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null
null
<joke about giving a man some fire versus setting a man on fire>
null
pohl
null
1,268,060,065
"2010-03-08T14:54:25Z"
comment
1,175,407
1,175,128
null
null
null
101
null
null
It will be interesting to see how much the author still agrees with this on reaching 2^6 years of age.
null
RyanMcGreal
null
1,268,060,050
"2010-03-08T14:54:10Z"
comment
1,175,406
1,174,637
null
null
null
102
null
null
The trouble might be that if your advertising message really is all that interesting, you can just submit it like any other story and people will vote it up.<p>Every now and then, an advertiser will make a mistake and pay for attention he could have gotten for free. But I don't think we can expect them to do that all the time. The only way to make money from advertising is to accept money from people who can't get attention otherwise.
null
DennisP
null
1,268,060,141
"2010-03-08T14:55:41Z"
comment
1,175,409
1,172,650
null
null
null
103
null
null
Well there's an easy solution here. Make the red smell like strawberry pie and the blue like blueberry pie.
null
fburnaby
null
1,268,060,112
"2010-03-08T14:55:12Z"
comment
1,175,408
1,175,317
null
null
null
104
null
null
They realize it, they just think their interests are always more important.
null
rhizome
null
1,394,076,646
"2014-03-06T03:30:46Z"
comment
7,351,699
7,351,569
null
null
null
105
null
null
If they&#x27;re owned, based, and operated from within the EU, and do not have a dire record to their name, then I am very likely to trust them with sensitive things.
null
lizardactivist
null
1,654,062,679
"2022-06-01T05:51:19Z"
comment
31,578,612
31,574,312
null
null
null
106
null
null
When&#x2F;if Bitcoin becomes the world currency, it&#x27;s price will stabilise to match the global desire to defer the completion of trades (i.e. the aggregate desire to purchase goods in the future). So you might expect to see it go up and down depending on very largescale worldwide trends about purchase timing.
null
jasonisalive
null
1,421,231,139
"2015-01-14T10:25:39Z"
comment
8,885,408
8,885,052
null
null
null
107
null
null
$3M in sales is the yearly turnover of a small local bakery chain with a few retail points. Every village of more than 5000 people has several companies with this turnover. $3M is <i>nothing</i>. For a retailer of low-margin goods like Overstock, they must have spend more on implementing bitcoin payments than they made on the sales that were paid with them, and that&#x27;s not even counting costs of converting back to $ etc.
null
roel_v
null
1,421,231,007
"2015-01-14T10:23:27Z"
comment
8,885,404
8,885,089
null
null
null
108
null
null
It&#x27;d be good to see how these new languages compare to established ones that offer similar features - maybe OCaml and Haskell.
null
lmm
null
1,421,231,028
"2015-01-14T10:23:48Z"
comment
8,885,405
8,883,791
null
null
null
109
null
null
&gt;Use mongoose!<p>We don&#x27;t use node.js. Also, we have app-level schema, but enforcing should (IMHO) be done on DB level so as to avoid any chance of invalid data.<p>Joins: easy, we specify which fields are connected (on app level), then fetching goes to connected collections and fetches data from there too. Not ideal, but it works. We made a similar solution for foreign keys.<p>Transactions: no need for any further guarantees. Our system mostly works on a single record at a time in all critical components. If this is not possible, we have app-level locking to avoid conflicts. No issues or wishes here.
null
annnnd
null
1,421,231,050
"2015-01-14T10:24:10Z"
comment
8,885,406
8,885,192
null
null
null
110
null
null
Well, sure. PHP could also become a nice language to code in. Neither outcome seems likely, given what we&#x27;ve seen in the past.
null
redthrowaway
null
1,421,231,050
"2015-01-14T10:24:10Z"
comment
8,885,407
8,885,360
null
null
null
111
null
null
Yes. Many programs rely on W&amp;X (I believe the JVM is a prominent example)
null
taejo
null
1,421,230,924
"2015-01-14T10:22:04Z"
comment
8,885,400
8,884,685
null
null
null
112
null
null
When I want to know if a site is trustworthy, the first thing I check is whois information. If hidden, do not trust.
null
reacweb
null
1,421,230,931
"2015-01-14T10:22:11Z"
comment
8,885,401
8,882,151
null
null
null
113
null
null
Clickables: <a href="http://fallinloveapp.com" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;fallinloveapp.com</a> or <a href="http://loveactualized.com" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;loveactualized.com</a> ?
null
fallinlove
null
1,421,230,938
"2015-01-14T10:22:18Z"
comment
8,885,402
8,885,399
null
null
null
114
null
null
The UK is one of the wealthiest, stablest, most developed countries in the world. Pointing out that its banking system is relatively effective as if that reduces the value of Bitcoin is like saying toilets and public sanitation is great in the UK so why are these entrepreneurs bothering building cheap toilets and menstruation technologies for India and Africa again? In other words, unbelievably naive and borderline arrogant.
null
jasonisalive
null
1,421,230,947
"2015-01-14T10:22:27Z"
comment
8,885,403
8,885,308
null
null
null
115
null
null
Programming is not hard to learn if you can already think rigorously. But most people have no experience expressing their thoughts using strict formalisms and have to learn that separate skill along with programming.
