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I would rather just have wired earbuds, period. Wireless is insecure and unreliable; wires are secure and dependable.<p>The headphone jack is a marvel of engineering!
null
zeveb
null
1,591,717,736
"2020-06-09T15:48:56"
comment
23,467,666
23,456,782
null
null
null
1
null
null
DNS?
null
nly
null
1,572,810,465
"2019-11-03T19:47:45"
comment
21,436,112
21,435,130
null
null
null
2
null
null
These benchmarks seem pretty good. Filterable by language, etc.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.techempower.com&#x2F;benchmarks&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.techempower.com&#x2F;benchmarks&#x2F;</a><p>The source code is published too (<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;TechEmpower&#x2F;FrameworkBenchmarks" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;TechEmpower&#x2F;FrameworkBenchmarks</a>)
null
mrkeen
null
1,591,717,727
"2020-06-09T15:48:47"
comment
23,467,665
23,467,426
null
null
null
3
null
null
Oh really?<p>* Excel alone uses 86.1MB of private memory, and 142MB on a <i></i>Blank<i></i> Workbook.<p>* Where did you get this 100MB metric? VS Code uses 24MB Private, 86MB shared and I&#x27;ve got a ton of extensions added.<p>* No, most electron apps are offline apps.<p>* I doubt it. Creating performant HTML layouts and WebGL rendering all verified by independent 3rd party test suites is hard, dude. If someone came to you and said &quot;Build a HTML engine or build Word&quot; which would you choose?<p>* O&#x27;rly? Office 2016 add ins are built in JS, and there are built-in &quot;addins&quot;
null
oceanswave
null
1,462,987,532
"2016-05-11T17:25:32"
comment
11,677,248
11,676,886
null
null
null
4
null
null
These systems are useless. Of the many flaws:<p>1.) Simple alteration (change a pixel in MS paint) or encryption of content bypasses the filter 2.) Patching out the filtering routine bypasses the filter 3.) Blocking the phone-home address (pihole, router firewall, etc) bypasses any reporting 4.) Any vulnerability in the future that allows an attacker to report arbitrary clients (disclosure of client IDs, weakness in app, weakness in server) renders evidence gathered by the system unreliable.<p>At best clientside filtering allows you to draw relationship maps of technically incompetent perverts who might possibly be sharing CP. What harm reduction are they trying to get out of that?? Why not just refocus efforts on catching the small minority of individuals who are actually producing this content??<p>But hey, if these garbage clientside filtering of image uploads is enough security theatre to keep governments satisfied, I say let them have it.
null
nyxxie
null
1,572,810,473
"2019-11-03T19:47:53"
comment
21,436,113
21,435,025
null
null
null
5
null
null
<i>I don&#x27;t worry about the server</i> and <i>there is no server</i> are two very different statements. Serverless is a terrible name for it.
null
dahfizz
null
1,566,231,278
"2019-08-19T16:14:38"
comment
20,739,051
20,738,305
null
null
null
6
null
null
Why do you take it as a given that the Secretary of State should have an email address? If anything it seems like a vulnerability. At that level of politics, the actors are not concerned over trivialities like email. So why not avoid the risk all together?
null
chatmasta
null
1,425,350,594
"2015-03-03T02:43:14"
comment
9,135,815
9,135,800
null
null
null
7
null
null
Let me know what you guys think so far and if you have an account feel free to follow me!
null
augustin1989
null
1,394,076,499
"2014-03-06T03:28:19"
comment
7,351,690
7,351,684
null
null
null
8
null
null
I often feel that the main result of this privacy consciousness is that it adds to the impression caused by the OP, that is, one of being behind technologically.<p>E.g. when you can&#x27;t do administrative tasks online or have to fetch and send some info from and to four different government agencies because they&#x27;re not allowed to pass it among each other.<p>But who knows, maybe I&#x27;ll be thankful for the extra work one day when other societies are wholly ruled by brainwave scanners and social credit systems.
null
jaynetics
null
1,572,810,482
"2019-11-03T19:48:02"
comment
21,436,115
21,435,981
null
null
null
9
null
null
That is exactly why I generally prefer median-like average methods versus mean-like averages in these type of crowdsourced systems. Generally speaking, average votes are distributed evenly whereas the ratings on the edges are not. The movies that you gave as examples could be due to preference of voters for particular type of movies.
null
bugra
null
1,393,290,376
"2014-02-25T01:06:16"
comment
7,294,506
7,293,801
null
null
null
10
null
null
American farmers are anti-intellectual and rarely listen to science? Citation is really needed, because that’s not what reality shows. It’s very true that farmers are risk adverse, but that’s for good reason: it takes years for “discoveries” to be vetted and people aren’t going to literally bet the farm on trendy tech until it’s proven.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nytimes.com&#x2F;2019&#x2F;09&#x2F;06&#x2F;business&#x2F;farming-technology-agriculture.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.nytimes.com&#x2F;2019&#x2F;09&#x2F;06&#x2F;business&#x2F;farming-technolo...</a>
null
briandear
null
1,572,810,489
"2019-11-03T19:48:09"
comment
21,436,118
21,436,026
null
null
null
11
null
null
&gt; For a 180lb male, it would take 4 drinks for them to become over the legal limit<p>That&#x27;s not true, but I don&#x27;t blame you — I learned the same thing in school. As I recall, the &#x27;drinks&#x27; they used were 10-ounce servings of 3.2 beer, not 16-ounce servings of 5.8% beer. And the limit now is 3&#x2F;4 of what it used to be (was .12, then .10, now .08).<p>A single good beer is enough to throw you over the limit.<p>Just don&#x27;t have a drink and then drive. Never mind whether you can drive just fine or not after one drink[0]: it&#x27;s just not worth the legal consequences regardless.<p>0: I used to think it was okay, but I no longer do.
null
eadmund
null
1,572,810,497
"2019-11-03T19:48:17"
comment
21,436,119
21,434,944
null
null
null
12
null
null
Love the writing style of this post. He may be in an introvert but he&#x27;s a damn good writer!
null
robbiea
null
1,394,076,520
"2014-03-06T03:28:40"
comment
7,351,691
7,351,430
null
null
null
13
null
null
Most interesting part about it for me was the note that they are supporters of neovim.
null
jamestomasino
null
1,393,290,377
"2014-02-25T01:06:17"
