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166,853 | null | null | Is there even an equivalent situation in the UK, given that it's extremely easy and cheap to form a company in the UK? | null | cameronh90 | null | 1,654,355,706 | "2022-06-04T15:15:06Z" | comment | 31,621,262 | 31,620,987 | null | null | null |
166,854 | null | null | I like to say that Apple is a marketing company with a very good product development team. Apple makes luxury goods with huge cachet. Android covers the entire spectrum of cheap crap up to the same level of luxury but that dilutes the brand. Apple is also vertically integrated, doing everything themselves and licensing nothing. | null | tootie | null | 1,662,123,211 | "2022-09-02T12:53:31Z" | comment | 32,690,071 | 32,689,946 | null | null | null |
166,855 | null | null | yeah, you're right...it's really delusional to think that iphone possession is a status symbol...I'd have to be insane to think that! | null | RappingBoomer | null | 1,662,123,204 | "2022-09-02T12:53:24Z" | comment | 32,690,070 | 32,690,032 | null | null | null |
166,856 | null | null | 4 years when I bought it a year ago. | null | secondcoming | null | 1,662,123,215 | "2022-09-02T12:53:35Z" | comment | 32,690,072 | 32,690,017 | null | null | null |
166,857 | null | null | I can not tell you how much I love my 21:9 setup in vertical mode. But also I love to stare at my old 1366x768 with tiny energy use while long sessions of laptoping somewhere out of civilization. | null | eimrine | null | 1,662,123,225 | "2022-09-02T12:53:45Z" | comment | 32,690,075 | 32,690,035 | null | null | null |
166,858 | null | null | This sort of makes the whole premise confusing to me. The way to use the alternative to the "dead" product is to use the dead product.<p>This isn't a critique of your comment. Just, that I don't understand what's going on here. Maybe this whole issue is a non-Linux kind of thing?<p>Test stuff out with wither docker compose, or minikube, and otherwise deploy to k8s has worked great for me. | null | okamiueru | null | 1,654,355,698 | "2022-06-04T15:14:58Z" | comment | 31,621,261 | 31,617,455 | null | null | null |
166,859 | null | null | I was using an Android for years. My mother at one point was nagging me to buy an iPhone, and I relented and bought one just to get her to stop nagging.<p>6 months later I gave the iPhone to my sister and bought a new Android. I still use Android today.<p>(Apple does not make iTunes for Linux, seemingly out of sheer spite to Linux users like myself. I ended up having to use a slow paid app to transfer files where previously I used a command line and an SSH connection with RSA keys.) | null | mathlover2 | null | 1,662,123,230 | "2022-09-02T12:53:50Z" | comment | 32,690,077 | 32,689,888 | null | null | null |
166,860 | null | null | The monthly price is exactly the same price as paying upfront - doesn't make any difference to affordability. | null | chrisseaton | null | 1,662,123,230 | "2022-09-02T12:53:50Z" | comment | 32,690,076 | 32,690,015 | null | null | null |
166,861 | null | null | I live in Sunderland. | null | onion2k | null | 1,662,123,233 | "2022-09-02T12:53:53Z" | comment | 32,690,078 | 32,689,233 | null | null | null |
166,862 | null | null | I’ve been playing games most of my life, and it quickly became an all-time favorite. Exploring that solar system and piecing together the story was an incredible experience that I still think about, over two years later. The ending was also profoundly moving for me. | null | scott_s | null | 1,654,355,686 | "2022-06-04T15:14:46Z" | comment | 31,621,260 | 31,621,127 | null | null | null |
166,863 | null | null | iZotope Inc | Software Engineer | Cambridge, MA | Onsite<p>iZotope is seeking a Software Engineer for a position on our Spire product development team, creating the next generation recording studio. You’ll be joining a cross functional software team, responsible for the software running on the Spire Studio hardware device and our iOS/Android Spire applications. Your focus will be the Spire Studio application, but expect to learn and help on other platforms to reach our product goals.<p>Technology focus will be C++ application running on a Linux embedded devices. Experience with performance tuning and real time audio systems would be a plus.<p>Full description: <a href="https://www.izotope.com/en/company/careers/jobs/engineering/Software-engineer.html" rel="nofollow">https://www.izotope.com/en/company/careers/jobs/engineering/...</a> | null | jamartini | null | 1,538,485,257 | "2018-10-02T13:00:57Z" | comment | 18,121,119 | 18,113,144 | null | null | null |
166,864 | null | null | Sounds like a nightmare to be a DTAG customer.. But why would all of us pay to subsidize DTAG when we want servers in Europe peered with our reasonable ISPs and there are plenty of French ones? | null | yayana | null | 1,538,485,254 | "2018-10-02T13:00:54Z" | comment | 18,121,117 | 18,120,825 | null | null | null |
166,865 | null | null | Given how short your comment is, I am not quite certain what you are trying to say. However, in my experience, whenever somebody complains about "equality of opportunity vs equality of outcome", they willfully overlook a lot of factors that would be playing into the "opportunity" part of the equation. | null | krastanov | null | 1,538,485,252 | "2018-10-02T13:00:52Z" | comment | 18,121,116 | 18,120,977 | null | null | null |