null
bbotond
null
1,351,524,194
"2012-10-29T15:23:14Z"
comment
4,712,660
4,712,617
null
null
null
116
null
null
I fully agree. In fact, I think (hope) that most of the writers who are selling only hundreds of copies of their books are actually just bad marketers. I think this is why the myth of the Big Four publishing house exists, because those publishing houses used to come in and scoop the writer out of obscurity by marketing their book. Now they look for a writer who already has a big platform so they don&#x27;t have to spend the marketing budget and can wind up with a &quot;sure thing.&quot;
null
ellegriffin
null
1,620,665,324
"2021-05-10T16:48:44Z"
comment
27,108,026
27,107,893
null
null
null
117
null
null
Newsflash from police state parenting
null
tomc1985
null
1,620,665,328
"2021-05-10T16:48:48Z"
comment
27,108,027
27,107,022
null
null
null
118
null
null
wow, I had no idea the fees where so much in India, another reason not to use them.<p>My main issue as someone who used them for taking payments was them holding my money and not being able to talk to anyone about it. Not in a meaningful anyway.
null
davidmclean
null
1,620,665,332
"2021-05-10T16:48:52Z"
comment
27,108,028
27,106,325
null
null
null
119
null
null
The implication that the author wants to make is that the cops are worse than the criminals, and that&#x27;s the conclusion most people will make on first reading of it. However, after further inspection that&#x27;s totally acceptable, because cops mostly (?) go after bad people, whereas criminals mostly go after innocent people. It&#x27;s like saying &quot;police are responsible for more kidnappings (aka. arrests) than criminals&quot;. Technically true, but misleading.
null
gruez
null
1,620,665,339
"2021-05-10T16:48:59Z"
comment
27,108,029
27,107,924
null
null
null
120
null
null
omg, i am considering deleting firefox now. terrible.
null
mrinfinite
null
1,644,876,438
"2022-02-14T22:07:18Z"
comment
30,339,052
30,337,782
null
null
null
121
null
null
Do you see a difference between one person learning a process inside and out, and reproducing it elsewhere, versus the work product of thousands of engineers being stolen, far more information than a single human could ever possibly know? The former is like watching a chef work and seeing how he cooks a beef Wellington and doing it yourself, whereas the latter is like just taking his whole recipe set.
null
oh_sigh
null
1,543,627,998
"2018-12-01T01:33:18Z"
comment
18,574,409
18,574,049
null
null
null
122
null
null
That&#x27;s not the same thing, you funded your company on credit cards...
null
seiferteric
null
1,543,627,926
"2018-12-01T01:32:06Z"
comment
18,574,403
18,572,646
null
null
null
123
null
null
I wonder if the folks defending Apple by referencing the &quot;cheap $30 battery replacement fee&quot; knew this was just a temporary response to the outrage. The new price ($50-70) still isn&#x27;t too bad, but that&#x27;s still a 140-230% increase in the price you have to pay for Apple to not slow down your device on purpose.
null
craftyguy
null
1,543,627,921
"2018-12-01T01:32:01Z"
comment
18,574,402
18,574,214
null
null
null
124
null
null
im not a big fan of their UI either
null
tuananh
null
1,543,627,889
"2018-12-01T01:31:29Z"
comment
18,574,401
18,572,731
null
null
null
125
null
null
I don&#x27;t trust VPS&#x27;s.
null
pmoriarty
null
1,543,627,977
"2018-12-01T01:32:57Z"
comment
18,574,407
18,574,060
null
null
null
126
null
null
&gt; I’m not sure what more they could have done.<p>Not broken 2? None of the breaking changes in 3 were necessary.
null
loeg
null
1,568,101,811
"2019-09-10T07:50:11Z"
comment
20,925,966
20,919,389
null
null
null
127
null
null
No it is not interesting, someone obviously compromised his account and posted a random word to test it out.<p>Your friends are smarter than you are.
true
fsdfghdfgh
null
1,543,627,929
"2018-12-01T01:32:09Z"
comment
18,574,404
18,574,356
null
null
null
128
null
null
It&#x27;s been so long since these were in the theaters I wouldn&#x27;t remember which was most accurate.<p>I saw them all in the theater but I watched the original so many times on the original DVD that to my mind the DVD release would be &quot;correct&quot;.<p>I haven&#x27;t seen any of them in a long time but I sure loved that first movie for about 5 years.<p>My feeling that it should be more green when they are in the Matrix and less so outside of the Matrix matches up with other commenters though. There were very very obvious filmography&#x2F;cinematography&#x2F;color grading choices the directors made to show the contrast between the Matrix and the Real as you watched the movie.<p>One of the example scenes with Agent Smith pointing his gun is NOT in the Matrix though, that&#x27;s in the construct.. can&#x27;t remember but I think those did not have the green tint.