comment
7,294,507
7,293,833
null
null
null
14
null
null
At the moment that&#x27;s not possible. It&#x27;s on our road map to make the hubs and posts visible on the web app without requiring sign up. Hopefully we will have that available soon.
null
altrim
null
1,452,447,432
"2016-01-10T17:37:12"
comment
10,876,150
10,875,947
null
null
null
15
null
null
Did you miss the part where Snowden claims Russia is the first to stand against human rights violations? Reread the quote. If you think Snowden is a principled champion of civil rights, how do you square that with the fact that he is on the record praising Russia&#x27;s civil rights record?
null
minimax
null
1,392,399,382
"2014-02-14T17:36:22"
comment
7,239,734
7,239,642
null
null
null
16
null
null
&gt; but seriously, do we hate our government so much that we are willing to cheer when another government subverts it?<p>Probably not, but your government hates YOU so much that they are willing to spy on you on every occasion.
null
factorizer
null
1,392,399,389
"2014-02-14T17:36:29"
comment
7,239,736
7,239,045
null
null
null
17
null
null
What&#x27;s the underlying GeoIP database?
null
doktrin
null
1,392,399,395
"2014-02-14T17:36:35"
comment
7,239,737
7,239,333
null
null
null
18
null
null
Is this a joke?
null
theflubba
null
1,392,399,355
"2014-02-14T17:35:55"
comment
7,239,730
7,238,749
null
null
null
19
null
null
<i>When you join the military and are deployed, you give up your individuality, your movements and thoughts are no longer your own.</i><p>Why, when killbots are much cheaper?
null
angersock
null
1,392,399,361
"2014-02-14T17:36:01"
comment
7,239,731
7,239,182
null
null
null
20
null
null
Tracking visitors&#x2F;customers comes to mind. Definitely not uncommon to have 1000 uniques a day :)
null
jqueryin
null
1,392,399,364
"2014-02-14T17:36:04"
comment
7,239,732
7,239,711
null
null
null
21
null
null
Just taking stuff from the wikipedia page ( <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Principality_of_Sealand" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Principality_of_Sealand</a> )...<p>Emphasis where it appears is mine.<p>&gt; In 1943, during the Second World War, HM Fort Roughs [Sealand] was constructed by the United Kingdom as one of the Maunsell Forts, primarily for defence against German mine-laying aircraft<p>&gt; On 2 September 1967, the fort was occupied by Major Paddy Roy Bates, a British subject and pirate radio broadcaster, <i>who ejected a competing group of pirate broadcasters</i>.<p>&gt; In 1968, British workmen entered what Bates claimed to be his territorial waters in order to service a navigational buoy near the platform. Michael Bates (son of Paddy Roy Bates) tried to scare the workmen off by firing warning shots from the former fort.<p>&gt; In August 1978, while Bates and his wife were in England, Alexander Achenbach, who describes himself as the Prime Minister of Sealand, hired several German and Dutch mercenaries to spearhead an attack of Roughs Tower. They stormed the tower with speedboats, jet skis and helicopters, and took Bates&#x27; son hostage. Bates was able to retake the tower and capture Achenbach and the mercenaries.<p>And of course...<p>&gt; While it has been described as the world&#x27;s smallest country, the world&#x27;s smallest nation, or a micronation, Sealand is <i>not currently officially recognised by any established sovereign state</i>, although Sealand&#x27;s government claims it has been de facto recognised by the United Kingdom (after an English court ruled it did not have jurisdiction over Sealand as territorial water limitations were defined at the time) and Germany<p>Both of those claimed recognitions took place after an act of agression toward British &#x2F; German citizens mentioned in the above excerpts.<p>So you&#x27;ve got a platform in the ocean that was created as part of a war effort, that has been the subject of a failed and a successful military coup, whose only unofficial recognition by established states came after assaulting their citizens, and that is still not officially recognized by any other state. (And which is currently sitting in British territorial waters, after they unilaterally annexed its surrounding ocean.) And all this is for a &quot;state&quot; with a population estimated at &quot;over 50&quot;.
null
thaumasiotes
null
1,392,399,368
"2014-02-14T17:36:08"
comment
7,239,733
7,238,683
null
null
null
22
null
null
From experience, they hire top level by religious affinity however, this time they most likely were burned by this tradition.
null
taivare
null
1,394,076,601
"2014-03-06T03:30:01"
comment
7,351,696
7,351,462
null
null
null
23
null
null
Talking Points Memo put out this great piece on the glut of publishers and how advertisers want video more than website visitors do: <a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;talkingpointsmemo.com&#x2F;edblog&#x2F;theres-a-digital-media-crash-but-no-one-will-say-it" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;talkingpointsmemo.com&#x2F;edblog&#x2F;theres-a-digital-media-c...</a><p>Fraud seems to happen more frequently in situations of distress. Like Madoff, who had to expand his fraudulent operation to hide his past wrongdoing.
null
vonnik
null
1,514,669,477
"2017-12-30T21:31:17"
comment
16,037,728
16,018,962
null
null
null
24
null
null
Facebook killed most of the old social communities. The big ones where very lucrative basically swimming in cash, they where only replaced by a bigger fish. The non profit forums and IRC channels are still alive. What worries me though is that so many people use smartphones instead of work-station computers. With a smartphone you are mostly a consumer&#x2F;by-stander. While on a work-station you are actively taking part by both producing and consuming. There are a lot of really high quality content produced by professionals for profit. But <i>the best</i> content and Internet culture is still made by &quot;ordinary&quot; people for the love of sharing. I hope the good content is not buried by monetized content. There should be more &quot;Hacker News&quot; and less Google and Facebook ads.
null
z3t4
null
1,514,669,492
"2017-12-30T21:31:32"
comment
16,037,729
16,033,970
null
null
null
25
null
null
