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166,453 | null | null | My life is easy. <a href="https://www.drupal.org/docs/develop/standards/coding-standards#indenting" rel="nofollow">https://www.drupal.org/docs/develop/standards/coding-standar...</a> "Use an indent of 2 spaces, with no tabs." Anyone writing custom code with a different coding style than the ecosystem they rely is a fool so that's decided for me.<p>If my dreams come true I will work with Elixir next. <a href="https://github.com/christopheradams/elixir_style_guide#spaces-indentation" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/christopheradams/elixir_style_guide#space...</a> "Use two spaces per indentation level. No hard tabs." See, this is why I like Elixir, I do not need to change my spacing habits from Drupal! :D | null | chx | null | 1,497,570,359 | "2017-06-15T23:45:59Z" | comment | 14,565,441 | 14,560,893 | null | null | null |
166,454 | null | null | Point taken. My point is just because I can simply explain it does not imply clear understanding. And not being able to explain isn't a reliable indicator of lack of understanding | null | sh87 | null | 1,497,570,354 | "2017-06-15T23:45:54Z" | comment | 14,565,440 | 14,565,039 | null | null | null |
166,455 | null | null | You can't guarantee that someone else will not come out with something in the mean time. There is quite clearly a time limit to which this would have been amazing.<p>And even at the time, many people ridiculed the iphone. | null | cakedoggie | null | 1,497,570,372 | "2017-06-15T23:46:12Z" | comment | 14,565,443 | 14,563,290 | null | null | null |
166,456 | null | null | He was elected, despite his numerous faults - so he and his policies are emblematic of at least enough of the country to be politically relevant. | null | krapp | null | 1,497,570,362 | "2017-06-15T23:46:02Z" | comment | 14,565,442 | 14,565,411 | null | null | null |
166,457 | null | null | Using timing attacks in this case is almost not possible any actual web user would know that, do you think you can accurately analyse that the application's choice of code brunch in 35000 requests successfully? (in a multi-threaded attack)<p>Unless you are sitting by the server physically or it's in your localhost (even than, not for sure) timing attack simply not feasible. | null | stackthat | null | 1,284,970,201 | "2010-09-20T08:10:01Z" | comment | 1,708,182 | 1,707,699 | null | null | null |
166,458 | null | null | No, it still does not! | null | pkrumins | null | 1,284,970,214 | "2010-09-20T08:10:14Z" | comment | 1,708,183 | 1,708,177 | null | null | null |
166,459 | null | null | I think this was probably one of the worst responses you could have given. The email seems to indicate that the guy feels guilty about buying your laptop, and that his offer is an attempt to ease his conscience. Now he's thinking to himself that he tried to set things right but couldn't because you responded by being a jerk.<p>The second best thing would have been to cooperate and get the files - and I would have suggested this if you needed them - but the best would have been to refuse to cooperate with him on the grounds that you don't want to ease his conscience when you belive him to be guilty.<p>Too late now, I guess, but that's what I think.<p>(Apologies if I sound rude or blunt in this comment; I don't have the time to revise/edit it.) | null | george_george | null | 1,284,970,179 | "2010-09-20T08:09:39Z" | comment | 1,708,180 | 1,706,127 | null | null | null |
166,460 | null | null | (Total nitpick that I wasn't initially going to post, but it's now appeared in several of your posts and it's driving me crazy: you're using "debit" where I think you mean "debt". A debit is an accounting entry indicating something has been deducted from an account; it's basically part of an income statement, reflecting a one-time payment. A debt is money that's owed to someone else; it's part of a balance sheet, and is permanent until paid back.<p>Confusion is somewhat understandable when you consider that the opposite for <i>both</i> is "credit". When used with an article ("a credit"), it's the opposite of debit, a one-time addition to an account. When used without an article ("banks extend credit to borrowers"), it's the opposite of debt, a sum that is owed to you by other parties. English is a funny language.) | null | nostrademons | null | 1,284,970,194 | "2010-09-20T08:09:54Z" | comment | 1,708,181 | 1,707,792 | null | null | null |
166,461 | null | null | Ok so sh is good for small one-off scripts, fair enough. But why? Why shouldn't a sh language be <i>good</i>? Why can't I interface with other programs (that have bindings) natively in an sh? Why is it considered a <i>good</i> thing to make it a complete pain to do anything non-trivial with sh? As for the argument of keeping memory usage low that's a bunch of crap vm's are usually comparable or lower. | null | nwmcsween | null | 1,284,970,297 | "2010-09-20T08:11:37Z" | comment | 1,708,186 | 1,707,094 | null | null | null |
166,462 | null | null | android is kept in git, not the main archive. | null | joshu | null | 1,284,970,298 | "2010-09-20T08:11:38Z" | comment | 1,708,187 | 1,707,438 | null | null | null |
166,463 | null | null | They never were, it was a myth. | null | stackthat | null | 1,284,970,271 | "2010-09-20T08:11:11Z" | comment | 1,708,184 | 1,707,338 | null | null | null |
166,464 | null | null | The question isn't whether or not it's an acceptable way of terminating an agreement, the question is how does a merchant act properly in handling such a situation.<p>Calling the creditors when a) the missed payment is for a pre-paid service; b) is a small amount; and c) the service hasn't been used by the customer... is completely inappropriate.<p>Even more inappropriate is when a merchant builds their entire business model based on a combination of infrequent auto-renewing payments, a complicated cancelation process, and crazy cancelation terms. Canceling at some gyms, for example, is more complicated and requires more effort and notice than leaving an apartment. That's sneaky (and by design).<p>Is it stupid to cancel your cards as a way of ending your contracts? Yes. Is it stupid to take draconian measures to get money from a customer who doesn't want and hasn't used your service? Yes. | null | furyg3 | null | 1,284,970,331 | "2010-09-20T08:12:11Z" | comment | 1,708,188 | 1,707,815 | null | null | null |