null
ben7799
null
1,641,238,492
"2022-01-03T19:34:52Z"
comment
29,785,328
29,784,384
null
null
null
129
null
null
I agree with the bias you highlight, but I&#x27;m not sure it is that exaggerated in this example.<p>Today 2 Billion people have a platform (social media).<p>The sample size of &quot;telco executives making futuristic predictions interviewed in a print newspapers&quot; was probably in the tens or hundreds of instances during this period.
null
ozten
null
1,641,238,492
"2022-01-03T19:34:52Z"
comment
29,785,329
29,785,124
null
null
null
130
null
null
SPQR by the same is a good book for gaining an understanding of what Rome was. One of my takeaways from it is that mapping a contemporary term to something similar from the past is a tricky thing and can lead to poor interpretations.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;dp&#x2F;B0108U7IHO&#x2F;ref=dp-kindle-redirect?_encoding=UTF8&amp;btkr=1" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.amazon.com&#x2F;dp&#x2F;B0108U7IHO&#x2F;ref=dp-kindle-redirect?...</a>
null
adolph
null
1,490,447,069
"2017-03-25T13:04:29Z"
comment
13,955,423
13,953,912
null
null
null
131
null
null
<i>...but there is work to make things more efficient and perhaps the author could invest more time in thinking about that.</i><p>Not all in life is about efficient things. Anthropologists and philosophers are involved in something else.
null
azaras
null
1,490,447,049
"2017-03-25T13:04:09Z"
comment
13,955,422
13,955,301
null
null
null
132
null
null
Is there any plan, anywhere, to try to provide a standard, modern subset of C++? Sort of like Perl and Javascript have strict mode.<p>Something that could be enforced by all the compilers.
null
oblio
null
1,490,447,039
"2017-03-25T13:03:59Z"
comment
13,955,421
13,954,195
null
null
null
133
null
null
Nah. It&#x27;s long-haul trucking. There&#x27;s a much easier on-ramp to profitability because you don&#x27;t have to solve the whole problem at once.<p>You start by just automating the highway driving, which is a much easier problem than city driving. You might still need the human operator to deal with the off-highway driving at the beginning and end of each journey, but in the middle they can just hang out in the cab and work on their PhD dissertation or whatever. At that point your business has become quite a bit more efficient, because you&#x27;ve gotten rid of the need for your trucks to be stationary for 10 out of every 24 hours.<p>So that&#x27;s already a big win for tackling a relatively small piece of the problem. You can keep chipping away from there, and each increment will net even more returns.
null
bunderbunder
null
1,490,447,033
"2017-03-25T13:03:53Z"
comment
13,955,420
13,955,317
null
null
null
134
null
null
It depends on the author and subject, FP has some decent writing and some excellent geopolitical analysis.<p>Although I haven&#x27;t been reading it as much since the election - maybe the editors are pushing the anti-Trump angle hard like NYTimes has been shamelessly doing recently. It&#x27;s writers are very &#x27;internationalist&#x27; and focused on geopolitical diplomacy so a lot of them are falling under the &#x27;I&#x27;m appalled at Trump and must bring it up at every moment to show that America is still okay&#x27;.<p>It&#x27;s tough being a news junkie and not being a typical foaming at the mouth US mainstream liberal these days (which to the surprise of many in that category does not make one a right wing Trump supporter, nor American for that matter).
null
dmix
null
1,490,447,134
"2017-03-25T13:05:34Z"
comment
13,955,427
13,954,683
null
null
null
135
null
null
Did you read the whole article? The author is decrying a society where people are forced to work 50 hot weeks so they remain docile(he claims this is in contrast to the 60s where people started to get free time and used it to protest).<p>Remember, according to Keynes we should we working 15 hour weeks by now(and if that&#x27;s sustainable people would be paid a reasonable wage for a 15 hour week).<p>He then provides an example of a rock musician who was providing a measurable benefit to people&#x27;s wellbeing, but is now working as a corporate lawyer(and aparrently generating nothing of value). The author&#x27;s central question is basically asking why we live in a society where there&#x27;s a finite number of artists, but an infinite number of lawyers(all kept busy for 50hrs&#x2F;wk and paid well).
null
H4CK3RM4N
null
1,490,447,122
"2017-03-25T13:05:22Z"
comment
13,955,426
13,955,301
null
null
null
136
null
null
I think that a more interesting statistic is that almost 3% of the respondents do not identify as &quot;Male.&quot;<p>Are men more likely to complete surveys? Perhaps women are less likely to participate in online surveys.
null
jrnichols
null
1,490,447,089
"2017-03-25T13:04:49Z"
comment
13,955,425
13,954,783
null
null
null
137
null
null
&gt; Without the multiplayer there&#x27;s OpenMW: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;openmw.org&#x2F;en&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;openmw.org&#x2F;en&#x2F;</a><p>From what I understand there are rumours that multiplayer is something they plan to develop after their 1.0 (feature-parity with the original Morrowind engine). There are already people making patchsets that add some form of multiplayer support.