if i recall correctly Shaver was not wearing pjs, he was wearing shorts. but yes, he appeared to pull up his shorts which were being dragged down because he was being forced to crawl on his hands and knees.<p>i would bet that almost everyone being in such a position, or standing at their front door in front of their neighbors, who felt their bottom falling down, would instinctively reach down without thinking.<p>some points to note about that incident -<p>a) he had the pellet gun as part of his job as an exterminator, even if he was careless in demonstrating how he used it to shoot birds for pest control<p>b) think about how easily the officers could have gone to the wrong hotel room; you, me or anyone random could&#x27;ve been in the room next door to Shaver and been treated the same (and probably wouldve reacted the same), even if we&#x27;d just poked out head outside our room to see what the heck was going on
null
dingbat
null
1,514,669,452
"2017-12-30T21:30:52"
comment
16,037,726
16,037,691
null
null
null
26
null
null
&gt; <i>Here in the UK our cop shows are like Midsomer Murders. Most episodes don’t even feature a gun...</i><p>But your rusty gardening tools seem as efficient and they enhance murdering creativity :-)
null
wott
null
1,514,669,470
"2017-12-30T21:31:10"
comment
16,037,727
16,037,343
null
null
null
27
null
null
Yet, plenty of people go into the military. I call bullshit. And frankly the only people I want wearing the badge are ones who are willing to sacrifice themselves, even if it’s a much smaller number of officers being paid much more and are much more skilled.
null
dclowd9901
null
1,514,669,434
"2017-12-30T21:30:34"
comment
16,037,725
16,037,667
null
null
null
28
null
null
&gt; I suppose one way to prevent this loophole is to grant voting power only to individuals, and not entities, but that would screw over index-funds, mutual-funds, foundations, non-profit-endowments etc etc.<p>Why not just block organizations that sell such a service as above be denied the benefit from increasing voting shares? Why ban all organizations instead of the ones trying to game it?
null
csdreamer7
null
1,514,669,410
"2017-12-30T21:30:10"
comment
16,037,722
16,036,819
null
null
null
29
null
null
American police and military are trained to shoot for the largest target area, center of mass, as this is the least likely area to have unintentional results.<p>Some examples of unintentional results are: 1) Missing. 2) Hitting another person. 3) Maming, or otherwise causing grievous injury such as shooting in the leg and hitting an artery on accident when you didn&#x27;t intend to kill the target.
null
cheschire
null
1,514,669,411
"2017-12-30T21:30:11"
comment
16,037,723
16,036,864
null
null
null
30
null
null
It&#x27;s part of a good foundation for measure theory which is part of a good foundation for probability which can be used in any type of computational role. Also, understanding a bit about manifolds, neighborhoods, and things like that are a big part of deep learning theory. I am only acquainted with undergrad topology, but I would say it has had more of an impact on my work and projects and future learning than quick sort ever has or &lt;insert random CS degree topic here&gt;.<p>Tangentially, it is a great topic to learn in general for those with a math interest and a bare minimum requirement for any higher math learning.
null
aje403
null
1,514,669,391
"2017-12-30T21:29:51"
comment
16,037,721
16,036,730
null
null
null
31
null
null
Cool, there probably isn&#x27;t a huge difference between idle and deep sleep modes so I&#x27;m sure it could still last a long time. In deep sleep you can still use the HIGH &amp; LOW level interrupts but just not the CHANGE one.
null
tonyd256
null
1,394,076,635
"2014-03-06T03:30:35"
comment
7,351,697
7,350,570
null
null
null
32
null
null
Looks good, but since I am more of a devops person, I must ask 2 things:<p>- What is the scope? E.g. only some predefined programming languages or say, Puppet is also OK?<p>- Who decides the pricing of a course?
null
seqizz
null
1,628,719,056
"2021-08-11T21:57:36"
comment
28,148,328
28,141,462
null
null
null
33
null
null
This is my new target platform. I really like how broadly it&#x27;s spread since my first evaluation a decade ago.
null
falcolas
null
1,628,719,061
"2021-08-11T21:57:41"
comment
28,148,329
28,148,243
null
null
null
34
null
null
As a League of Legends player, it&#x27;s very common. Virtually everyone that I know that plays this game has some sort of overlay(LolWiz, Porofessor, Blitz.gg, etc.) that provides unimaginable level of detail about the enemy team and my team before the game even begins. I can find out what the enemy players like to do(&quot;invade&quot;, or initiate cheese fights early), roam to other lanes in the map, and more. I know what their winrate on their champion is, how many kills on average they get before 10 minutes, whether they don&#x27;t ward(a crucial component of the game that opens them up to ganks if not done correctly), and who they may be connected to voice call with. If anything, it seems like Senpai.gg&#x27;s tool isn&#x27;t doing enough.
null
interator7
null
1,628,719,036
"2021-08-11T21:57:16"
comment
28,148,320
28,148,242
null
null
null
35
null
null
&gt; Air conditioning accounts for less than 5% of the average home’s energy use in homes that use it (the US is a good source of data here, with hot summers and 90% of homes having air conditioning)<p>The number is higher in places like the South. I don&#x27;t mean to demonize AC; I think AC should be a fundamental part of living in high-humidity climates. I just think we need to do everything we can to make its use more efficient.<p>&gt; If you want to really save energy, focus on the heating side. It takes far more energy to heat a house in the Midwest from 10F to 70F in the winter than the trivial amount it takes to cool a home from 90F to 70F for a few weeks in the summer.<p>Definitely! Heat pumps should be mandatory for heating. In many newer building codes they are, but it&#x27;s too expensive for residents of older buildings to upgrade.
null
Karrot_Kream
null
1,628,719,040
"2021-08-11T21:57:20"
comment
28,148,321
28,148,076
null
null
null
36
null
null
That&#x27;s not my repo. To be clear. I followed this guys methodology, and can confirm it works. It&#x27;s his work not my work.
null
ggm
null
1,628,719,042
"2021-08-11T21:57:22"
comment
28,148,323
28,147,018
null
null
null
37
null
null
This reads like that notorious HN comment about it being trivially easy to roll your own Dropbox. Our time has value. Good UI has value. How much time is saved by just using a service like 1Password versus the design, setup, maintenance, and ongoing use of a system like you suggest with all those individual pieces?
null
slg
null
1,628,719,043
"2021-08-11T21:57:23"
comment
28,148,324
28,148,113
null
null
null
38
null
null