166,866 | null | null | This has always been true though. The government basically controls the real estate companies, and they won’t list/show your house beneath a certain price. When prices weaken, volume simply plummets as no one can sell because the real estate companies won’t allow for discounting. That isn’t a really a new thing, it has been going on for at least a decade.<p>In many cases, what we have in China is much worse than japan since artificial intervention is much deeper and prolonged. | null | seanmcdirmid | null | 1,538,485,226 | "2018-10-02T13:00:26Z" | comment | 18,121,115 | 18,121,069 | null | null | null |
166,867 | null | null | WorkerDOM has a DOM representation, but I wouldn't call it a "virtual DOM". It's just propagating mutations back and forth. It wouldn't, for instance, have the ability to reorder nodes in a list in linear time (like React does with the key={} prop). When a change takes place, it's not diffing anything, it's just mapping one representation of the DOM onto another. If you set innerHTML in the worker, it would set innerHTML in the main thread also. | null | bastawhiz | null | 1,538,485,213 | "2018-10-02T13:00:13Z" | comment | 18,121,114 | 18,120,262 | null | null | null |
166,868 | null | null | Read the article... Yes, obviously those CPUs didn't support it. But the later CPUs and PCs did, and yet the software (MS-DOS), didn't really support it. They had to use some gross hacks to access more memory.<p>That excuse is valid for 8086, but it's no longer valid for the 386. | null | oblio | null | 1,538,485,209 | "2018-10-02T13:00:09Z" | comment | 18,121,113 | 18,121,079 | null | null | null |
166,869 | null | null | Ditto. The Canadians were pretty easy to deal with.<p>The US is always a PITA, esp. after long international flights. One time they flagged me for "smuggling halogen headlights" or something and searched ALL of my stuff. Missed my LA-DC flight because of it. And I'm a white, clean-cut US citizen. | null | barrow-rider | null | 1,538,485,195 | "2018-10-02T12:59:55Z" | comment | 18,121,112 | 18,116,736 | null | null | null |
166,870 | null | null | > I believe the author is referring to high inflation as measured by things that reserve banks look at (in Australia this would be the consumer price index etc); while house prices either stay stagnant or rise slower than said rate of inflation. Thus, the nominal price of housing is maintained, while the real value tanks.<p>Yes, this makes perfect sense in theory - housing inflation has dramatically outpaced everything else, so <i>if</i> the government causes a whole bunch of monetary inflation by printing money <i>and</i> that money doesn't go into housing but goes into other things (maybe even wages!), then it will let those prices catch up, while also devaluing the cost of the housing debt.<p>But I think printing money is what got us into this situation in the first place, it just mostly all went into housing, to stop that from continuing you'd need to change the collective beliefs of nearly the entire population. This is one thing that could genuinely be "different this time": the belief that real estate always goes up. And you can hardly blame people, because it's more or less true, and is virtually guaranteed by more than one government policy. | null | mistermann | null | 1,538,485,180 | "2018-10-02T12:59:40Z" | comment | 18,121,110 | 18,119,532 | null | null | null |
166,871 | null | null | Honest question: Do we have the means to detect conclusive evidence of life on <i>Earth itself</i> from even "only" as far as, say, Pluto, without knowing exactly what to look for? | null | Razengan | null | 1,535,031,344 | "2018-08-23T13:35:44Z" | comment | 17,827,111 | 17,827,096 | null | null | null |
166,872 | null | null | You're factually wrong: fish have conscious experience, most importantly, <i>they feel pain</i> <a href="https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/fish-feel-pain-180967764/" rel="nofollow">https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/fish-feel-pain...</a> | null | yboris | null | 1,535,031,316 | "2018-08-23T13:35:16Z" | comment | 17,827,110 | 17,821,920 | null | null | null |
166,873 | null | null | Yes, I did try it <i>after</i> Haskell.<p>I had the impression the FP hype started with Haskell and so I tried it, alter people started talking about OCaml, so I gave FP another try and liked it. | null | k__ | null | 1,535,031,366 | "2018-08-23T13:36:06Z" | comment | 17,827,113 | 17,827,078 | null | null | null |
166,874 | null | null | Any advice on finding a position like this? 13M JPY is a large salary for Japan. | null | laurieg | null | 1,535,031,389 | "2018-08-23T13:36:29Z" | comment | 17,827,115 | 17,825,749 | null | null | null |
166,875 | null | null | And then classic React enters the building | null | kmbriedis | null | 1,535,031,386 | "2018-08-23T13:36:26Z" | comment | 17,827,114 | 17,825,941 | null | null | null |
166,876 | null | null | For anybody looking for a similar-ish syllabus with different material, Matthew Flatt's introductory programming languages course is available online at [0]. It's in Plait (formerly PLAI-Typed, a smaller dialect of Racket) and was really a great class, in my opinion. (I took this as a junior at the U.)<p>[0] <a href="https://pubweb.eng.utah.edu/~cs3520/" rel="nofollow">https://pubweb.eng.utah.edu/~cs3520/</a> | null | DonaldPShimoda | null | 1,535,031,432 | "2018-08-23T13:37:12Z" | comment | 17,827,117 | 17,826,998 | null | null | null |