null
cyphar
null
1,490,447,077
"2017-03-25T13:04:37Z"
comment
13,955,424
13,955,372
null
null
null
138
null
null
Where does it say that &quot;thou shalt not kill&quot; does not apply to gentiles, in any Jewish religious text from any time? And by that of course I mean &quot;does not apply to gentiles, period, kill them as you&#x27;d kill animals, no biggie&quot; as opposed to laws about waging war etc. - which is the only non-weasely interpretation of &quot;does not apply to gentiles&quot;?
null
_yosefk
null
1,490,447,197
"2017-03-25T13:06:37Z"
comment
13,955,429
13,954,936
null
null
null
139
null
null
Was the perpetrator of the crime caught and punished?
null
platz
null
1,392,571,008
"2014-02-16T17:16:48Z"
comment
7,248,329
7,248,144
null
null
null
140
null
null
Nope.<p>The major difference between your common Windows user and Linux user is that Windows users are often logged in as Administrator. So if arbitrary-code-execution happens that code owns the whole system - checkmate.<p>The typical Linux user is not running their Windows Manager or browser as root. The worse that can happen is stuff to your home dir(which can be very bad too). Even this article title calling this a <i>&quot;userland rootkit&quot;</i> is kinda odd, since &quot;&#x2F;etc&#x2F;ld.so.preload&quot;(and the whole &#x2F;etc dir) is a root-only writable. No matter how secure your OS is, if you&#x27;re tricked into running an evil program as root&#x2F;admin... it&#x27;s game over.<p>The usage-pattern for this happening on Windows is much, much higher than Linux since Windows users are already admin to start off with. Also, from my observation of Windows users over my 10+ year career, they always click &quot;Ok&quot; on every pop-up dialog box without even reading it. I think that UAC thing from Windows Vista enforced that behavior even more.
null
smtddr
null
1,392,570,930
"2014-02-16T17:15:30Z"
comment
7,248,323
7,247,385
null
null
null
141
null
null
I really have no idea bout UK&#x2F;British politics even though I worked&#x2F;lived in Europe so...<p>Can someone explain this part of Brexit. Nigel Farage resigns in July 2016 after he wins the vote. Why? Says he did &quot;his job&quot; and didn&#x27;t want to be a career politician (according to Wiki)<p>Then earlier this month he stepped back in as party leader of UKIP after his replacement was forced(?) out&#x2F;unable to garner support? Did he just get bored and want his job back? Seems like he has ample time to fly over to the States to pump up Trump.<p>What I&#x27;m trying to get at is this whole Brexit triggered a huge depression in the value of the Pound. Yet the Conservatives and UKIP are still in power? Or can no one do anything until the next general elections?
null
swang
null
1,477,385,709
"2016-10-25T08:55:09Z"
comment
12,786,316
12,785,879
null
null
null
142
null
null
&gt; does that mean they&#x27;ll at least start getting rid of the us bases?<p>It doesn&#x27;t talk about that. And I doubt it&#x27;s going to happen b&#x2F;c literally nobody of the current European politicians has the balls to piss off the US (as for France, Obama has declared their president to be the new lap dog, recently, calling it another &quot;special relationship&quot; and saying he couldn&#x27;t choose between the UK and France, would he be asked to). It&#x27;s really a freak show nowadays.
null
f_salmon
null
1,392,570,909
"2014-02-16T17:15:09Z"
comment
7,248,321
7,248,261
null
null
null
143
null
null
FWIW, my equivalent of &#x27;git show&#x27; is &#x27;hg diff -c&#x27;. It shows the patch but not the metadata; this is usually what i want.<p>I know what you mean about hg not invoking a pager by default. I understand why the hg maintainers haven&#x27;t done it, but it&#x27;s still mildly annoying every time i have to throw in a |less.<p>I have no idea what you&#x27;re talking about with queues. The last time i used queues was to do stashing back before hg got a proper shelve in the core. I don&#x27;t think there&#x27;s any sane use case which requires them now.
null
twic
null
1,392,570,897
"2014-02-16T17:14:57Z"
comment
7,248,320
7,247,896
null
null
null
144
null
null
You got it almost right.<p>We do enterprise consulting and are bound to the technology that is already in place. In 90% of our projects we seldom introduce anything new.<p>Many of our customers have been sold into git hype and have been moving or have recently moved to git.
null
pjmlp
null
1,392,570,963
"2014-02-16T17:16:03Z"
comment
7,248,327
7,248,277
null
null
null
145
null
null
I tried that too and got the same result. I&#x27;m outside the US, if this isn&#x27;t your intended audience then make it clear you&#x27;re serving US(&#x2F;Canada) only users&#x2F;customers.<p>Edit: Ok...so I discover that you&#x27;re limited to DC metro and a couple of VA counties at the very bottom of the page. Perhaps your address selector should be a bit more clever and save folks some time.
null
teh_klev
null
1,392,570,948
"2014-02-16T17:15:48Z"
comment
7,248,326
7,248,126
null
null
null
146
null
null
&gt;I still think C++ is the right language for my project (vision related)<p>Interesting. What is the advantage to C++ in the context of CV that outweights the long compile time for you?