No, it wouldn’t. Because the homeless crisis is not due to a lack of homes most homeless people have other issues and homelessness is just a symptom.
null
edgyquant
null
1,628,719,051
"2021-08-11T21:57:31"
comment
28,148,325
28,137,701
null
null
null
39
null
null
Interesting that raising $100mm in funding isn&#x27;t enough to pay a few dedicated macOS developers.
null
raydev
null
1,628,719,052
"2021-08-11T21:57:32"
comment
28,148,326
28,143,563
null
null
null
40
null
null
They’ve put a ton of work into making VSCode browser independent because of Codespaces. It now works in Mobile Safari pretty well, as well as Firefox.
null
easton
null
1,628,719,054
"2021-08-11T21:57:34"
comment
28,148,327
28,146,238
null
null
null
41
null
null
He says it&#x27;s like &quot;PHP++&quot; but I like to say it&#x27;s more like P#P.
null
gmack
null
1,395,429,452
"2014-03-21T19:17:32"
comment
7,444,223
7,443,854
null
null
null
42
null
null
2 years ago I was struck by a car which resulted in a TBI that I still deal with from time to time. Early on I was prescribed different anti-depressants (and anti-seizure meds) as a prophylaxis and they were beyond terrible. I&#x27;ve probably tried 1&#x2F;2 dozen and each one made life a chore. Overall numbness, sleeplessness, insomnia, minor depression, etc. In the end I decided I&#x27;d rather deal with the occasional debilitating headache than be on that sort of medication.<p>My heart goes out to the people with MDD that deal with these side effects as part of their daily routine.<p>Sort of related-- wear a fucking helmet.
null
650REDHAIR
null
1,394,076,574
"2014-03-06T03:29:34"
comment
7,351,694
7,351,150
null
null
null
43
null
null
You realize that most people don’t really have a problem (or even think about) twitter&#x2F;YouTube censorship right?<p>You also realize that people sign in the thousands for these services every day?<p>Also, which elections did YouTube and twitter sway? Provide proof. Tbh, a direct connection between trumps addled brain and the internet through twitter has a much larger negative impact on his electability than any kind of “deplatforming”. Twitter did him a favour.
null
9935c101ab17a66
null
1,654,062,692
"2022-06-01T05:51:32"
comment
31,578,613
31,573,836
null
null
null
44
null
null
Two quick things jump out at me: (1) This is TDD, without the implementation part of it. (2) There <i>have</i> to be some halting problem issues in here. It's actual realm of usefulness is constrained somewhere, though I'm not exactly sure where.<p>That said, I've worked with modeling languages along the lines of GAMS that work in this sort of manner. Define a problem - a set of constraints - equations, inequalities, parameters, and the like - push a button, and out pops a solution. Damn useful.
null
jowiar
null
1,327,468,424
"2012-01-25T05:13:44"
comment
3,508,487
3,506,345
null
null
null
45
null
null
The headlines says &quot;South Carolina bill outlaws websites...&quot;. That is dishonest, because of the verb tense. The honest phrasing would be &quot;South Carolina bill would outlaw websites...&quot;<p>Nobody would say &quot;Terrorist bombed subway&quot; when they meant &quot;Terrorist would have bombed subway&quot; (except that they were stopped, and didn&#x27;t get the chance).
null
radford-neal
null
1,658,502,738
"2022-07-22T15:12:18"
comment
32,192,783
32,192,581
null
null
null
46
null
null
i do use that.<p>however i spend a substantial amount of time on other peoples systems and when using other peoples systems especially windows systems i avoid logging into google in case of malware. the default settings of google search are just garish these days.<p>i tried duckduckgo and while it was ok it just wasn't as good as google... yet. of course i'm not a fan of their new makeover either. i just prefer simple design.
null
moylan
null
1,327,468,410
"2012-01-25T05:13:30"
comment
3,508,486
3,508,318
null
null
null
47
null
null
I've been doing this 30 years and I've never seen a title that didn't have some connection or another to some hit title. Some have it stronger than others.<p>I always say, when asked sage game design advice, that a hit game is like the center point of a circle. The closer YOUR game is to the center the more likely it's a clone. If it's far OUTSIDE the circle that it's just to far from what people know to be a hit.<p>The goal is to hit the line of the circle, which makes the circle move to include your game and maybe make it the new center point.
null
Macsenour
null
1,327,468,328
"2012-01-25T05:12:08"
comment
3,508,485
3,508,354
null
null
null
48
null
null
For US citizens, it&#x27;s an obvious yes. If you disagree, can you show me where collecting this information has held detrimental effects on the common good of US citizens?
null
jonnybgood
null
1,401,595,902
"2014-06-01T04:11:42"
comment
7,828,147
7,828,056
null
null
null
49
null
null
&gt; A variation of the http&#x2F;2 name would IMHO make more sense, e.g. http&#x2F;2q or something, since it&#x27;s not changing the HTTP semantics.<p>HTTP&#x2F;2 didn&#x27;t change semantics, either. We literally only have one version of HTTP semantics, and a variety of transports for it.
null
gsnedders
null
1,540,829,778
"2018-10-29T16:16:18"
comment
18,328,673
18,327,249
null
null
null
50
null
null
I don&#x27;t believe it should be _illegal_ to create, or operate, a compatible backend for the software at any point.<p>The first-party solution, with all of the historical knowledge, employees, codebase, marketing budget, and so on and so forth, is going to be superior enough that these emulations will never gain significant traction anyway.<p>To me, it seems like an issue of legal departments getting out of control.
null
esotericn
null
1,540,829,756
"2018-10-29T16:15:56"
comment
18,328,672
18,328,644
null
null
null
51
null
null
What does it mean &quot;Hack the planet&quot;?
null
andy32j3b
null
1,540,829,747
"2018-10-29T16:15:47"
comment
18,328,671
18,328,094
null
null
null
52
null
null
Dogs depended on humans through evolution which differs from cats which were simply worshiped by humans<p>or something like that idk
null
stevewodil
null
1,540,829,747
"2018-10-29T16:15:47"
comment
18,328,670
18,327,758
null
null
null
53
null
null
A lot of businesses and banks communicate electronically with people, not just phone calls but texts and emails. A smartphone is possibly (short of using a public library) the cheapest way to get access to those sorts of things as the world becomes increasingly digitized and connected (versus having a computer that is less portable, and can&#x27;t access the internet on its own without pairing with a phone or finding a public wifi hotspot or paying for a separate internet connection, assuming you have a stable home to establish that in).
