the lines on the screen, but they benefit from having one of those tools. Do you also not use plain metal tools unless you completely understand their mixture and how the metal is made and fully comprehend how they're forged/machined/etc? Or do you sometimes just accept "yes, this is a screwdriver, it can drive screws."<p>I don't know everything about how the local metro train system works and probably wouldn't be able to know everything about it, but I'll still ride on the train. I learn to use the resources available to me, even if some parts are opaque to me. | null | 34,199,007 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,398 | null | comment | Semaphor | 1,672,766,296 | That's actually a very good point. Disillusionment with both, and exposure of dirty deeds, started way later. I did not think of that. | null | 34,234,296 | null | 34234565 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,399 | null | comment | nerdwaller | 1,672,766,297 | I have a 2006 vehicle I can still work on and is reliable - so there's no reason to get anything newer for me or my wife. I'd easily jump in it and do a cross country road trip (and will at the end of January). | null | 34,233,934 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,400 | null | comment | ravi-delia | 1,672,766,298 | But that's not what (scanning back through the article) the author used quotation marks for. They mostly talk about children forming a sort of pigeon in a laboratory setup. | null | 34,231,065 | null | 34239797 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,401 | null | comment | JeremyBanks | 1,672,766,300 | From the inside, he has an ego like Elon and focus like Dorsey. Several of his executives are very good at managing him, but he lives in and broadcasts from a white void detached from reality. | null | 34,233,648 | null | 34238337 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,402 | null | comment | mikepurvis | 1,672,766,304 | Yeah, well, and even looking to the immediate subject of the article... like, whether your lawyer is going to become a bot in ten years, a huge amount of what used to be part of the legal practice has already been automated away in terms of the research side, nevermind specialized firms that just crank through bog-standard family-law or property-transfer cases by plugging the relevant details into an Excel template.<p>Basically it's the same story as everywhere else, where technological augmentation has already created a huge squeeze, and now suddenly even the senior people are wondering if the writing is on the wall for them too. | null | 34,233,147 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,403 | null | story | sturza | 1,672,766,308 | null | null | null | null | 34236091 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,404 | null | comment | rektide | 1,672,766,308 | I enjoy it. I'm glad to see the unpolished, unveneered.<p>What you see as bad, I see as a strong positive signal that we aren't taking ourselves too seriously (it would be phrased delicately if it were), that we aren't here to be nice & tactful.<p>We're here because we're humans & we're wrestling with bullshit & we should at this point have some attitude & flippancy about where we are & how we got here & how badly we need to progress. It's time to spring ourselves from the trap, already, to start to re-emerge better genuinely human possibilities.<p>This is a Network (1976) Mad As Hell moment. And it fits; it's apparent to many, many are mad as hell at what online social media has become, what it's impact has been on society. "You've got to get mad." <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WINDtlPXmmE">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WINDtlPXmmE</a><p>In general, one of my signs of empathic & in touch people is that they can get past their own response & start to tune in & sympathize with, understand other people's disposition & reason, even if they don't like it. Taking the best side of your opponent in debate, the most charitable interpretation you can muster, is the fastest route to progress. I think there's a ton of ways this form here can be a good influence, but more so, I think the content is right on, and it's worth trying to get past your yuck for. | null | 34,233,889 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,405 | null | comment | mnd999 | 1,672,766,311 | Many reasons:<p>- I don’t need a car<p>- I don’t like the look of them, particularly the interior.<p>- I live in an apartment with only on-street parking so I’d have to rely on public charging points which are expensive and subject to a lot of competition. | null | 34,233,934 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,406 | null | comment | fetus8 | 1,672,766,313 | I find the design language of the whole Tesla lineup to be boring and look outdated as of now. The exterior design hasn't truly been updated since the Model 3 launched 5 years ago.<p>The interior of their cars are boring and frankly very cheap feeling. I just rode in a brand new Model 3 and was astonished by the plasticky feeling interior.<p>I currently drive a Kia Stinger GT2 which I think will be my last ICE car. I am hoping more and more EVs launch and look more and more like ICE cars. I generally don't like the design and exterior body lines of Teslas, the Kia EV6, and say the Nissan Leaf.<p>When Hyundai or Kia puts out an EV version of their existing sedans with a sporty option (N-Line or GT) I'll probably upgrade out of my Stinger and into an EV. | null | 34,233,934 | null | 34234799,34234583,34234584,34234493 | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,407 | null | comment | hartator | 1,672,766,315 | print "sad" | null | 34,227,760 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,408 | null | comment | iUsedToCode | 1,672,766,316 | <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intellectual_dark_web" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intellectual_dark_web</a> | null | 34,234,295 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,409 | null | comment | threemux | 1,672,766,317 | Mainly comes down to not wanting to pay luxury prices for a car that is anything but. Lots of build quality issues, spartan interior, and actual ergonomic design replaced with a giant tablet. Many people are so used to the giant tablet now they don't even know it can be better. Mazda is one of the few automakers that gets this right. | null | 34,233,934 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,410 | null | comment | anilcanglk | 1,672,766,317 | it is rapid fast and efficient to use. I've been using it for one year | null | 34,231,770 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
34,234,411 | null | comment | adrianmonk | 1,672,766,320 | > <i>Film, I would assert, works because the teeth just need to align the film; force transfer just uses the filmstrip itself.</i><p>I'm not a projectionist or a mechanical engineer, but I reasoned the opposite way:<p>* Film sprockets have a difficult job because the film has to be stopped and started 24 times a second[1]. It needs to be held still while light is shining through it, and then (to reduce flicker) it needs to get moved to next frame quickly.<p>* Film seems soft and easy to damage, but somehow all that seems to work anyway.<p>* So it's probably OK if you have a stronger material like steel and all you need to do is move at a constant speed.<p>> <i>Gear teeth are a reasonably complex design</i><p>That's a really good point. Here's a page that covers film sprockets: <a href="https://www.sprocketschool.org/wiki/Sprockets" rel="nofollow">https://www.sprocketschool.org/wiki/Sprockets</a><p>And sure enough, it covers the evolution of sprocket design, saying a manufacturer "created the VKF ('very kind to film') sprocket in order to improve presentation and reduce film wear".<p>So, although you could probably steal ideas from film, there is indeed some engineering to do.<p>Also, the trash train designer said he wanted smooth, quiet operation. He 3D-printed the pinion gear out of plastic, which achieves that. If he'd done a sprocket and hole thing, my guess is the sprocket teeth need to be strong, so it probably has to be made out of steel. So it'd be harder to make and less quiet.<p>I guess the main reason film does it this way is because it has to. It's flat.<p>I still think the film-style approach is probably feasible, but now I'm convinced it has some significant drawbacks.<p>---<p>[1] Apparently the sprockets that do this are called intermittent sprockets. Wikipedia has a good explanation and illustration here: <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Movie_projector#Film_gate_and_frame_advance" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Movie_projector#Film_gate_and_...</a><p>Note the blue arrows showing slack between the intermittent sprockets and the other sprockets that move continuously. | null | 34,228,974 | null | 34239330 | null | null | null | null | null |
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