null
lgieron
null
1,392,570,948
"2014-02-16T17:15:48Z"
comment
7,248,325
7,248,159
null
null
null
147
null
null
She a Conservative traditionalist and most definitely a right-winger. How is that communist?<p>I swear I have no clue how so many people don&#x27;t know basic enough history that they are so mistaken by what communism is.
null
ionised
null
1,477,385,716
"2016-10-25T08:55:16Z"
comment
12,786,317
12,786,248
null
null
null
148
null
null
Serious question. What&#x27;s wrong with living next to basketball hoops? I live across the street from one in NYC and consider it a big positive to have a park nearby.
null
phillypham
null
1,641,238,474
"2022-01-03T19:34:34Z"
comment
29,785,320
29,784,630
null
null
null
149
null
null
Pronouns are merely virtue signaling acts of control. By specifying pronouns if they are obvious (99% of the time) you are signaling you are part of a non-bigoted, non-hateful club. Surely you don’t hate people right? So why don’t you have your pronouns visible, fellow citizen?<p>It’s also a form of control in redefining the obvious. You want to just live your life? Nope, sorry, you need to consciously be aware of my preferred pronouns at all times. It’s a very narcissistic and attention seeking thing too.
null
coolso
null
1,641,238,477
"2022-01-03T19:34:37Z"
comment
29,785,321
29,785,086
null
null
null
150
null
null
We have a saying in Britain, that few people remember now: &quot;rise with your class, not above it&quot;.<p>That comes from an understanding that making the best of living under a system that creates opportunities to be rich and opportunities to be poor is not the same as altering that system.<p>Really, the idea of privilege as people use it now is too individualistic to make sense at the macro level.
null
hkt
null
1,477,385,704
"2016-10-25T08:55:04Z"
comment
12,786,315
12,785,032
null
null
null
151
null
null
Agreed totally. The runway is nothing other than a brutally honest cash flow projection into the next 6 months (minimum).<p>Cash flow projection: first useful skill for any entrepreneur.
null
ak39
null
1,363,244,501
"2013-03-14T07:01:41Z"
comment
5,373,492
5,373,442
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152
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At least it is not as bad as the MS OS/2 2.0 fiasco: <a href="http://yuhongbao.blogspot.ca/2012/12/about-ms-os2-20-fiasco-px00307-and-dr.html" rel="nofollow">http://yuhongbao.blogspot.ca/2012/12/about-ms-os2-20-fiasco-...</a>
null
yuhong
null
1,363,244,506
"2013-03-14T07:01:46Z"
comment
5,373,493
5,373,472
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153
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One update for all RSS feed fans. If you are in India, US or Casnada, you could SMS enable your feeds by using the RSS feature of <a href="http://txtweb.com" rel="nofollow">http://txtweb.com</a>. check it out!
null
srinibond
null
1,363,244,488
"2013-03-14T07:01:28Z"
comment
5,373,490
5,371,725
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154
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I'm getting a 400 error when I try to complete the 'choose a username' screen. No visible reaction to pushing the continue button at all, but the error shows up in chrome's console. "Uncaught SyntaxError: Unexpected token O"
null
NickNameNick
null
1,363,244,495
"2013-03-14T07:01:35Z"
comment
5,373,491
5,373,424
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null
null
155
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null
LOL - I hadn't been aware of that blog, so headed over to take a look. Liked it so much I was just about to hit "Add to Reader"...<p>Bugger.<p>Mark my words, Blogger is next for some choppie-choppie. Have you noticed how it, too, is steadily being neglected/deprecated in favour of posting to some G+ river of drivel?
null
mikro2nd
null
1,363,244,590
"2013-03-14T07:03:10Z"
comment
5,373,496
5,372,438
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Noah Kagan of appsumo literally goes over how you go about this <a href="http://www.appsumo.com/where-are-my-customers/" rel="nofollow">http://www.appsumo.com/where-are-my-customers/</a>. The best videos I've seen on early customer aquisition hands down.
null
yoshyosh
null
1,363,244,513
"2013-03-14T07:01:53Z"
comment
5,373,494
5,370,957
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157
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I certainly agree - it was about 10 years ago now, but I did a physics degree and ended up pivoting to computer science. I offered to help a couple of friends in the department with their analysis, and ended up writing the majority of their code in actually analysing their experimental results. In both cases, their supervisor decided not to put my name in the resulting papers, and treated me less than a lab tech.<p>Why would anyone want to do that, when a six-figure tech company salary is just next door?
null
kimixa
null
1,654,062,709
"2022-06-01T05:51:49Z"
comment
31,578,615
31,577,673
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null
null
158
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null
Title needs 2016
null
jjtheblunt
null
1,655,181,788
"2022-06-14T04:43:08Z"
comment
31,734,819
31,734,110
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159
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Highly optimized one-time bare-metal runs, i.e., not a regular run using vCPUs and VMs like it would be for 99th of clients running HPC workloads over these platforms. Only to pop up in the Top500 charts and market about it. That’s all.
null
zekrioca
null
1,655,181,786
"2022-06-14T04:43:06Z"
comment
31,734,818
31,731,548
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null
null
160
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null
How heavy is this? The article doesn&#x27;t say.