166,465 | null | null | It was an error - sorry. I meant to put it under KP. thanks for spotting. | null | msuster | null | 1,284,970,350 | "2010-09-20T08:12:30Z" | comment | 1,708,189 | 1,707,251 | null | null | null |
166,466 | null | null | Looks like they were in a hurry to get this site out. | null | inf3cti0n95 | null | 1,550,666,232 | "2019-02-20T12:37:12Z" | comment | 19,207,357 | 19,207,350 | null | null | null |
166,467 | null | null | We have other payment systems like credit cards which work that way. The inevitable consequences are that permissions to receive payments are tightly locked down, and the network charges fees to help cover the cost of fraudulent transactions. | null | SpicyLemonZest | null | 1,665,176,070 | "2022-10-07T20:54:30Z" | comment | 33,126,747 | 33,126,088 | null | null | null |
166,468 | null | null | I also see you use this website to promote Amazon products, with an Amazon Associate tag. First, your website does not comply with Amazon Associate rules (see the point "5. Identifying Yourself as an Associate"). Second, it may seem like this website, aiming to offer eco-friendly solutions, only try to sell more to people. A poor mix of eco-friendliness and consumerism in this case. | null | Cynddl | null | 1,550,666,199 | "2019-02-20T12:36:39Z" | comment | 19,207,356 | 19,206,801 | null | null | null |
166,469 | null | null | And I'd rather use Vim. | null | factotvm | null | 1,527,518,895 | "2018-05-28T14:48:15Z" | comment | 17,172,679 | 17,172,669 | null | null | null |
166,470 | null | null | I try this with beer from time to time, the hangover isn't enough to make me quit for any significant amount of time :p. | null | Cthulhu_ | null | 1,527,518,885 | "2018-05-28T14:48:05Z" | comment | 17,172,678 | 17,165,182 | null | null | null |
166,471 | null | null | Sounds like you're getting fixated on the example. Short vectors would do what you want. And it's a lot easier to add specific vector instructions for particular use cases than adding N of them for each use case (for N simd sizes).<p>Are you getting hung up on the term 'vector'? That doesn't assume you're just doing linear algebra. | null | lallysingh | null | 1,550,666,233 | "2019-02-20T12:37:13Z" | comment | 19,207,358 | 19,206,609 | null | null | null |
166,472 | null | null | This is an important point to stress. However the moment people want to get more complicated than bind and return while doing IO the "C" word inevitably creeps into scope.<p>So while you don't need to know anything about abstract algebras to do Haskell, that knowledge is lurking so close to the surface that it is really more of an issue than is generally acknowledged. | null | dmead | null | 1,527,518,860 | "2018-05-28T14:47:40Z" | comment | 17,172,675 | 17,172,423 | null | null | null |
166,473 | null | null | The counterexample here would be Mastodon, which I believe now has more users than IRC and seems to be growing quite healthily. (And, AFAIK, isn't funded by any megacorps; it's actual grassroots FOSS.)<p>When it comes to social media software, people care about two tightly-coupled things: if the people they need to talk to can be reached with it, and if the UX is good. (People abandoned IRC because its UX, which was never good, degraded to unusability in a multi-device not-always-online embedded-media world.)<p>But there's nothing about federation that inherently requires bad UX. But federation generally means open-source (because there's no market pressure for interoperability), and open-source means bad UX. Mastodon owes 80% of its success to having been principally developed by somebody who knows how to make a goddamned webpage. The other 20% is that it's pretty easy to host.<p>I think the really interesting takeaway is that the giants only don't support interoperability because they have a monopoly on good UX. If something highly usable and open-source appeared in the chat space and started gaining serious traction, the enterprise players would have to entertain the notion of playing ball and supporting the protocol – and if one of them did it, the rest would follow. | null | BurritoAlPastor | null | 1,527,518,857 | "2018-05-28T14:47:37Z" | comment | 17,172,674 | 17,172,373 | null | null | null |
166,474 | null | null | > bcrypt is constant-time, not because it truncates at 72 characters. It's constant-time, because it slurps the password and salt once into the state (initial setup)<p>And why do you think that initial setup is constant-time? Because it truncates at 72 characters! Otherwise it would be O(n), and so bcrypt overall would be O(n) + O(m) (if n is password length and m is cost factor).<p>It's quite simply impossible to have any hash function not be at least O(n) without truncation. That would imply that the data does not even need to be read to compute the hash.<p>Your point is still relevant in that without truncation, shacrypt would be O(n*m) and bcrypt would be O(n) + O(m), but NEITHER is O(m) without truncation. If shacrypt truncated, it would be O(m), just like bcrypt is O(m) with truncation. If both prehash instead of truncate, then both are O(n) + O(m). | null | peeters | null | 1,527,518,869 | "2018-05-28T14:47:49Z" | comment | 17,172,677 | 17,158,033 | null | null | null |
166,475 | null | null | How? | null | raldi | null | 1,527,518,866 | "2018-05-28T14:47:46Z" | comment | 17,172,676 | 17,172,622 | null | null | null |
166,476 | null | null | Right, it obfuscates class distinctions between those who control capital and policy versus those who just have money. I'm somewhat cynical but I think this is an intended obfuscation.<p>It's important for petit bourgeois and wealthy skilled workers to understand their position in the class hierarchy, but calling a class whose power is dwarfed by the capitalist class an aristocracy is fluffy rhetoric. | null | danharaj | null | 1,527,518,790 | "2018-05-28T14:46:30Z" | comment | 17,172,671 | 17,172,659 | null | null | null |
166,477 | null | null | Just to be clear:<p>We don't need a referendum on every issue, we just need a way to<p>- change your representative every week or so<p>- override your representative's vote within a given time window | null | dmichulke | null | 1,527,518,780 | "2018-05-28T14:46:20Z" | comment | 17,172,670 | 17,172,643 | null | null | null |