null
Jtsummers
null
1,540,829,816
"2018-10-29T16:16:56"
comment
18,328,677
18,328,659
null
null
null
54
null
null
Doesn&#x27;t FreeOTP allow you to change labels after adding a token?
null
dcbadacd
null
1,540,829,803
"2018-10-29T16:16:43"
comment
18,328,676
18,328,621
null
null
null
55
null
null
Maybe this could work for you? <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;corbindavenport&#x2F;creative-cloud-linux" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;corbindavenport&#x2F;creative-cloud-linux</a><p>I suggest making your own script instead of using PoL (abandoned, check Phoenicis).
null
c487bd62
null
1,540,829,788
"2018-10-29T16:16:28"
comment
18,328,675
18,327,970
null
null
null
56
null
null
On an aggregate scale it doesn&#x27;t make sense to talk about a system based on &quot;saving&quot;. You can&#x27;t eat money in retirement.<p>So retirees are always extracting some fraction of the productive output of current labor. This fraction can go up or down depending on the economic growth rate and expectation of standard of living of retirees.
null
kenmicklas
null
1,540,829,783
"2018-10-29T16:16:23"
comment
18,328,674
18,328,407
null
null
null
57
null
null
Sign up at their main site: <a href="http://teambox.com/" rel="nofollow">http://teambox.com/</a> And then log into the beta version.
null
aymeric
null
1,327,468,259
"2012-01-25T05:10:59"
comment
3,508,483
3,507,851
null
null
null
58
null
null
They are not removing the like button.
null
dcre
null
1,540,829,828
"2018-10-29T16:17:08"
comment
18,328,679
18,328,471
null
null
null
59
null
null
A windows license is a lot cheaper than an XBox.
null
behringer
null
1,540,829,819
"2018-10-29T16:16:59"
comment
18,328,678
18,328,184
null
null
null
60
null
null
This is business as usual for Zynga.<p>"They would sit and look at competitive products and write down all the features and make it obvious to us," the designer says. One contractor says he was offered freelance work from Zynga, related to mimicking a competitor's application, with explicit instructions: "Copy that game." <a href="http://blogs.sfweekly.com/thesnitch/2010/09/zynga_pincus_copy_games.php" rel="nofollow">http://blogs.sfweekly.com/thesnitch/2010/09/zynga_pincus_cop...</a><p>Pincus was heard yelling at employees, "I don't fucking want innovation. You're not smarter than your competitor. Just copy what they do and do it until you get their numbers." <a href="http://www.sfweekly.com/2010-09-08/news/farmvillains/" rel="nofollow">http://www.sfweekly.com/2010-09-08/news/farmvillains/</a><p>More examples: <a href="http://www.businessinsider.com/how-zynga-is-just-like-microsoft-2010-1" rel="nofollow">http://www.businessinsider.com/how-zynga-is-just-like-micros...</a>
null
amored
null
1,327,468,240
"2012-01-25T05:10:40"
comment
3,508,482
3,508,354
null
null
null
61
null
null
Pieter&#x27;s businesses are impressive, but IMO not using React nowadays is actually harder than using it. Building stuff vanilla takes more time, effort and knowledge.
null
dvh1990
null
1,598,280,443
"2020-08-24T14:47:23"
comment
24,261,189
24,259,201
null
null
null
62
null
null
He was probably a better negotiator. And citing laws that say you should be paid a certain amount, instead of showing her value to the company, is not a good tactic for getting a raise.
null
sp332
null
1,350,053,392
"2012-10-12T14:49:52"
comment
4,645,241
4,644,885
null
null
null
63
null
null
C++ code only needs to be safe according to C++ rules (not Rust rules). So it is possible for the C++ to be safe, and the corresponding Rust code to be unsafe, e.g.,<p>* int foo(); which returns an uninitialized int is OK according to C++ rules, but would need a MaybeUninit&lt;c_int&gt; according to Rust rules.<p>* int foo(); could throw an exception, causing UB in Rust, since Rust assumes FFI declarations not to throw according to the spec. Rust can only export `noexcept(true)` C++ FFI declarations, or C functions (since C cannot throw). Apparently, autocxx and the cxx crate ignore this and treat all C++ functions as if they never throw, giving them a safe API. That&#x27;s unsound. (One can fix that on nightly Rust though).<p>Unsafety can also be introduced through ABI incompatibilities, but IIUC autocxx usage of rust-bindgen deals with that.
null
fluffything
null
1,598,280,422
"2020-08-24T14:47:02"
comment
24,261,184
24,244,998
null
null
null
64
null
null
I&#x27;ve visited&#x2F;lived in 7&#x2F;10 of those cities, and really appreciated the fact that retail and public infra look the same between cities. In that sense, there&#x27;s a certain &quot;interoperability&quot; (much like how most airports around the world work the same). It only takes a day or so to get used to how the public transit works and how to buy things. I could drop into a new city and learn how to get around in no time.<p>(NY&#x27;s subway was the least intuitive and took the longest to get used to -- it&#x27;s complicated by inconsistencies like express trains, lack of electronic signage on multiuse platforms, doors not opening in certain cars for certain stops in lower Manhattan, etc. -- but even so there was a method behind the madness.)<p>However, once you venture outside the central business districts&#x2F;downtowns and into the neighborhoods, things start looking very different. It&#x27;s in the neighborhoods that one finds unique cultures.<p>Chicago for instance: the Loop is nice and all, but the character of Chicago is really in the 77 neighborhoods around the city. NYC&#x27;s cultural hotspots are in boroughs like Queens.<p>I would say most cities retain their culture in their neighborhoods, not in their CBDs&#x2F;downtowns.
null
wenc
null
1,598,280,434
"2020-08-24T14:47:14"
comment
24,261,186
24,260,430
null
null
null
65
null
null
So do many adults...
null
bluedino
null
1,598,280,374
"2020-08-24T14:46:14"
comment
24,261,180
24,261,013
null
null
null
66
null
null
They must be pretty close for those kinds of sites, no?
null
tome
null
1,598,280,391
"2020-08-24T14:46:31"
comment
24,261,181
24,260,616
null
null
null
67
null
null