166,877 | null | null | Can't you do the same thing without JavaScript, by having the web page go through a brief redirect so the back button takes you to the redirect?<p>And if so, how do you solve this? Ban server-side redirects? Make the Google SERP iframe all sites it takes you to? I agree this is a problem but I have no idea how to solve it in a way that's not worse. | null | geofft | null | 1,535,031,414 | "2018-08-23T13:36:54Z" | comment | 17,827,116 | 17,826,607 | null | null | null |
166,878 | null | null | This seems like a GREAT IDEA | null | zunzun | null | 1,535,031,437 | "2018-08-23T13:37:17Z" | comment | 17,827,119 | 17,826,853 | null | null | null |
166,879 | null | null | Funny I find it uplifting. The human experience is universal. | null | kjjw | null | 1,535,031,437 | "2018-08-23T13:37:17Z" | comment | 17,827,118 | 17,827,098 | null | null | null |
166,880 | null | null | Sometimes I'm a little sad about && and || as well (I'm a Python guy myself) but I get that Rust is trying to target C++ programmers first and foremost, and a little bit of familiarity goes a long way towards comforting newcomers. And judging by the number of self-proclaimed Python programmers lurking in in #rust (including at least one quite famous one), it hasn't been a complete turn-off.<p>Then again, the "C familiarity" rationale would seem to contradict the choice of `match` over `switch`, though I think pattern-matching is a sufficiently big deal to warrant a distinct keyword. It's an interesting comparison to Rust's old `tag` keyword, which was finally changed to `enum` because the easiest way to explain it was "look, they're basically C enums, but better". Personally I think the keyword should have remained `tag`, but you can't win 'em all. :) | null | kibwen | null | 1,350,392,057 | "2012-10-16T12:54:17Z" | comment | 4,659,580 | 4,658,608 | null | null | null |
166,881 | null | null | Yeah, appointing the speaker is a problem. Good ones can be great, bad ones dreadful. | null | regularfry | null | 1,350,392,082 | "2012-10-16T12:54:42Z" | comment | 4,659,581 | 4,659,460 | null | null | null |
166,882 | null | null | A little off-topic, but does anyone know why Modafinil is so powerful on willpower (i.e. capacity to power through things one doesn't care about)? Anecdotally it's as though it removes all "willpower barriers" - those little objections one uses to avoid doing things (e.g. "but the water is cold").<p>I initially put it down to it being used when people are sleep-deprived (as I find willpower is easier when sleep-deprived) but it's even more effective when rested. | null | nopassrecover | null | 1,350,392,161 | "2012-10-16T12:56:01Z" | comment | 4,659,586 | 4,659,552 | null | null | null |
166,883 | null | null | We'll have to wait and see if a big part of that storage is not used by the Windows OS, which is much larger than iOS, unless they don't count that storage, but they might.<p>Also, it still has a regular resolution. I would expect at least a 1080p resolution at that price. The 9" Kindle Fire has one, and it sells for $300. That's $200 difference,and the Surface still doesn't have that high of a resolution. | null | mtgx | null | 1,350,392,162 | "2012-10-16T12:56:02Z" | comment | 4,659,587 | 4,659,532 | null | null | null |
166,884 | null | null | A REPL is extremely useful for learning, debugging (instead of using print statements, embed an interpreter to see exactly what is going wrong — IPython's one-line embed() for example), sketching (embed into an incomplete part of your program, try out a few things, when it works paste it to your source), and documentation (IPython's ? and ?? — completion is also part of that). | null | Tobu | null | 1,350,392,126 | "2012-10-16T12:55:26Z" | comment | 4,659,584 | 4,658,641 | null | null | null |
166,885 | null | null | Thank you, I had forgotten about class guard. It's a great tool, but I recall having problems getting it to work on larger applications.<p>It's also possible for you to remove the ObjectiveC metadata from a binary entirely, obfuscate/encrypt it, and then add it back to the ObjectiveC runtime as needed. With LLVM bitcode this becomes much more difficult (but maybe not impossible...) | null | nekitamo | null | 1,443,151,997 | "2015-09-25T03:33:17Z" | comment | 10,276,254 | 10,275,898 | null | null | null |
166,886 | null | null | Inspiring, yes - but it's also disheartening with respect to how far away we are from highly-convincing VR.<p>It's not even a matter of engineering the solutions; we have yet to fully understand so many of the problems, and we'll need years (decades?) of research before beginning to think about some of the solutions. That's not to say it can't be an overall positive technology/experience in the meantime, but it'll likely be many years before it's free of certain side effects (e.g., nausea, discomfort) that bother people. | null | dperfect | null | 1,443,152,045 | "2015-09-25T03:34:05Z" | comment | 10,276,256 | 10,273,710 | null | null | null |
166,887 | null | null | <p><pre><code> PS: no pentalobe screws either.