166,478 | null | null | IF you never cut anyone's wage because there's no fair way to measure performance, then there's also no reason to give anyone a raise. But people do get raises, even when they might not deserve them. The more raises an employee has received, the more likely it is that some of them weren't justified. Without wage cuts, you end up with people who are overpaid because their productivity didn't increase with their pay, not because their productivity actually declined. | null | yorwba | null | 1,527,518,811 | "2018-05-28T14:46:51Z" | comment | 17,172,672 | 17,171,889 | null | null | null |
166,479 | null | null | 1. I said skip over that for a reason. :)<p>2. Do you bring your phone out during lengthy business meetings? I still see that as rude, even if all you are doing is checking the time. Checking a wristwatch is far more acceptable and subtle in that scenario. Perhaps you aren't in lengthy business meetings or perhaps your work environment is a bit more forgiving at looking at your phone during a meeting.<p>3. Beanie babies were a 90's fad based on thin air and speculation. Watches and other antiques with years of history backing up their ability to maintain and increase in value is a different kind of investment. Luxury items <i>are</i> luxury items. They tend to maintain or increase in value based on that merit alone. Beanie Babies aren't luxury items, thus are worthless only a few years after the collection fad died out.<p>It's written to answer why one would buy a pre-owned luxury watch but the reasons apply to new items as well. | null | Nadya | null | 1,435,266,363 | "2015-06-25T21:06:03Z" | comment | 9,780,904 | 9,780,639 | null | null | null |
166,480 | null | null | Yah, this is all super topical. | null | freejack | null | 1,325,295,938 | "2011-12-31T01:45:38Z" | comment | 3,409,834 | 3,409,815 | null | null | null |
166,481 | null | null | My 4-year old is currently programming on my old Oric-1/Atmos machine. Simple loops, sound effects, chars on the screen - its amazing what he can do when given a little encouragement and things are explained to him .. | null | seclorum | null | 1,333,449,734 | "2012-04-03T10:42:14Z" | comment | 3,792,331 | 3,790,144 | null | null | null |
166,482 | null | null | > people apply even if they aren't the kind of folks who can work 60h week for 10 years.<p>I think you don't know in advance how long you can stand this before you burn out. | null | chefkoch | null | 1,467,645,111 | "2016-07-04T15:11:51Z" | comment | 12,031,200 | 12,030,914 | null | null | null |
166,483 | null | null | Just because it would be a slower development path doesn't mean it's impossible. It would be slower, but any given civilization would have only a few viable options for development - so yes, I think you'd find a civilization which values glass and mirrors and polishing technology to get the heat necessary for metal working. | null | XorNot | null | 1,428,943,124 | "2015-04-13T16:38:44Z" | comment | 9,368,647 | 9,368,315 | null | null | null |
166,484 | null | null | Cut a piece of black cardboard, fold it in half and hang it over the camera.<p>Or this <a href="https://ilovegreengrass.wordpress.com/2014/02/12/cover-the-camera/" rel="nofollow">https://ilovegreengrass.wordpress.com/2014/02/12/cover-the-c...</a> | null | pmontra | null | 1,466,587,038 | "2016-06-22T09:17:18Z" | comment | 11,952,459 | 11,952,365 | null | null | null |
166,485 | null | null | A dream can't be failed. A dream is a dream. | null | Eerie | null | 1,500,035,703 | "2017-07-14T12:35:03Z" | comment | 14,769,252 | 14,768,685 | null | null | null |
166,486 | null | null | What I really want is a the Smart Reply feature to point out to the user that more than one question was asked of them.<p>It's so boring to ask two questions and get a reply to one or ask someone to choose one of two options and they reply with "Yes, go ahead". | null | nextweek2 | null | 1,524,643,494 | "2018-04-25T08:04:54Z" | comment | 16,919,437 | 16,919,221 | null | null | null |
166,487 | null | null | Bin liners are kind of pointless though. Just wash your bin occasionally | null | craigds | null | 1,524,643,489 | "2018-04-25T08:04:49Z" | comment | 16,919,436 | 16,918,910 | null | null | null |
166,488 | null | null | As pointed out in another comment, this doesn't work when the link count is 0:<p><pre><code> $ uname -rv
4.15.0-3-amd64 #1 SMP Debian 4.15.17-1 (2018-04-19)
$ touch foo
$ exec 3<>foo
$ rm foo
$ ls -l /proc/$$/fd/3
lrwx------ 1 jwilk jwilk 64 Apr 25 10:02 /proc/324/fd/3 -> '/home/jwilk/foo (deleted)'
$ strace -e linkat ln -L /proc/$$/fd/3 foo
linkat(AT_FDCWD, "/proc/3447/fd/3", AT_FDCWD, "foo", AT_SYMLINK_FOLLOW) = -1 ENOENT (No such file or directory)
ln: failed to create hard link 'foo' => '/proc/3447/fd/3': No such file or directory
$ sudo strace -e linkat ln -L /proc/$$/fd/3 foo
linkat(AT_FDCWD, "/proc/3447/fd/3", AT_FDCWD, "foo", AT_SYMLINK_FOLLOW) = -1 ENOENT (No such file or directory)
ln: failed to create hard link 'foo' => '/proc/3447/fd/3': No such file or directory
+++ exited with 1 +++</code></pre> | null | jwilk | null | 1,524,643,445 | "2018-04-25T08:04:05Z" | comment | 16,919,431 | 16,918,038 | null | null | null |
166,489 | null | null | ...and how does one do nested/tree-like data in TSV? One doesn't, only just ad-hoc invents something akin to sexps or json but unstandardized. Real-world data rarely has a natural fit for "tabl | null | nnq | null | 1,524,643,405 | "2018-04-25T08:03:25Z" | comment | 16,919,430 | 16,906,700 | null | null | null |
166,490 | null | null | Midwife led care in the UK is free.<p>Research isn't great but it seems to show that home births are more risky than hospital births; that midwife led care is safer but only if there are both obstetricians available and strong multidisciplinary working. | null | DanBC | null | 1,524,643,465 | "2018-04-25T08:04:25Z" | comment | 16,919,433 | 16,919,236 | null | null | null |
166,491 | null | null | I could ask the reverse: "why isn't China <i>more</i> successful?"<p>It's such a complicated issue that you could argue almost anything. I think any discussion must acknowledge Hong Kong, however, as an important data point.<p>My opinion is that the Communist party, even despite its "GDP obsession" [1], has gotten in the way more than anything.<p>As an (admittedly, very rough) estimate, if you take Hong Kong's GDP per person and multiply it by China's population, you get $58 trillion.<p>[1] <a href="https://www.economist.com/news/china/21689628-chinas-obsession-gdp-targets-threatens-its-economy-grossly-deceptive-plans" rel="nofollow">https://www.economist.com/news/china/21689628-chinas-obsessi...</a> | null | jtraffic | null | 1,500,035,731 | "2017-07-14T12:35:31Z" | comment | 14,769,253 | 14,769,015 | null | null | null |