null
diebeforei485
null
1,655,181,740
"2022-06-14T04:42:20Z"
comment
31,734,815
31,734,296
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161
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If I remember correctly it was facebook access, not internet. I can imagine it is security risk for local goverments. Facebook could control elections etc...
null
throw93232
null
1,655,181,731
"2022-06-14T04:42:11Z"
comment
31,734,814
31,734,381
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162
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Out of the Tar Pit<p>66 - pages, a little dry but will change your life<p>The main thesis of the book is that the programmers job, is to try to minimize state as much as possible
null
syspec
null
1,655,181,757
"2022-06-14T04:42:37Z"
comment
31,734,817
31,713,756
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null
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163
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null
The author also made 4D-Toys which I suppose was a proving ground for the more ambitious game project. If you have PCVR it&#x27;s a good way to stretch your imagination.
null
jimmySixDOF
null
1,655,181,749
"2022-06-14T04:42:29Z"
comment
31,734,816
31,729,259
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null
null
164
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null
Extremely high cost of living likely makes union benefits much more appealing relative to low CoL areas.
null
MBCook
null
1,655,181,695
"2022-06-14T04:41:35Z"
comment
31,734,811
31,734,501
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null
I had the opportunity to go back and visit my undergrad (not Stanford) university recently, where I spent much of the 90s as a student in various states of mischief and sobriety. Maybe I am just remembering things with nostalgia-colored glasses, but it just seems so different now. So bland and vanilla. Everything that was quirky, silly, grimy, dangerous, weirdo, degenerate, beatnik, or irreverent is now gone. Every building, hall and dorm in the place looks and feels like a sterile, gray hospital now. The arcades and dive bars and unique hangouts that used to be down on the city&#x27;s main road have been replaced with banks, fast food chains, clothing factory outlets, more banks, trendy bistros that spent $1M on just their logo, and so on. Everything is just soulless and cardboard now. Even the students! The guys walking around don&#x27;t stink like we used to--they all have this weird happy preppy-optimist-i&#x27;m-on-camera vibe. Nobody is retching on the sidewalk or sitting in the shrubs high as a kite. Everyone just seems to be kind of nervously hustling everywhere. Feels like a foreign country honestly.
null
ryandrake
null
1,655,181,690
"2022-06-14T04:41:30Z"
comment
31,734,810
31,733,731
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null
null
166
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null
I am not an out and out billionaire hater, but there are many that have legit impacted peoples&#x27; lives in a positive way or have provided jobs in the millions. Amazon, Microsoft, Google, Meta, Tesla, Reliance, etc. The amount of wealth they have might not be justified, but comparing them to this crooked list of billionaires is doing disservice to the products that they have put out in society.<p>But I just can&#x27;t empathize with the loss of billions of the crypto billionaires, all of them seem to be founders of trading apps. The whole space operates like an MLM. Get in early, shill relentlessly and just turn the other way to the numerous scams in the space.<p>An example (Binance in this case): <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.reuters.com&#x2F;investigates&#x2F;special-report&#x2F;fintech-crypto-binance-dirtymoney&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.reuters.com&#x2F;investigates&#x2F;special-report&#x2F;fintech-...</a><p>It&#x27;s been over 12 years and the space is still trying to find an answer to a problem that either does not exist or is niche. For Bitcoin:<p>Failed as a currency<p>Failed as a store of value<p>Failed as an investment hedge<p>Failed as energy or whatever mumbo jumbo some billionaires like Michael Saylor spew out<p>I for one won&#x27;t miss it even if it magically vanishes tomorrow<p>Speaking of which, at least now some Nvidia graphics cards are becoming available very close to MSRP :)
null
gadnuk
null
1,655,181,726
"2022-06-14T04:42:06Z"
comment
31,734,813
31,734,695
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null
null
167
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null
Wouldn’t this generate a ton of heat?
null
arriu
null
1,655,181,717
"2022-06-14T04:41:57Z"
comment
31,734,812
31,734,296
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<i>tell the USPS to not do any bulk mail forward</i><p>the USPS will not forward bulk mail, and even magazines will not get forwarded. only mail carrying first class postage will get forwarded.<p>however, as soon as you submit a change of address, the USPS makes that information public, so many companies subscribe to those lists and will get your new address (like magazine companies). so your best bet is to just not forward any mail and submit the address changes manually to the companies that send you mail.
null
there
null
1,276,119,499
"2010-06-09T21:38:19Z"
comment
1,418,379
1,418,331
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null
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169
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I'm more worried that expectations are simply too high for them to meet this time.<p>I have no doubt that they'll see an initial rush of sales. That's just to be expected based on hype. The real question is whether it has any staying power or not. I'm leaning towards the "it can't possibly meet expectations" side, but I could be wrong.
null
Natsu
null
1,276,119,483
"2010-06-09T21:38:03Z"
comment
1,418,378
1,417,981
null
null
null
170
null
null
Be Quick - But Don't Hurry by Andrew Hill with John Wooden. This book reveals the secrets of running a successful organization.