</code></pre>
This makes me happy :) Also, any chance you might demo one of these at Metrix on Capitol Hill sometime? I'd love to check it out in person without having to pay $2,000 first! | null | aaronbrethorst | null | 1,443,151,979 | "2015-09-25T03:32:59Z" | comment | 10,276,251 | 10,276,091 | null | null | null |
166,888 | null | null | Your logic does not follow.<p>Lots of men are hostile to women. Making jokes regarding women's issues fuels hostility. Therefore men should not make jokes regarding women's issues.<p>Some people are mentally unstable. Guns in the hands of mentally unstable people can cause catastrophic results. Therefore people should not own guns. | null | balls187 | null | 1,443,151,988 | "2015-09-25T03:33:08Z" | comment | 10,276,253 | 10,275,841 | null | null | null |
166,889 | null | null | So content is king? | null | hiou | null | 1,443,151,980 | "2015-09-25T03:33:00Z" | comment | 10,276,252 | 10,274,842 | null | null | null |
166,890 | null | null | Quirky also derisked the process and took preorders. | null | davemel37 | null | 1,443,152,112 | "2015-09-25T03:35:12Z" | comment | 10,276,259 | 10,276,195 | null | null | null |
166,891 | null | null | I agree very much with this article. Kaufman is a very cool, stand-up guy; everyone I met at Quirky was smart and nimble and on board with the vision. The products ranged from naïf (hence "Quirky") to straight up brilliant. It makes sense to me that they simply took on too much, and should have focused and iterated on their better products. | null | Eric_WVGG | null | 1,443,152,097 | "2015-09-25T03:34:57Z" | comment | 10,276,258 | 10,276,053 | null | null | null |
166,892 | null | null | The feature has not been in Java for a long time, because the feature <i>is</i> the nice syntax. | null | Peaker | null | 1,340,569,959 | "2012-06-24T20:32:39Z" | comment | 4,154,169 | 4,153,916 | null | null | null |
166,893 | null | null | There's easy way - test it on humans. The strain that kills the host is the deadly one.<p>Remember these people don't think dying is bad - they usually believe in an afterlife. | null | rbanffy | null | 1,322,396,951 | "2011-11-27T12:29:11Z" | comment | 3,282,300 | 3,280,458 | null | null | null |
166,894 | null | null | "Hey I hear there's this things "hackers" can do to make your internet work. But I'm afraid they'll steal my credit card information. Is this article right for me? Also, Friends is still a TV show" -- this article | null | languagehacker | null | 1,332,901,910 | "2012-03-28T02:31:50Z" | comment | 3,764,429 | 3,763,375 | null | null | null |
166,895 | null | null | Off-topic, but related: <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Appeal_to_emotion" rel="nofollow">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Appeal_to_emotion</a> (as much as I hate patents) | null | olalonde | null | 1,332,901,882 | "2012-03-28T02:31:22Z" | comment | 3,764,428 | 3,764,332 | null | null | null |
166,896 | null | null | "None of their options were suited to her daughter, and they all carried hefty price tags—as in $7,000+ hefty. She began asking around to see if PRC or any of the other big companies were planning on releasing an iPad app, and learned that although many customers were clamoring for one, the companies had no intention of meeting their demands. They didn't want an affordable option out there reducing sales of their expensive systems."<p>Time for their business model to die | null | bobbles | null | 1,332,901,818 | "2012-03-28T02:30:18Z" | comment | 3,764,424 | 3,764,332 | null | null | null |
166,897 | null | null | I had a co-op position while at school, and I found the opportunity through the school's co-op/internship office. They had system like Monster where you could post your resume to positions, except they were only looking for interns from my school.<p>A friend of mine just got hired as an intern at my work. We needed someone and I knew he was looking. Everything worked out on both sides and he accepted.<p>Expectations for interns, at least in my experience:<p>1) You're going to get trained. There's a 99% chance you don't know what we want you to know<p>2) You're going to learn quickly, because otherwise you're gone in 3 months and that was worthless<p>3) You're going to be given a project (or piece thereof) that realistically can be finished or mostly finished by the time you leave.<p>So what I'm looking for in an intern (I did screening of applicants at my last job to replace myself as a co-op) is a willingness to learn, reasonably smart, and good time management. The latter 2 you can approximately screen for in GPA, or GPA + outside activities. If you're excited in whatever we do that will give you a big leg up, or if you've done something approximately similar to what that is.<p>My last job would also only seriously look for applicants in spring, though we did interviews year round. In summer we'd start hitting other companies' rejects that couldn't get a job for that summer. Fall was hit or miss, depending on if they wanted to start in spring or summer. Summer was more promising because it meant that the students thought ahead and were already looking for jobs. | null | caw | null | 1,332,901,858 | "2012-03-28T02:30:58Z" | comment | 3,764,427 | 3,764,163 | null | null | null |