166,492 | null | null | Not to denigrate the Indian space program on their historic achievement, but since it has been done before (even if more expensively), it's of less interest to those that are looking forward to major advances in the field.<p>These types of achievements are great though, in the sense that they foster competition and help everyone improve. | null | nickserv | null | 1,466,586,938 | "2016-06-22T09:15:38Z" | comment | 11,952,451 | 11,952,140 | null | null | null |
166,493 | null | null | It's not what I said. I meant that there probably are reasons apart from difficulty that people don't launch so many satellites at once. | null | pilsetnieks | null | 1,466,586,927 | "2016-06-22T09:15:27Z" | comment | 11,952,450 | 11,952,135 | null | null | null |
166,494 | null | null | Well no they better not, obviously!<p>The point was "all a hacker would really have to do is to intercept when you put your decryption key in and send it off to <i>their</i> own server" (emphasis added).<p>However this is more about keeping the Lastpass <i>software</i> secure than it is about keeping the encrypted user vaults secure. The documentation you quoted really obscures this by use of the passive voice, casting the end-user somehow as an active agent deliberately doing all the encryption/hashing and sending, implying that they are in full control :) Try this on for a change:<p>"LastPass says they never receive my Master Password. Doesn't <i>the LastPass Software</i> send it to the LastPass servers when I log in?<p>No, when you login to LastPass, <i>the LastPass Software</i> generates two things when you give it your Master Password, before <i>the LastPass Software</i> sends anything to the server: the password hash and the decryption key. <i>The LastPass Software</i> does all this locally.<p><i>The LastPass Software</i> sends your password <i>hash</i> to our servers to verify you. Once verified, our server sends back your encrypted Vault. <i>The LastPass Software</i> only sends your hash to our server, not your Master Password that you just entered into <i>the LastPass Software</i>.<p><i>The LastPass Software</i> then uses this decryption key, which should NEVER leave your computer, to decrypt your Vault once it comes back."<p>-<p>The above is IMHO a much better way to word the same documentation, since it doesn't try to gloss over a rather important part of the attack surface. It's not really fair to on the one hand congratulate a user for being security-aware enough to use a password manager, but then ignore this part. Good security software documentation should <i>proudly</i> present the last few exposed parts of the attack surface, <i>especially</i> if they are minor ones, so that a user can assess the limits of their trust--there are always limits, no sense in pretending there aren't, and it's better to know them so that the <i>user</i> gets to decide what they're okay with. | null | tripzilch | null | 1,466,586,958 | "2016-06-22T09:15:58Z" | comment | 11,952,453 | 11,938,817 | null | null | null |
166,495 | null | null | I'm not convinced Apple design department will allow that. | null | vilda | null | 1,466,586,953 | "2016-06-22T09:15:53Z" | comment | 11,952,452 | 11,952,400 | null | null | null |
166,496 | null | null | > I fail to see much value in an abstract account of "pure language" as dissociated from the real communicative process<p>But this assumption makes assumptions of purity as well. The communicative process may just be a byproduct of a mental process which has little to do with communication. A mutation happens tens of thousands of years ago (say 50,000 years ago), a change happens in the Broca (and/or Wernecke) area of the brain, and suddenly a new mental process kicks off. This mental process can be modeled as a state machine, and has the abilities and limitations of a state machine. It also has known limitations of output, which Chomsky has talked about.<p>You're assuming the mutations which gave rise to the brain changes which created an internal language generator and parser have only one purpose - communication. But that's an assumption on your part. The ability to communicate may be just one byproduct of those changes which made things like communication possible. | null | Ologn | null | 1,466,586,961 | "2016-06-22T09:16:01Z" | comment | 11,952,455 | 11,952,247 | null | null | null |
166,497 | null | null | But probably 95% of usage uses the term to mean developing or under developed country which is probably a better definition now (as in that meaning indicates what the author meant). | null | lostlogin | null | 1,466,586,960 | "2016-06-22T09:16:00Z" | comment | 11,952,454 | 11,952,270 | null | null | null |
166,498 | null | null | Let this be a lesson to us all. If you blatantly violate terms of service, there's no amount of harassing families of school shooting victims that will get your platform back. | null | darpa_escapee | null | 1,534,392,565 | "2018-08-16T04:09:25Z" | comment | 17,771,801 | 17,771,776 | null | null | null |
166,499 | null | null | I feel like the article covers the advantages. But, most notably, the tunnel is much cheaper and faster (to build). | null | issa | null | 1,534,392,551 | "2018-08-16T04:09:11Z" | comment | 17,771,800 | 17,771,788 | null | null | null |
166,500 | null | null | That is still idem potent. In both cases after the request is performed the resource is still deleted. | null | spockz | null | 1,534,392,630 | "2018-08-16T04:10:30Z" | comment | 17,771,803 | 17,770,112 | null | null | null |
166,501 | null | null | This is a pilot. Doesn’t have to be financially viable on its own. Paves way for future projects and proves utility for the community. | null | hkmurakami | null | 1,534,392,616 | "2018-08-16T04:10:16Z" | comment | 17,771,802 | 17,771,787 | null | null | null |
166,502 | null | null | I had the exact same questions. I'm pretty sure the answer to question 1 is hidden in their systems about the originally planned Sepulveda proof of concept tunnel. According to them that one hadn't been planned to take any passengers so it would have been a total loss and poor proof of concept. This tunnel would still be a loss but probably a smaller one and a much better proof of concept and marketing show piece. | null | ajmurmann | null | 1,534,392,670 | "2018-08-16T04:11:10Z" | comment | 17,771,805 | 17,771,787 | null | null | null |