null
blee001
null
1,174,563,147
"2007-03-22T11:32:27Z"
comment
5,658
5,572
null
null
null
171
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null
The femtocell range is extremely short. It wouldn't do your neighbors any good. (I have one.)
null
wooster
null
1,276,119,364
"2010-06-09T21:36:04Z"
comment
1,418,371
1,418,086
null
null
null
172
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null
I wonder if we will ever get to read such transcripts in this age of private emails and ephemeral conversations.
null
kunjaan
null
1,276,119,402
"2010-06-09T21:36:42Z"
comment
1,418,373
1,417,891
null
null
null
173
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I went to University of California - Santa Cruz for my undergraduate in physics. Around my year, the administration realized that a lot of the students were having trouble transitioning to non-academic jobs. So much so that they started an "applied physics" program which allowed more classes in electrical engineering and computer science, and made a required class called Physics in Industry that I have had the privilege of speaking in a few times to tell young physicists how and why they could transition into a career in software.
null
Periodic
null
1,276,119,364
"2010-06-09T21:36:04Z"
comment
1,418,372
1,417,155
null
null
null
174
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null
+1 for "I hope his mother fully shares his viewpoints".<p>That being said, it appears he also declined several great job offers. Some people just don't live for material things. Most people say they don't, but their actions (including mine) say differently.<p>This guy doesn't talk his philosophy, he acts it.
null
rokhayakebe
null
1,276,119,424
"2010-06-09T21:37:04Z"
comment
1,418,375
1,418,152
null
null
null
175
null
null
there's a difference between (not) caring about money, and rejecting it on principle
null
milkshakes
null
1,276,119,451
"2010-06-09T21:37:31Z"
comment
1,418,377
1,418,274
null
null
null
176
null
null
iOS 4 GM jailbreak, not iPhone 4 jailbreak.
null
pieter
null
1,276,119,449
"2010-06-09T21:37:29Z"
comment
1,418,376
1,418,308
null
null
null
177
null
null
How is matching V8 performance a big deal given that MRI Rack isn&#x27;t significantly slower than Node?
null
cutler
null
1,622,297,480
"2021-05-29T14:11:20Z"
comment
27,325,346
27,323,680
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null
null
178
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null
I guess less reasonable in the context of “they’re very unreliable, which is why I always keep auto high beams off.”<p>It’s not an irrelevant bit of context.
null
arkades
null
1,622,297,487
"2021-05-29T14:11:27Z"
comment
27,325,347
27,325,027
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179
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null
In the early days they did seem to follow that motto so there was at least some cause to believe them.
null
filterfish
null
1,622,297,460
"2021-05-29T14:11:00Z"
comment
27,325,344
27,325,292
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Being a pedestrian I get the raging tic for loud vehicles easily without any metal cage assistance. And sure I try to not get annoyed by their insane noise pollution and disruption of pleasant conversations or enjoyment of sound in a large radius. But fundamentally I believe that as the driver of an unnecessarily loud vehicle you* are an arsehole.<p>*you as in the driver, I am aware that the parent poster is not necessarily driving a loud vehicle.
null
adament
null
1,622,297,460
"2021-05-29T14:11:00Z"
comment
27,325,345
27,325,068
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null
null
181
null
null
That data isn&#x27;t actually shared with Apple. It&#x27;s used <i>on device</i> by the client applications for those services.
null
kyralis
null
1,622,297,443
"2021-05-29T14:10:43Z"
comment
27,325,342
27,325,279
null
null
null
182
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null
Google even managed to incur heavy losses from offering cloud infrastructure services. A business which usually is a guaranteed golden goose.<p>They are really bad at making money with anything that isn&#x27;t advertising.
null
Vespasian
null
1,622,297,449
"2021-05-29T14:10:49Z"
comment
27,325,343
27,325,219
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null
null
183
null
null
Is being housebroken a bad thing? I don&#x27;t want to live in my own filth.
null
alisonkisk
null
1,622,297,415
"2021-05-29T14:10:15Z"
comment
27,325,340
27,324,834
null
null
null
184
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null
That&#x27;s fine, maybe the trade off in increased price is worth it to some people.
null
jjulius
null
1,622,297,417
"2021-05-29T14:10:17Z"
comment
27,325,341
27,325,275
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null
null
185
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null
That sounds absolutely miserable. These kinds of opportunities can not be forced.<p>The candidate who seeks this role is the wrong candidate to hire, in my experience.
null
davidu
null
1,225,603,536
"2008-11-02T05:25:36Z"
comment
351,210
350,958
null
null
null
186
null
null
I only saw boxes in the title with Chrome 38. Tried out IE10 and it works just fine.