Then go ahead and make the argument! I&#x27;d love to see how you juxtaposition &quot;the right to not be tortured&quot; or &quot;the right to not be enslaved&quot; next to &quot;the right <i>to be able</i> to use Dreebly Chat&quot;...<p>Don&#x27;t get me wrong. I <i>agree</i> with the OP in their ideals! Software <i>is</i> an increasingly important part of our lives, and accessibility should be taken seriously for any serious venture.<p>But legislation? Human rights? It&#x27;s this kind of rhetoric that divides minds and undermines goals. By all means fight for what you think is right! Progress isn&#x27;t inevitable. But attempting to <i>impose</i> change rather than <i>affect</i> change is the most classic mistake in the book. You must also be young.
null
kingdomcome50
null
1,598,280,419
"2020-08-24T14:46:59"
comment
24,261,182
24,253,944
null
null
null
68
null
null
Something that works for me is to switch media. Start talking into a microphone. It&#x27;s fast and easy to work things out a few different ways, and hearing it can help you find flaws that you might miss otherwise.
null
dhimes
null
1,458,562,528
"2016-03-21T12:15:28"
comment
11,327,512
11,285,344
null
null
null
69
null
null
There&#x27;s a difference between accepting that other people dress in &quot;slutty&quot; outfits and making it ok, and not wanting sexuality jammed down your throat at a technology event.
null
heartsucker
null
1,458,562,531
"2016-03-21T12:15:31"
comment
11,327,513
11,327,492
null
null
null
70
null
null
Isn&#x27;t that basically what the scientist asks in the last paragraph?<p>&gt; “What about this hypothesis: sleep was the first state of life and it was from sleep that wakefulness emerged,” says Walker. “I think it’s probably a ridiculous hypothesis – but it’s also not entirely unreasonable.”
null
pluma
null
1,458,562,480
"2016-03-21T12:14:40"
comment
11,327,510
11,326,701
null
null
null
71
null
null
There are many things that would be illegal without a contract that are legal with one. That&#x27;s kind of the point.
null
donatj
null
1,458,562,506
"2016-03-21T12:15:06"
comment
11,327,511
11,326,833
null
null
null
72
null
null
I have no idea. My post was more general and about principles rather than specifics. I have no knowledge of the specifics of the relevant terms of service for this company, I also don&#x27;t know whether they form a binding contract in the relevant jurisdiction or what things are specifically legal to do in contracts in the relevant jurisdiction.<p>I repeat that I am not a lawyer so if this is important to you then hire a lawyer in your local jurisdiction to advise you, don&#x27;t listen to random people on the internet.
null
JupiterMoon
null
1,458,562,586
"2016-03-21T12:16:26"
comment
11,327,516
11,326,859
null
null
null
73
null
null
It would no longer be stealing because you agreed to it. This is why repossession is legal.
null
donatj
null
1,458,562,613
"2016-03-21T12:16:53"
comment
11,327,517
11,327,466
null
null
null
74
null
null
He has kind of always been like this. He&#x27;s can be a good writer and has some interesting things to say, but I alway read his blog through my fingers covering my face, because his political writing is usually a cringe read, competitive with ESR&#x27;s. &quot;There is no reason for a woman to go to medical school. If she wants to have the spending power of a doctor she can just have sex with three doctors.&quot; &quot;
null
tptacek
null
1,458,562,570
"2016-03-21T12:16:10"
comment
11,327,514
11,325,607
null
null
null
75
null
null
Agreed, react-router developers try too much to change and add new features to their baby. it has become a bit of a monster. 46KB for a minified router framework...
null
boubiyeah
null
1,473,956,883
"2016-09-15T16:28:03"
comment
12,507,488
12,506,349
null
null
null
76
null
null
To be fair, my company was a little unconventional. We made NLP systems for defense clients, and as such we were working on interesting problems and had some real scientists on our payroll. I actually felt kinda out of place because I came from a systems and platform background and wound up being immersed in academic CS stuff and computational linguistics, while also being surrounded by experts on the subject with lots of experience, when I&#x27;ve never been good at the academic side. As much as I liked working at that company, I&#x27;m glad I&#x27;m now doing NMS engineering at a telecom instead, because what I&#x27;m doing now actually matches my skillset.<p>Personally, though, I&#x27;ve never cared that much about working on something that&#x27;s fulfilling in and of itself. As long as I&#x27;m getting paid enough to fund my life, the hours are good, the work environment isn&#x27;t abusive (I learned <i>that</i> lesson from a startup), and I&#x27;m doing something I&#x27;m actually competent at, I&#x27;m content. If I want to work on something that tickles my fancy, that&#x27;s what personal projects are for.
null
amyjess
null
1,473,956,875
"2016-09-15T16:27:55"
comment
12,507,486
12,507,347
null
null
null
77
null
null
I&#x27;ve been in construction and it&#x27;s surprisingly common that one company tears street up for sewers and then patch it up. Then a week later, another subcontractor tears up the exact same spot for gas line repair. Both instances scheduled months in advance.<p>I don&#x27;t know if you really need software for it. And maybe hydraulic excavators are just too cheap for anybody to mind stuff like this.<p>EDIT: even more common is this &quot;oh this gas line looks really corroded. But I guess we just throw dirt on it as we finish.&quot;
null
vlehto
null
1,458,562,618
"2016-03-21T12:16:58"
comment
11,327,518
11,324,936
null
null
null
78
null
null
I don&#x27;t even think you need to be confirmed at the company. I think once you put yourself as an employee of any given company, you can see their applicants, but they may have fixed this issue.<p>Though overall AngelList seem like a site that&#x27;s focused on helping startups (and investors), and unlike most sites, they don&#x27;t even charge for their job listings.
null
arikrak
null
1,458,562,632
"2016-03-21T12:17:12"
comment
11,327,519
11,326,639
null
null
null
79
null
null
It&#x27;s funny you mention InfoPath. I know of at least two multi-billion dollar companies that have significant amounts of development time tied up in InfoPath. All of its still running, with the plan being to replace it over time.<p>Still just sitting there running.<p>No need for pardon&#x27;s. Use what you like that gets the work done. My instinctive flinch is different. We all have them. That&#x27;s the thing, I don&#x27;t want you to switch. I don&#x27;t care. I love open source software. What I am saying is that they have a lot of effort built into backwards compatibility. And those solutions may not be the latest hotness, but you can still run them.
null
youdontknowtho
null
1,473,956,866
"2016-09-15T16:27:46"