166,503 | null | null | Why? It’s not like they’re using slave labor. Google will reveal their plans if and when it suits them. | null | gonyea | null | 1,534,392,637 | "2018-08-16T04:10:37Z" | comment | 17,771,804 | 17,771,293 | null | null | null |
166,504 | null | null | Sure... and Vindaloo is derived from a Portugeuse dish. Which is not to say they aren't associated with India today. | null | enno_au | null | 1,534,392,692 | "2018-08-16T04:11:32Z" | comment | 17,771,806 | 17,770,134 | null | null | null |
166,505 | null | null | Think of it as a pilot project for your first client. Typically you bill a very low price that doesn't really even cover the bills, even in a SW Project. | null | hkmurakami | null | 1,534,392,708 | "2018-08-16T04:11:48Z" | comment | 17,771,808 | 17,771,775 | null | null | null |
166,506 | null | null | Sure, but we're kind of wandering off the point here.<p>Carlsen is widely recognized to have been in a great, likely winning position in game 12, and arguably got himself into several other, if not cleanly decisive positions, very strong ones in several other games, where Caruana never quite seemed to.<p>OP suggested they were dead even in play in "what he considers" chess (classical time controls). I'm suggesting that the results may have been even, but that Carlsen seemed to be stronger all along, based on the chances he got himself into, even though it never quite converted until rapid. | null | msbarnett | null | 1,543,438,582 | "2018-11-28T20:56:22Z" | comment | 18,555,601 | 18,555,544 | null | null | null |
166,507 | null | null | Apple is taking steps to move away from Yelp:<p><a href="https://www.macrumors.com/2021/04/22/apple-maps-ratings-places-interest-us/" rel="nofollow">https://www.macrumors.com/2021/04/22/apple-maps-ratings-plac...</a> | null | fuckcensorship | null | 1,629,997,291 | "2021-08-26T17:01:31Z" | comment | 28,317,519 | 28,317,497 | null | null | null |
166,508 | null | null | We have, but we'd need to scale up a bit to be able to get on there. There's a lot of red tape involved! | null | reitzensteinm | null | 1,213,589,602 | "2008-06-16T04:13:22Z" | comment | 218,380 | 218,359 | null | null | null |
166,509 | null | null | Can't use this because my clients/contract don't allow sending of documents to third parties. | null | amelius | null | 1,543,438,586 | "2018-11-28T20:56:26Z" | comment | 18,555,602 | 18,554,122 | null | null | null |
166,510 | null | null | If you see the world in black and white then yes, I will question your intellect.<p>If you look at some of the best, most novel tech and do not see 'art' then yes I will question your intellect.<p>I could go on. | true | pteredactyl | null | 1,540,562,860 | "2018-10-26T14:07:40Z" | comment | 18,309,325 | 18,309,216 | null | null | null |
166,511 | null | null | > examples of the problem<p>on the other hand, they both seem to come to the same conclusion: that we need our election machinery to be verifiably tamper-proof. | null | commandlinefan | null | 1,543,438,587 | "2018-11-28T20:56:27Z" | comment | 18,555,603 | 18,555,140 | null | null | null |
166,512 | null | null | > realize that they drew inspiration from LayerVault<p>if (inspiration.drawnfrom("us")) { file.DMCA(); } | null | visarga | null | 1,362,676,854 | "2013-03-07T17:20:54Z" | comment | 5,338,796 | 5,333,309 | null | null | null |
166,513 | null | null | I'm more worried about the GMO "roundup ready" seeds they sell, and the crops that result.<p>Those contain alterations that (I hypothesize) are partially responsible for increased allergies in the US population. | null | TimTheTinker | null | 1,667,058,995 | "2022-10-29T15:56:35Z" | comment | 33,385,178 | 33,384,391 | null | null | null |
166,514 | null | null | Hi there,<p>Perhaps you could add this to the list of TAP Producers in testanything.org. Here's the link for the Shell producers entry.<p><a href="http://testanything.org/wiki/index.php/TAP_Producers#SH_.2F_Shell_Script" rel="nofollow">http://testanything.org/wiki/index.php/TAP_Producers#SH_.2F_...</a><p>There are two other tools that produce TAP in Shell there, but I haven't used any of them. Before going to sleep I decided give it a try to use Bats in Jenkins. Here's the result:<p><a href="http://www.kinoshita.eti.br/2011/12/30/testing-shell-code-and-producing-tap-using-jenkins/" rel="nofollow">http://www.kinoshita.eti.br/2011/12/30/testing-shell-code-an...</a><p>Thanks for sharing.<p>Cheers, Bruno P. Kinoshita | null | kinow | null | 1,325,296,142 | "2011-12-31T01:49:02Z" | comment | 3,409,838 | 3,408,934 | null | null | null |
166,515 | null | null | SGI uses EFS on their CDs. It's basically the same filesystem they used on harddisks before XFS (in the IRIX 5 days) | null | dark-star | null | 1,635,622,258 | "2021-10-30T19:30:58Z" | comment | 29,051,636 | 29,050,339 | null | null | null |
166,516 | null | null | I tend to think that higher education is not as interesting as it's said to be. And people who used to work hands on (woodwork, metal smith) had a lot of deep knowledge too, it just wasn't seen as evolved.<p>Frankly I don't think one book will ever prepare you to live the situations above. This is the kind of thick skin only real life can imprint in you. That girl probably knew everything she could have said, but biology took over, she made a large grin and let it slip. Social status for you. The same old song that has been played for ages. And mind you, that chief wasn't an angel, she unleashed on me a few times during my work. That's why I say people are not better today. All I see is tribal reflexes and fitting in the social tissue.<p>Now to be fair, I'm not the happiest dude on earth right now, so maybe I amplify the negativity of those situation. Still I'm not sold on the benefits of doing less thanks to modern technology. | null | agumonkey | null | 1,635,622,259 | "2021-10-30T19:30:59Z" | comment | 29,051,637 | 29,051,542 | null | null | null |
166,517 | null | null | It's called parthenogenesis.[0] While it might not be super uncommon in certain types of turkeys, it's extremely rare overall for birds. It is a lot more common in fish, amphibians, and reptiles however. Given that it's been well-observed in reptiles, it makes me wonder how much it might actually be happening in birds and we've just been failing to observe it.<p>[0] <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parthenogenesis" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parthenogenesis</a><p>Also here's the actual study: <a href="https://academic.oup.com/jhered/advance-article/doi/10.1093/jhered/esab052/6412509" rel="nofollow">https://academic.oup.com/jhered/advance-article/doi/10.1093/...</a> | null | culi | null | 1,635,622,245 | "2021-10-30T19:30:45Z" | comment | 29,051,634 | 29,051,563 | null | null | null |