null
guardian5x
null
1,416,394,249
"2014-11-19T10:50:49Z"
comment
8,629,288
8,629,145
null
null
null
187
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null
The saying goes, once you learn enough history you either become a Marxist or a liar.<p>The man whose name is now synonymous with “smart” has a nice essay about this:<p>“Why Socialism?”, by Albert Einstein <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;monthlyreview.org&#x2F;2009&#x2F;05&#x2F;01&#x2F;why-socialism&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;monthlyreview.org&#x2F;2009&#x2F;05&#x2F;01&#x2F;why-socialism&#x2F;</a>
null
nextstep
null
1,622,297,519
"2021-05-29T14:11:59Z"
comment
27,325,349
27,324,804
null
null
null
188
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null
It uses python-reconfigure[0] to parse the config files into syntas trees (similar to ASTs). Seems to be written by the same author. Either the author didn&#x27;t know about Augeas[1] which aims to do the same things and has more parsers AFAIK or for some reason couldn&#x27;t use it.<p>Edit: Here[2] is the list of Augeas lenses(parsers) -- it&#x27;s pretty extensive.<p>[0] - <a href="http://eugeny.github.io/reconfigure/" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;eugeny.github.io&#x2F;reconfigure&#x2F;</a> [1] - <a href="http://augeas.net/" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;augeas.net&#x2F;</a> [2] - <a href="http://augeas.net/stock_lenses.html" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;augeas.net&#x2F;stock_lenses.html</a>
null
shock
null
1,403,816,436
"2014-06-26T21:00:36Z"
comment
7,951,552
7,951,259
null
null
null
189
null
null
That sentence, while insightful, side-steps the issue of synonyms (different names for equal things).
null
qubex
null
1,452,447,460
"2016-01-10T17:37:40Z"
comment
10,876,153
10,875,736
null
null
null
190
null
null
Have, not of.
null
timcederman
null
1,225,603,972
"2008-11-02T05:32:52Z"
comment
351,213
349,327
null
null
null
191
null
null
Dart, TypeScript, or any other similar strongly typed language that compiles down to JavaScript while still looking quite a bit like JavaScript.
null
johnzabroski
null
1,403,816,403
"2014-06-26T21:00:03Z"
comment
7,951,551
7,950,357
null
null
null
192
null
null
Funny that they mention the Urdu Times as an example of a thriving non-digital newspaper -- HN just had a post referring to how those who speak Urdu are fiercely protective of their script and underserved digitally due to the difficulty of rendering the typeface.<p>So keep in mind that that headlining success story is likely a misleading represenntation, as it&#x27;s a newspaper that is restricted from going digital.
null
patcon
null
1,403,816,381
"2014-06-26T20:59:41Z"
comment
7,951,550
7,950,937
null
null
null
193
null
null
Full subtitle: &quot;POTATOES: Humans evolved large brains because our ancestors ate starchy carbohydrates&quot;<p>Our saliva suggests improved carbohydrate digestion: &quot;...humans possess six salivary amylase genes, while other primates just have two, increasing the ability to digest starch. ...after cooking became widespread and the salivary amylase genes multiplied, this increased the availability of dietary glucose to the brain and foetus which, in turn, allowed the acceleration in brain size which occurred from around 800,000 years ago onwards.&quot;
null
jdnier
null
1,439,057,639
"2015-08-08T18:13:59Z"
comment
10,028,148
10,028,135
null
null
null
194
null
null
No, will never take off.
null
jonsen
null
1,439,057,663
"2015-08-08T18:14:23Z"
comment
10,028,149
10,027,997
null
null
null
195
null
null
&gt; &quot;Looks like a Mac. Feels like a Mac.&quot;<p>It looks like an old clamshell style macbook. At best. Which are what? 8 years old now?
null
octo_t
null
1,473,081,152
"2016-09-05T13:12:32Z"
comment
12,430,048
12,429,807
null
null
null
196
null
null
They are using the 2009-2010 lower end EliteBooks which means that is also likely that they are using a refurbished stock.<p>I&#x27;m pretty sure this is going to piss off both HP (for showing their logo clearly) and Apple and this is probably not going to last.<p>There are plenty of &quot;hackintosh&quot; guides out there, anyone who&#x27;s capable of installing OSX on a non-Apple device has probably better hardware options out there.<p>And considering that this will never come with a pre-installed OS you aren&#x27;t saving yourself any trouble buy buying it from them rather than buying the same hardware or newer from any other source.
null
dogma1138
null
1,473,081,171
"2016-09-05T13:12:51Z"
comment
12,430,049
12,429,967
null
null
null
197
null
null
Heavily used? Probably. Does that make it great? Not necessarily.
null
hasenj
null
1,403,816,476
"2014-06-26T21:01:16Z"
comment
7,951,555
7,951,177
null
null
null
198
null
null
On the upside as long as you have Find My iPhone activated when you <i>did</i> have the phone it doesn&#x27;t have a huge amount of value to the thief, particularly on newer models where individual components can&#x27;t even be swapped without issues.
null
unicornfinder
null
1,618,997,802
"2021-04-21T09:36:42Z"
comment
26,887,289
26,878,680
null
null
null
199
null
null
When it comes from a hostile company, yes.<p>You can mitigate the privacy impact of ads with countermeasures such as ad-blockers or provide fake personal information if asked.<p>You can&#x27;t easily do so with paid services because you need to provide real information for the payment to be processed. This requires mutual trust on both sides of the transaction.
null
Nextgrid
null
1,618,997,799
"2021-04-21T09:36:39Z"
comment
26,887,288
26,887,214
null
null
null