166,898 | null | null | <i>Uhmm... they can and did.</i><p>English might not be your first language, so I want to be sensitive of this. We have what is called a turn of phrase, or a memorable statement which represents an idea. In this case, when I say "you can't do that", it is similar to how your boss might call you into his office to complain that you deleted the company's production server. He might say "you can't do that", even though you obviously just did. What he means is "you really shouldn't have done that, and you should have known better."<p><i>Why should they not leverage the crazy traffic they have?</i><p>They can and should. What I'm representing is that the way they have chosen to leverage that traffic is confusing. Selling Android apps on a PC storefront which also has its own apps causes confusion as to whether or not the apps will work on your PC. In this case, they specifically use the name Android in several places, and I didn't see anywhere that it said "works on your PC" or "doesn't work on your PC".<p><i>It's a good time to do it since the masses unfortunately love Angry Birds</i><p>They've had a webapp store which sold Angry Birds for the PC. Combining the two caused me confusion. If it causes me confusion, it likely causes other people confusion as well. | null | freehunter | null | 1,332,901,848 | "2012-03-28T02:30:48Z" | comment | 3,764,426 | 3,762,695 | null | null | null |
166,899 | null | null | I hate <i>pro-infinite scroll</i> nonsense.<p>But the argument that your "page 867" means nothing remains.<p>What's the solution? I'm not sure and it probably depends on the application involved.<p>One idea in search might be to return fifty items and give ten suggested refinements by key word or otherwise. | null | joe_the_user | null | 1,332,901,770 | "2012-03-28T02:29:30Z" | comment | 3,764,421 | 3,764,187 | null | null | null |
166,900 | null | null | Tumblr implemented endless pagination with exactly this problem. This came up when you tried to reblog/reply to a post or view "read more" content and forgot to open another tab. They have since implemented a regular pagination system that fixes the back button problem. | null | JamesLeonis | null | 1,332,901,816 | "2012-03-28T02:30:16Z" | comment | 3,764,423 | 3,764,141 | null | null | null |
166,901 | null | null | You should learn C because it's a gateway to deeper knowledge. The kernel uses it, about a thousand programs shipped with Linux use it, embedded programming uses it. It helps you understand how lower level network protocols have been designed, how to efficiently use memory, how to design algorithms and why they're harder than you think. There's a crapton of libraries in C, most higher level languages have some extensions to take advantage of them. Sensitive security software will use it, due to various attack vectors that are slightly easier to deal with at a lower level. It's handy and expands your brain. And it's not going away anytime soon. | null | throwawaaarrgh | null | 1,665,977,679 | "2022-10-17T03:34:39Z" | comment | 33,229,596 | 33,229,162 | null | null | null |
166,902 | null | null | Yeah, having an extremely confusing interface that doesn't make completely clear to average customer from whom you are actually buying (and who is actually fulfilling your order) is part - IMHO - or a very poor ethic.<p>Anyway, your points as a customer are indeed valid and obvious. Still, the way they reach such efficiency is absolutely unhealthy for the economy. On my personal side, i will avoid like hell any professional relationship with Amazon. Note: I didn't part for any of the reasons above and i don't have anything personal against it. Mine are just general thoughts after gaining some experience on their internal operations :) | null | jnardiello | null | 1,390,496,834 | "2014-01-23T17:07:14Z" | comment | 7,109,404 | 7,109,169 | null | null | null |
166,903 | null | null | By the way. That "rouge" approach is what would I have go through as a sysadmin if this was an computer related problem. I think you deserve to be a case study in immunology and be very very successful.<p>Sometimes thinking out of the box and letting go of established ways will lead to results.<p>Edit:
Also in computer sciences we use differentiating between two known states to find out how to change on state to the other one perfectly. In immunology do you use similar approaches? | null | fsniper | null | 1,390,496,835 | "2014-01-23T17:07:15Z" | comment | 7,109,405 | 7,109,088 | null | null | null |
166,904 | null | null | Rents have gone up, but there's still a lot of things that are dramatically cheaper in Berlin than in Munich - just go out for lunch for example. | null | Xylakant | null | 1,390,496,836 | "2014-01-23T17:07:16Z" | comment | 7,109,406 | 7,109,315 | null | null | null |
166,905 | null | null | But you'll have a different amount of surplus money, since living costs might cost, 50k in Munich but only 40k in Berlin. | null | earllee | null | 1,390,496,839 | "2014-01-23T17:07:19Z" | comment | 7,109,407 | 7,109,328 | null | null | null |