166,518 | null | null | Purchase dollar? Or energy dollar? | null | tinus_hn | null | 1,635,622,248 | "2021-10-30T19:30:48Z" | comment | 29,051,635 | 29,051,183 | null | null | null |
166,519 | null | null | Fundamentally, the US military is optimized for quality over quantity.<p>Look at the US Navy: ~400,000 active duty personnel operating ~400 ships (~250 combat, ~150 aux).<p>Compare to the Chinese PLAN: ~250,000 active duty personnel operating ~750 ships (~500 combat, ~250 aux).<p>A huge portion of that difference is due to aircraft carriers (11 USN, 2 PLAN), average tonnage per ship, and specifically the USN's lack of frigates.<p>This arrangement optimizes for the USN's mission of international power projection, where logistics requirements are like an iceberg, with the deployed forces being the above water volume.<p>However, it does leave a problem of training and experience. If no numerous smaller vessels exist for SWOs and crew to come up through, how do we expect them to have a deep reservoir of experience by the time they're commanding and crewing a destroyer+?<p>The retirement of the Perry class, subsequent botching of the LCS program (and finally recent selection of a Constellation class design, to be built) left the current USN with ~50 less commands for officers and crew to cut their teeth on. | null | ethbr0 | null | 1,635,622,242 | "2021-10-30T19:30:42Z" | comment | 29,051,632 | 29,051,090 | null | null | null |
166,520 | null | null | Weird, I seem to mostly not have that problem, and vividly remember the confusions and mysteries. I’m constantly jumping in to improve others’ explanations that assume too much. I’ve started calling myself “the translator”.<p>Maybe I should take some teaching role? | null | SilasX | null | 1,635,622,244 | "2021-10-30T19:30:44Z" | comment | 29,051,633 | 29,051,121 | null | null | null |
166,521 | null | null | The end users don't care what brand of chip is under the hood, or why the UX on Apple's implementation of Intel chips sucked, they just know the new device has much better UX overall due to the more powerful and more efficient chip and will upgrade for that. | null | ChuckNorris89 | null | 1,635,622,209 | "2021-10-30T19:30:09Z" | comment | 29,051,630 | 29,051,487 | null | null | null |
166,522 | null | null | How is Amazon able to product their arm chips for aws? Assuming those are not the 5nm? | null | taf2 | null | 1,635,622,222 | "2021-10-30T19:30:22Z" | comment | 29,051,631 | 29,051,464 | null | null | null |
166,523 | null | null | Stackful coroutines (often used to implement colorless async) is the same except you can specify stack size. You can specify thread stack size yourselves as well, though no one does that.<p>OTOH, growable stack is useful, as Go demonstrated. | null | liuliu | null | 1,635,622,260 | "2021-10-30T19:31:00Z" | comment | 29,051,638 | 29,050,996 | null | null | null |
166,524 | null | null | Please, someone, correct me if I've misunderstood.<p>The big difference appears to be that async Ruby does not merely give you an easy sugar to perform the sync-over-async antipattern you have described. The real innovation is that, as far as the user is concerned, Ruby is magically turning blocking methods into non-blocking ones. | null | Smaug123 | null | 1,635,622,263 | "2021-10-30T19:31:03Z" | comment | 29,051,639 | 29,050,521 | null | null | null |
166,525 | null | null | I'm currently compiling a list of features to be added and will add your suggestion. I appreciate your feedback! | null | builderone | null | 1,549,324,790 | "2019-02-04T23:59:50Z" | comment | 19,081,892 | 19,074,310 | null | null | null |
166,526 | null | null | Any smokers here?
Nicotine IS a hard core drug. | true | rcchyssser | null | 1,549,324,795 | "2019-02-04T23:59:55Z" | comment | 19,081,893 | 19,080,673 | null | null | null |
166,527 | null | null | The Comcast part made me laugh. But yes, sadly even in my experiences, Comcast has better customer support than Google. | null | kevinyun | null | 1,549,324,768 | "2019-02-04T23:59:28Z" | comment | 19,081,890 | 19,081,591 | null | null | null |
166,528 | null | null | I joked about this years ago. I'm not a Javascript fan, so really, I lamented that in a few years time, someone would make a CoffeeScript REPL[1] with built-in functions mirroring the Linux shell[2]. Call it jssh or sh.js.<p>Just a few days ago, I saw a shell interpreter that had a method for bouncing in and out of Python with ease.[3] I'm sure the Javascript version isn't long behind.<p>[1] <a href="https://coffeescript.org/#overview" rel="nofollow">https://coffeescript.org/#overview</a><p>[2] <a href="https://www.npmjs.com/package/shelljs" rel="nofollow">https://www.npmjs.com/package/shelljs</a><p>[3] <a href="https://xon.sh/tutorial.html#python-mode-vs-subprocess-mode" rel="nofollow">https://xon.sh/tutorial.html#python-mode-vs-subprocess-mode</a> | null | johnmaguire2013 | null | 1,549,324,786 | "2019-02-04T23:59:46Z" | comment | 19,081,891 | 19,079,480 | null | null | null |
166,529 | null | null | <a href="https://volt.ws" rel="nofollow">https://volt.ws</a><p>200 KB native Slack client. A polished public beta will be finally released on Feb 7. Also supports Skype, Twitter, Telegram... almost everything.<p>It was delayed by 9 months. Sorry to thousands of people who have been subscribed and waiting for news.<p>I'll release a detailed post explaining what I've been working on and what caused the delay.<p>Also super excited about the language I created to develop Volt. Compiles 15 million lines of code per second and can be translated to from C/C++. I've successfully ported DOOM and (almost) DOOM 3 while making build time 120 times faster. | null | amedvednikov | null | 1,549,324,832 | "2019-02-05T00:00:32Z" | comment | 19,081,896 | 19,079,754 | null | null | null |
166,530 | null | null | Hello,<p>Can you share what technology stack you use? Are you entertaining applications through mail?<p>Thank you. | null | dophsotc | null | 1,549,324,839 | "2019-02-05T00:00:39Z" | comment | 19,081,897 | 19,058,118 | null | null | null |