comment
12,507,483
12,506,581
null
null
null
80
null
null
If the JVM has one bytecode compiler that it uses only during startup and another that it used the rest of the time, shouldn&#x27;t it dump the bytecode generated by the first compiler from the cache at the point when it switches to the second compiler?
null
bobbyi_settv
null
1,473,956,844
"2016-09-15T16:27:24"
comment
12,507,481
12,505,517
null
null
null
81
null
null
Well said.<p>I was recently passed off a project from someone who didn&#x27;t have a development background but had been working on C++... the amount of copy-paste, repetitive if statements and fixed length arrays makes the original code almost completely unusable and I was forced to suggest a total rewrite.
null
ultramancool
null
1,473,956,836
"2016-09-15T16:27:16"
comment
12,507,480
12,506,726
null
null
null
82
null
null
Interesting that he uses only one space after each of his colons.
null
jccc
null
1,350,053,413
"2012-10-12T14:50:13"
comment
4,645,246
4,645,121
null
null
null
83
null
null
And appearing on HN due to self-promotion by the author.<p><a href="http://news.ycombinator.com/submitted?id=jessicaSFNY" rel="nofollow">http://news.ycombinator.com/submitted?id=jessicaSFNY</a>
null
trhtrsh
null
1,350,053,451
"2012-10-12T14:50:51"
comment
4,645,247
4,645,209
null
null
null
84
null
null
$100k in NYC or SF is not going to get you much.
null
tricolon
null
1,327,468,444
"2012-01-25T05:14:04"
comment
3,508,488
3,505,731
null
null
null
85
null
null
I disagree.<p>"Please discard paper towels into wastebasket" is direct and specifies <i>exactly</i> what kind of behavior is desired. Your example doesn't do that. It says there <i>is</i> a wastebasket, but the only request is not to throw paper on the floor. It could be satisfied by leaving the wet paper towels on the sink, leaving them draped on the door handle or slapping them on the wall. (How's <i>that</i> for passive-aggressive!)<p>The original message is both shorter and clearer. It's both pro-active and respectful. Getting angry at the notice and littering to show you won't tolerate "condescension" is just being a dick.
null
xiaoma
null
1,330,258,384
"2012-02-26T12:13:04"
comment
3,635,455
3,635,417
null
null
null
86
null
null
Erlang&#x27;s processes are green threads, they&#x27;re just called &quot;processes&quot;. Neither Erlang, nor Akka run 1 thread or process per actor, they just schedule multiple actors over N native threads inside the single process (ignoring multi-node situations).
null
dalailambda
null
1,485,325,885
"2017-01-25T06:31:25"
comment
13,479,202
13,478,432
null
null
null
87
null
null
Why does it matter? The complaints are either right, or they&#x27;re wrong. The complainers&#x27; motives for making their complains have no bearing on that.
null
umanwizard
null
1,485,325,888
"2017-01-25T06:31:28"
comment
13,479,203
13,479,114
null
null
null
88
null
null
TorrentFreak maintains a list of providers that responded to a questionnaire about anonymity, including one about encryption used: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;torrentfreak.com&#x2F;vpn-anonymous-review-160220&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;torrentfreak.com&#x2F;vpn-anonymous-review-160220&#x2F;</a><p>Personally, I prefer the &quot;roll your own&quot; approach mentioned above. A VPS from DigitalOcean or something beats most providers&#x27; pricing.
null
resfirestar
null
1,485,325,877
"2017-01-25T06:31:17"
comment
13,479,201
13,478,266
null
null
null
89
null
null
He&#x27;s 70 FWIW
null
kevinkimball
null
1,485,325,943
"2017-01-25T06:32:23"
comment
13,479,206
13,479,062
null
null
null
90
null
null
Aside from what other said: compatibility with others OSs. But that&#x27;s probably not very high on Apple&#x27;s agenda (at least not for an FS).
null
hobarrera
null
1,485,325,896
"2017-01-25T06:31:36"
comment
13,479,204
13,476,278
null
null
null
91
null
null
I am saying that you are debating theory that has no place outside of debate of theory. It rings of privilege and naivete to the way the world actually works. Just search Twitter for &quot;dead without Obamacare&quot; and you will find plenty of &quot;real consequences&quot;.
null
slg
null
1,485,325,899
"2017-01-25T06:31:39"
comment
13,479,205
13,478,905
null
null
null
92
null
null
One of the best type features of Go is the lack of need to do something like this: &quot;@implements(IEatable)&quot;. If a class implements all of the methods of the interface, then it automatically implements that interface. Yuppy seems like a step backwards in OO in this regard.
null
jmpeax
null
1,401,595,752
"2014-06-01T04:09:12"
comment
7,828,144
7,827,804
null
null
null
93
null
null
No, those were fake news headlines run by Fox and Russian news agencies.
null
bduerst
null
1,485,325,970
"2017-01-25T06:32:50"
comment
13,479,208
13,479,110
null
null
null
94
null
null
Many people on Twitter have fewer followers before they tweet anything.
null
hawkice
null
1,485,325,994
"2017-01-25T06:33:14"
comment
13,479,209
13,479,126
null
null
null
95
null
null
This kid's ingenuity, determination and commitment toward his customers are very inspiring. It's obvious his dad is his role model. I expect great things from him in the future.
null
facorreia
null
1,334,173,966
"2012-04-11T19:52:46"
comment
3,829,343
3,829,120
null
null
null
96
null
null
Uh, not to be a complete jerk or anything, but do you realize that your comment is far easier to understand if you actually mention where you're from? Now it's like reading half of a joke.
null
unwind
null
1,268,059,878
"2010-03-08T14:51:18"
comment
1,175,401
1,174,812
null
null
null
97
null
null
How do you guys like 2checkout.com?
null
gibsonf1
null
1,268,060,031
"2010-03-08T14:53:51"
comment
1,175,403
1,175,141
null
null
null
98
null
null
I've always wondered whether the growing modern obsession with bug killing and so forth might be counter productive.<p>Has anyone seen any studies they can recommend into the long term effect on our immune system?
null
ErrantX
null
1,268,059,908
"2010-03-08T14:51:48"
comment
1,175,402
1,175,331
null
null
null
99
null
null
The studies mentioned don't show that <i>using</i> hand sanitizers is ineffective, just that <i>mailing</i> the sanitizers to people along with informational pamphlets is ineffective. If you actually read the first study they report finding a significant (though small) effect on respiratory infections for families that claimed to have actually used the products.
null
goodside
null
1,268,060,032
"2010-03-08T14:53:52"
comment
1,175,404
1,175,331
null
null
null