166,906 | null | null | Currently working with Node.JS and we want to introdcure Go in some new modules. Have 3 major concerns;<p>- Lack of Generics. I know this has been beaten to death but after using a dynamic typed language all this time, it is even more painful.<p>- Weird dependency management. No way to lock dependency versions, even if I fork something and depend on it, nested dependencies can fuck up at some point. We need something like NPM to manage our dependencies in a sane way. Importing from live git paths seems like the worst possible solution to this. And there seems to be no widely accepted 3rd party package manager.<p>- Google... At some point, I'd expect the compiler to require a Google+ account to enable optimizations. /s | null | eknkc | null | 1,390,496,805 | "2014-01-23T17:06:45Z" | comment | 7,109,400 | 7,109,090 | null | null | null |
166,907 | null | null | tl;dr: A quick recap of Go's basic features, also the author likes them. | null | sdegutis | null | 1,390,496,806 | "2014-01-23T17:06:46Z" | comment | 7,109,401 | 7,109,090 | null | null | null |
166,908 | null | null | The current gender ratio is the result of decades of gender stereotyping that things like math and science and programming were "for boys".<p>I'm going to believe the author when she says that this is for <i>children</i>. I just don't buy the idea that boys can't enjoy stories with female leads. Look at Brave or The Hunger Games. My son loves those. | null | MartinCron | null | 1,390,496,829 | "2014-01-23T17:07:09Z" | comment | 7,109,402 | 7,109,319 | null | null | null |
166,909 | null | null | Sorry I wasn't clear with my pronouns (?) - "they" referred to the LPs, not Insight. Meaning that now the LPs (not Insight) have to figure out how to reinvest the capital that was returned. | null | icewalker | null | 1,390,496,833 | "2014-01-23T17:07:13Z" | comment | 7,109,403 | 7,106,250 | null | null | null |
166,910 | null | null | So true. $75 million is not a lot of money for India. The Prime Minister's Office just spent $50 million on latest equipment for his bodyguards (secret service detail). ONE Indian company just signed a deal with the Nepal government to spend $1 billion for ONE hydro project in Nepal. And it is nowhere in news in India. | null | paramendra | null | 1,411,604,135 | "2014-09-25T00:15:35Z" | comment | 8,364,874 | 8,364,393 | null | null | null |
166,911 | null | null | So only "True" currencies are $1m signed bitcoin transactions now?<p>That level of No-True-Scotsman shows confirmation bias. How much have you put into bitcoins? | null | bduerst | null | 1,411,604,151 | "2014-09-25T00:15:51Z" | comment | 8,364,877 | 8,359,927 | null | null | null |
166,912 | null | null | Only the points the post gets matters. | null | mooism2 | null | 1,348,161,113 | "2012-09-20T17:11:53Z" | comment | 4,549,539 | 4,549,476 | null | null | null |
166,913 | null | null | <a href="https://formenergy.com/technology/battery-technology/" rel="nofollow">https://formenergy.com/technology/battery-technology/</a><p>Last figure I saw was 1/4 the cost of Li batteries. (I guess lithium cells have got cheaper since they made that page.) | null | ncmncm | null | 1,649,656,820 | "2022-04-11T06:00:20Z" | comment | 30,985,195 | 30,985,107 | null | null | null |
166,914 | null | null | Relatively! | null | mrsebastian | null | 1,348,161,079 | "2012-09-20T17:11:19Z" | comment | 4,549,534 | 4,549,518 | null | null | null |
166,915 | null | null | ICFP 2012 had quite a lot of talks about DSLs. Just go to e.g. youtube and search for something like "icfp 2012 domain specific language". | null | eru | null | 1,348,161,075 | "2012-09-20T17:11:15Z" | comment | 4,549,533 | 4,549,362 | null | null | null |
166,916 | null | null | It's just too bad Jobs is dead and is not here to personally fire the apple maps team. | null | samstave | null | 1,348,161,049 | "2012-09-20T17:10:49Z" | comment | 4,549,532 | 4,549,320 | null | null | null |
166,917 | null | null | I think that is a bit disingenuous. Nokia-Microsoft is a much better fit than Apple-Google.<p>Nokia has hardware and maps; Microsoft brings in its OS. That either is win-win, or lose-lose, but there is little reason for either party to be suspicious of the other at the moment.<p>On the other hand, Apple has good reasons to be suspicious of Google. Collaboration with google can be a win-loose combination, with Apple at the losing end: Google wins if iPhone fails. | null | Someone | null | 1,348,161,039 | "2012-09-20T17:10:39Z" | comment | 4,549,531 | 4,548,659 | null | null | null |
166,918 | null | null | There were. I think they called them "Sponsored" or something. It really annoyed me because if I'd search for something common like "Home Depot" it would give me random pins at places that were definitely not Home Depot but rather sponsored businesses. | null | tharris0101 | null | 1,348,161,028 | "2012-09-20T17:10:28Z" | comment | 4,549,530 | 4,549,454 | null | null | null |
166,919 | null | null | Do you have a website where you talk about your stuff? I didn't see anything listed in your profile. | null | akulbe | null | 1,596,383,813 | "2020-08-02T15:56:53Z" | comment | 24,029,432 | 24,029,204 | null | null | null |
166,920 | null | null | 3 mod 7 + 6 mod 7 = 9<p>i think you meant divide by 3 mod 7:<p>9 / 3 mod 7 = 3 | null | sabujp | null | 1,596,383,814 | "2020-08-02T15:56:54Z" | comment | 24,029,433 | 24,021,945 | null | null | null |