166,531 | null | null | Kudos on successful trial btw.<p>If a bank account is a problem, then maybe do it through personal banking until you have the funds to make it not a problem. But do check how hard opening a business account would be; I was pleasantly surprised.<p>Awkward for your friend, not the company you're invoicing<p>Good luck getting them to sign and then making them happy! | null | Robin_Message | null | 1,549,324,806 | "2019-02-05T00:00:06Z" | comment | 19,081,894 | 19,081,851 | null | null | null |
166,532 | null | null | I might sound dismissive, but in my views Keybase is entirely focused on being an identity provider; all the other tools they've been developing on the side are nice to play with and will probably be the ones bringing in money to them, but at the core they're not really reinventing the wheel, and wouldn't have any value without the powerful and simple-as-dirt reliable identification platform they provide. I might be completely off but I'm sure their dream would be that any new protocol would care about the exchange of data, and leave authentication and identity checking to them. | null | rakoo | null | 1,549,324,824 | "2019-02-05T00:00:24Z" | comment | 19,081,895 | 19,081,425 | null | null | null |
166,533 | null | null | Ha, we chose the name Elpha by riffing on the word alpha and the idea that we wanted to create a place where women come first. We combined alpha with the French word for she (“Elle”) to create ellepha. We shortened it to elpha from there. Plus, the .com was available. :) | null | kl2931 | null | 1,549,324,842 | "2019-02-05T00:00:42Z" | comment | 19,081,898 | 19,080,814 | null | null | null |
166,534 | null | null | Disclosability and licensing are <i>almost</i> orthogonal (though a proprietary license might make code more likely to be nondisclosable.) Particularly, open source code could still fall into most of the existing FOIA exceptions. | null | dragonwriter | null | 1,549,324,845 | "2019-02-05T00:00:45Z" | comment | 19,081,899 | 19,081,854 | null | null | null |
166,535 | null | null | Anyone care to elaborate on the evils of boost::bind? Maybe from experience?<p>I used boost::bind and boost::function in VC6 code of all places and I thought that the resulting code turned out to be pretty decent (I think newer compilers let you use slightly less verbose syntax), and I really liked having the functionality of being able to pre-bind certain arguments. For example, I had a menu item click handler that I was able to bind a call to a unary method, but with different parameters. I thought the resulting code was simpler overall (and easier to refactor). | null | astral303 | null | 1,325,296,218 | "2011-12-31T01:50:18Z" | comment | 3,409,839 | 3,409,714 | null | null | null |
166,536 | null | null | > OSS funding is a hard problem. OSS was best when it wasn't funded at all.<p>“Best” is subjective yet I don’t disagree. But what you don’t mention, which I think is important to mention here, is the proliferation of OSS that other vital, closed source software (often monetized) depends upon. OSS has always powered vital software, I’m just making the point that it’s increasingly, alarmingly common.<p>“Alarming” because the OSS developers often feel they should be compensated if their work is monetized and/or powers other vital software. There is a license for this, but it’s difficulty and complicated to enforce. And it’s not surprising for someone to license their work as “do whatever you want with it” at first, only to change their mind later when they see it used in FAANG products. But then it’s too late, and bitterness and anger creep in.<p>Take the anger and bitterness of a generation+ of OSS developers and you have our current predicament :( | null | auslegung | null | 1,667,058,994 | "2022-10-29T15:56:34Z" | comment | 33,385,177 | 33,384,883 | null | null | null |
166,537 | null | null | The downvotes are because you are parroting a common misconception. There is no 'duty' (legal or otherwise) for a company to pursue producing profits for shareholders.<p>They have to act in the interest of the shareholders, which could mean all sorts of things other than producing profit. That could include things like "not paying huge amounts of money on lobbying and advertising campaigns to spread misinformation about renewable energy and try to cast doubt on climate change for decades while they knew it was real"... | null | stephen_g | null | 1,629,997,239 | "2021-08-26T17:00:39Z" | comment | 28,317,515 | 28,316,587 | null | null | null |
166,538 | null | null | It's the window with the caption "Microsoft Help". (And it's actually Windows 2, not 1 as the article claims.) A help file was a bunch of hyperlinked rich-text documents in a single file. The hyperlinks could even span help files, though I don't know which Windows version introduced that.<p>(Edited for tone.) | null | ectopod | null | 1,629,997,231 | "2021-08-26T17:00:31Z" | comment | 28,317,514 | 28,317,339 | null | null | null |
166,539 | null | null | I hadn't seen either of these. Thanks!<p>Looks like they're both new apps, so they've done well to get everything up and running so quickly! I already had a lot of the groundwork laid for NightCafe Creator, so it was much easier for me to get this done. There's a lot involved, especially if you're going to charge for use (which is a must if you expect to have any sort of volume in the long run). | null | GusRuss89 | null | 1,628,211,380 | "2021-08-06T00:56:20Z" | comment | 28,082,044 | 28,081,966 | null | null | null |
166,540 | null | null | There was a funny, tiny thing that happened a few years back that made me think Tim Cook is a liar.<p>It was back when Apple had just introduced the (now-abandoned) Force Touch feature (i.e., pressure sensitive touch, since abandoned, since it turns out pushing hard on an unyielding surface is not very pleasant or useful).<p>To showcase the capability, Apple had updated many of its apps with new force-touch features. One of which was mail: if you pushed <i>just right</i> on the subject line of a message, you'd get a tiny, unscrollable popout preview of its contents.<p>It was totally useless: it took just as much time to force touch to see the preview as just normally tapping to view the message, and the results were less useful. It was also fairly fiddly: if you didn't press hard enough, you didn't get the preview; if you pressed too hard, it would open into the full email anyway.<p>So Tim Cook, demoing the feature, said a funny thing. He said, "It's great, I use it all the time."<p>Which maybe, just maybe, is true, but personally I don't believe, not for a second.<p>So since then, I've had Tim down in my book as basically a big liar. | null | dilap | null | 1,628,211,390 | "2021-08-06T00:56:30Z" | comment | 28,082,045 | 28,079,429 | null | null | null |