Hacker News corpus, 2007-Nov 2022

Dataset Description

Dataset Summary

Dataset Name: Hacker News Full Corpus (2007 - November 2022)

Description:

NOTE: I am not affiliated with Y Combinator.

This dataset is a July 2023 snapshot of YCombinator's BigQuery dump of the entire archive of posts and comments made on Hacker News. It contains posts from Hacker News' inception in 2007 through to November 16, 2022, when the BigQuery database was last updated.

The dataset does not incorporate any modifications or filtering - it is a raw dump from the original dataset provided by YCombinator. Hence, it retains the same structure and fields as the original BigQuery table, serving as a ready-to-use resource for conducting large-scale data analysis or training language models.

All credit for the original data collection and maintenance goes to YCombinator and the original post and comment authors. This version of the dataset has been prepared for convenience and ease of use within the HuggingFace ecosystem, especially for those interested in offline usage or who prefer not to use Google Cloud.

Please bear in mind that this dataset is a snapshot and will probably not be updated. For the latest data, consider accessing the live data directly from the official Hacker News API, potentially using Anant Narayanan's scripts.

Please use responsibly, respecting all relevant terms of use and privacy considerations inherent in the data.

Languages

English

Dataset Structure

Data Fields

fullname mode type description
title NULLABLE STRING Story title
url NULLABLE STRING Story url
text NULLABLE STRING Story or comment text
dead NULLABLE BOOLEAN Is dead?
by NULLABLE STRING The username of the item's author.
score NULLABLE INTEGER Story score
time NULLABLE INTEGER Unix time
timestamp NULLABLE TIMESTAMP Timestamp for the unix time
type NULLABLE STRING Type of details (comment, comment_ranking, poll, story, job, pollopt)
id NULLABLE INTEGER The item's unique id.
parent NULLABLE INTEGER Parent comment ID
descendants NULLABLE INTEGER Number of story or poll descendants
ranking NULLABLE INTEGER Comment ranking
deleted NULLABLE BOOLEAN Is deleted?

Dataset Creation

Curation Rationale

This dataset provides a snapshot of the Hacker News posts and comments archive, sourced from YCombinator's open data, to enable easy and direct access without the need for a Google Cloud account or BigQuery interface, and without putting undue strain on the HN API. It aims to simplify the data acquisition process, promoting its use within the HuggingFace ecosystem for various tasks including analysis, trend prediction, sentiment studies, and language model training. By minimizing barriers to access, this dataset encourages a wider usage, fostering innovation in natural language processing and related fields.

Annotations

Personal and Sensitive Information

This dataset has not undergone specific checks for personally identifiable information (PII); hence, it's possible that some may exist within the data. However, as the data source is publicly available and shared by YCombinator, any potential PII present is already part of the public domain.

Considerations for Using the Data

Social Impact of Dataset

The collective wisdom and perspectives captured in the posts and comments of this Hacker News dataset represent a unique gift from YCombinator and countless contributors worldwide; it is part of the common heritage of humanity. The potential insights to be gleaned and the future knowledge to be generated, especially through the training of language models on this corpus, can provide unbounded new perspectives, enriching our understanding and potential solutions to complex issues. It is a testament to the power of shared knowledge and open dialogue in shaping the world. While there is a risk that some may use language models trained on this dataset for disinformation purposes, it's worth noting that the misuse of technology is a challenge that predates this dataset. The proverbial horse of misused technology has long since left the barn; our focus now must be on harnessing this shared intellectual legacy responsibly for the common good.

Discussion of Biases

Given that Hacker News is a technology-focused platform with a largely self-selected user base, the content and perspectives found within this dataset may lean towards technology, entrepreneurship, and related fields, often reflecting the views and biases of this specific community. As such, users should be aware that analysis drawn from this data may not fully represent a balanced, global perspective and might contain inherent biases towards topics and viewpoints that are overrepresented in the Hacker News community.

Additional Information

Licensing Information

In the absence of an explicit license for the upstream BigQuery dataset, this dataset uses the same MIT license as the Hacker News API. The upstream terms of use are reproduced here:

This dataset is publicly available for anyone to use under the following terms provided by the Dataset Source - https://github.com/HackerNews/API - and is provided "AS IS" without any warranty, express or implied, from Google. Google disclaims all liability for any damages, direct or indirect, resulting from the use of the dataset.

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