166,921 | null | null | What's the relationship here between EFI, mutual funds, and "margin account/higher expense ratio"? Would anyone be willing to explain this comment thread to a newbie? | null | jasonv | null | 1,596,383,801 | "2020-08-02T15:56:41Z" | comment | 24,029,430 | 24,026,887 | null | null | null |
166,922 | null | null | Humans are animals so yes, although they are likely the only species that will try to burn down federal courthouses. | true | kyleblarson | null | 1,596,383,803 | "2020-08-02T15:56:43Z" | comment | 24,029,431 | 24,018,759 | null | null | null |
166,923 | null | null | The story yesterday said you support addition, multiplication, and enough for Turing completeness.<p>Surely, that means you also support equality tests. With that, it’s easy to build a lookup table, and the whole thing devolves to a glorified Caesar cipher. (With a permutation function instead of a rotation.)<p>What security guarantees does this library provide? What’s the attacker model? I see nothing about this on the front page of your github repo, or in the press releases.<p>Edit: For instance, can it tolerate chosen plaintext attacks? In a naive scheme:<p>If an attacker can get the cipher text for “1”, then they can compute 1+1=2, giving them the ciphertext for 2, and then, inductively, all the natural numbers. | null | hedora | null | 1,596,383,829 | "2020-08-02T15:57:09Z" | comment | 24,029,436 | 24,028,487 | null | null | null |
166,924 | null | null | A larger war on terror that has included China to a degree I was unaware of until recently.<p><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_wars_involving_the_People%27s_Republic_of_China" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_wars_involving_the_Peo...</a> | null | perl4ever | null | 1,596,383,841 | "2020-08-02T15:57:21Z" | comment | 24,029,437 | 24,028,884 | null | null | null |
166,925 | null | null | Independence means something else. It means not beholden to certain interests.<p>Simply being in the pocket of the other party (opposition) does not make them independent.<p>(Disclaimer: I don't know if this is the case, simply commenting on the topic of independence) | null | glofish | null | 1,596,383,814 | "2020-08-02T15:56:54Z" | comment | 24,029,434 | 24,028,834 | null | null | null |
166,926 | null | null | As an American, I don't think it's "crippling self-consciousness", we're just trained to think of nudity as sexually provocative in itself. | null | andrewflnr | null | 1,596,383,822 | "2020-08-02T15:57:02Z" | comment | 24,029,435 | 24,026,991 | null | null | null |
166,927 | null | null | - wake up, relax for 30 min<p>- work from home in my pajamas (I love it)<p>- drink 1 Coca Cola Vanilla after work<p>- cook and eat<p>- follow my curiosity online + work on sideprojects<p>- talk with friends/loved ones until I fall asleep<p>- repeat | null | aminozuur | null | 1,596,383,844 | "2020-08-02T15:57:24Z" | comment | 24,029,438 | 24,029,286 | null | null | null |
166,928 | null | null | Recently similar: <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23541949" rel="nofollow">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23541949</a> | null | enimodas | null | 1,596,383,845 | "2020-08-02T15:57:25Z" | comment | 24,029,439 | 24,026,445 | null | null | null |
166,929 | null | null | I've been a member @ HN for quite a while, but I usually just tend to focus in on security and privacy topics. One of my good friends is visiting, and we wanted to work on something challenging together. Both of us find privacy policies overly confusing and annoying, so we decided to tackle the problem. We built a tool that that crawls for privacy policies and uses guided machine learning to analyze them. We would love any feedback you have. | null | michaelaiello | null | 1,320,966,241 | "2011-11-10T23:04:01Z" | comment | 3,222,338 | 3,222,334 | null | null | null |
166,930 | null | null | In my experience, finance scumbags and startup scumbags are different breeds. Finance scumbags are greedy but honest. They believe themselves entitled to own $20 million apartments and will do whatever it takes to get them, but they don't pretend to be anything other than what they are. Startup/tech scumbags (because they're more accountable; Zynga's behavior would be unremarkable coming from Goldman) tend to be a bit better at disguising their intentions. They also tend to care more about power, social access and kingmaking, whereas finance scumbags are purely about money. In my opinion, that makes finance scumbags more respectable (or, I should say, less repulsive).<p>That said, I like technology a lot better. There are always going to be scumbags when there's money, but the difference (IME) is that: (1) there are more normal (non-scumbag) people in tech, probably 85% vs. 70%, (2) the normal people in tech are more interesting and creative, whereas decent people in finance tend to be boring, 9-to-5 types, and (3) technology has a small but sizable number of people who are decent and have entered the upper ranks, whereas there's a glass ceiling that non-scumbags experience in finance (unless they start their own trading firms).<p>I didn't move from finance to technology with the illusion that I'd never have to deal with another asshat. I moved because in technology, it's much more likely that <i>I</i> can succeed (a) in a creative way, and (b) without becoming a scumbag myself. | null | michaelochurch | null | 1,320,966,300 | "2011-11-10T23:05:00Z" | comment | 3,222,339 | 3,221,135 | null | null | null |