166,541 | null | null | Had an IPX at that time too, stacked high with peripheral boxes. It acted as my auto-dial gateway to the internet. Of course that was connected to an HP 700 series workstation, a SGI Indigo^2, an IBM PS/2, and a Linux box. The good old days of finding surplus workstations at computer flea markets. | null | madengr | null | 1,628,211,391 | "2021-08-06T00:56:31Z" | comment | 28,082,046 | 28,080,965 | null | null | null |
166,542 | null | null | This is awesome, but the aspect ratio/scaling is kind of weird on my Chromebook, which admittedly does have a smaller than usual screen. To have the left side toolbar fully showing so that I don't need to constantly scroll up and down when making art, I need to zoom allll the way out to only the 33% zoom level. | null | panda888888 | null | 1,628,211,403 | "2021-08-06T00:56:43Z" | comment | 28,082,047 | 28,073,383 | null | null | null |
166,543 | null | null | You can't mandate vaccination with a highly experimental and yet unapproved vaccine. And the main point revolves COVID-19 and the Olympics, not vaccinations in general.<p>> For the same reason, rules announced last month in France and Greece requiring that people going to cinemas, bars, or traveling on a train show proof of vaccination are not a violation of anyone’s freedom.<p>I can't believe a professor in bioethics wrote that. We never asked people to show proof of other vaccinations, or proof that they're not violent and won't attack others if drunk, or of past convictions.<p>There's the implicit agreement that, if you're sick, you won't show up, and most people do that. The comparison with seatbelts is absurd. | null | bassman9000 | null | 1,628,211,342 | "2021-08-06T00:55:42Z" | comment | 28,082,040 | 28,081,509 | null | null | null |
166,544 | null | null | Do the people authorized to query the database have access to view its contents?<p>How many people in the world can certify that it only contains CSAM? I wonder if there are images of US troops committing warcrimes, or politicians doing cocaine, or honeypot intel op blackmail images in there too. Lots of powerful people would love to have an early warning system for leaks of embarrassing non-CSAM images. | null | cwkoss | null | 1,628,211,346 | "2021-08-06T00:55:46Z" | comment | 28,082,041 | 28,080,118 | null | null | null |
166,545 | null | null | This seems similar to differential datalog (DDlog)<p><a href="https://hexgolems.com/2020/10/getting-started-with-ddlog/" rel="nofollow">https://hexgolems.com/2020/10/getting-started-with-ddlog/</a><p><a href="https://github.com/vmware/differential-datalog" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/vmware/differential-datalog</a> | null | infogulch | null | 1,628,211,358 | "2021-08-06T00:55:58Z" | comment | 28,082,042 | 28,075,774 | null | null | null |
166,546 | null | null | Yeah, sure. I’m happy to be downvoted to hell, but I know people who would have benefit greatly from this (perhaps have entirely different lives) if it were implemented 10 years ago.<p>Convince me that a strong step to ending CSA at the expense of a little privacy is a bad thing. | null | aetherspawn | null | 1,628,211,367 | "2021-08-06T00:56:07Z" | comment | 28,082,043 | 28,079,171 | null | null | null |
166,547 | null | null | <a href="https://www.amazon.in/Lifelong-Inferno-LLIC30-Induction-Cooktop/dp/B088K321BQ/ref=sr_1_5?crid=1BH2Q9889SW2W" rel="nofollow">https://www.amazon.in/Lifelong-Inferno-LLIC30-Induction-Cook...</a><p>this one costs around US$15. me and many millions of consumers in india use devices costing around this $12-$20 priced induction cookers because that's the only thing being available...<p>everyone has a soft button interface which sucks but because of the relatively cheap capital cost, you are able to buy a new one if the old one breaks. with good care i've used a machine not different from above for 4-5 years nonstop | null | 2Gkashmiri | null | 1,667,058,981 | "2022-10-29T15:56:21Z" | comment | 33,385,173 | 33,384,324 | null | null | null |
166,548 | null | null | In Princess Diana's crash, she was in the back seat unbelted and died from her heart exploding on impact.<p>Her bodyguard, belted in the front seat, survived.<p>Of course, this is anecdotal. Anecdotal is also the large bruises I received from the seatbelt in a crash where the seatbelt saved my life. I didn't mind the bruises. | null | WalterBright | null | 1,628,211,429 | "2021-08-06T00:57:09Z" | comment | 28,082,049 | 28,081,904 | null | null | null |
166,549 | null | null | I like minimalistic, but this is a bit too much. I'd also like to know what it does before I connect to dropbox | null | ragebol | null | 1,378,818,891 | "2013-09-10T13:14:51Z" | comment | 6,359,773 | 6,359,702 | null | null | null |
166,550 | null | null | If you can program in C at the level of K&R, your first step is to work through <i>Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective</i> [0].<p>Coursera has a course called the Hardware Software Interface [1] which covers the same material if you want lectures and forums and the other benefits of a MOOC.<p>[0] <a href="http://csapp.cs.cmu.edu/" rel="nofollow">http://csapp.cs.cmu.edu/</a><p>[1] <a href="https://www.coursera.org/course/hwswinterface" rel="nofollow">https://www.coursera.org/course/hwswinterface</a> | null | sn9 | null | 1,460,852,046 | "2016-04-17T00:14:06Z" | comment | 11,512,914 | 11,512,075 | null | null | null |
166,551 | null | null | Raising an happy and healthy child is an accomplishment, and both parents need to be involved.
Giving happiness to your family is an accomplishment, a much bigger one than "imagining" (because, lets get real, this is just a nice dream) futuristic trains travelling in a vacuum pipeline.<p>You don't have a family? Ok, spend all your time imagining nice stuff and give press releases about your imaginary stuff, but don't call it job, call it hobby. Are you still calling it a job? Then you shouldn't be spending so much time on it. | null | binarnosp | null | 1,378,818,903 | "2013-09-10T13:15:03Z" | comment | 6,359,774 | 6,359,462 | null | null | null |
166,552 | null | null | "and remove them when necessary meaning no orphaned packages."<p>Is this the same as:<p>"apt-get autoremove"<p>? | null | mike-cardwell | null | 1,356,873,112 | "2012-12-30T13:11:52Z" | comment | 4,985,572 | 4,980,245 | null | null | null |