166,931 | null | null | The term "big data" stands for the nature of the data Contactive stores, which comes many sources. Most of this data is unstructured and unorganized, and we are able to structure and index it.<p>Every time we get new data, we have to compare it with the existing set. This is done in realtime..<p>So, the fact we have 600+ million identities ready to be queried is the result of having a much bigger dataset were all the non-matched-yet data is stored. | null | julman99 | null | 1,406,563,678 | "2014-07-28T16:07:58Z" | comment | 8,097,591 | 8,096,715 | null | null | null |
166,932 | null | null | Where would you place saying nothing in your hierarchy.<p>I think that saying nothing is better than being right and mean, because being right and mean is usually counter productive and reinforces the wong belief.<p>Humans are simply wired to use aggression as overriding evidence of the person being wrong. If your goal is to change minds, it just doesn't work. | null | s1artibartfast | null | 1,573,327,506 | "2019-11-09T19:25:06Z" | comment | 21,493,681 | 21,493,463 | null | null | null |
166,933 | null | null | I forgot to mention the reason why I left the company about four months after I started. They laid off about half of the developers and told them that they could take their computers as payment instead of their final paycheck if they wanted to. I considered the situation and realized that I might end up not being paid for my time if they were that bad off. I quit the next day and the company went under a couple weeks later. | null | absconditus | null | 1,320,966,186 | "2011-11-10T23:03:06Z" | comment | 3,222,331 | 3,222,284 | null | null | null |
166,934 | null | null | Same here, I haven't gotten any email from Steam.<p>Luckily I also don't have my CC number on my account since I use PayPal. I also enabled authentication via email a while ago so it sends me a code to log in.<p>I guess it's a good idea to change your password and check CC statements either way. | null | jarquesp | null | 1,320,966,196 | "2011-11-10T23:03:16Z" | comment | 3,222,332 | 3,222,290 | null | null | null |
166,935 | null | null | The current rights granted to editorial usage <i>is</i> part of the fair use doctrine of photography. And note that editorial usage does <i>not</i> shield the defendant from real material loss civil suits - it simply shields the use of the imagery by default, and does not excuse the broadcaster/photographer from damages they cause.<p>I simply do not see anything to fix about this. The right to editorial usage is preserved, but if people go around causing material harm, they can, and probably will, get sued.<p>All without getting draconian about anything...<p>> <i>"But it doesn't become a stock photo, and he can't then turn around and sell that photo to Geico who uses it to sell flood insurance."</i><p><i>This is already the state of the law</i>. The use rights granted to <i>editorial</i> use are just that - <i>editorial</i> use. In legal precedent this has included not only traditional journalistic sources, but also artistic and benign, non-commercial use.<p>One thing that <i>has</i> been explicitly determined by previous cases is that commercial usage (stock photography included) is <i>not</i> considered fair editorial usage, and you'd better damn well have a model release if you want to use an image in that context.<p>tl;dr: Everything works as <i>you yourself</i> seem to expect. So where exactly is the outrage and call to reform coming from? | null | potatolicious | null | 1,320,966,199 | "2011-11-10T23:03:19Z" | comment | 3,222,333 | 3,222,270 | null | null | null |
166,936 | null | null | They have a lot of users to email, maybe it's coming? I still haven't anything either. | null | jigs_up | null | 1,320,966,231 | "2011-11-10T23:03:51Z" | comment | 3,222,336 | 3,222,290 | null | null | null |
166,937 | null | null | Is there any popular language, video/audio codec or CPU instruction set that <i>isn't</i> compiled to Javascript these days? | null | huskyr | null | 1,320,966,236 | "2011-11-10T23:03:56Z" | comment | 3,222,337 | 3,221,808 | null | null | null |
166,938 | null | null | If you're not familiar with McMaster-Carr, this Hackaday article is a good introduction: <a href="https://hackaday.com/2017/09/13/noobs-guide-to-mcmaster-carr/" rel="nofollow">https://hackaday.com/2017/09/13/noobs-guide-to-mcmaster-carr...</a><p>Besides the handy website, their many-thousand page phsyical catalog is great. We have a copy at work and it's easy to spend a long time flipping through, learning about all of the different things they have, and why they are useful.<p>Here is Adam Savage talking about why their catalog is awesome: <a href="https://youtu.be/8kbu34dk92s" rel="nofollow">https://youtu.be/8kbu34dk92s</a> | null | jstrieb | null | 1,664,146,565 | "2022-09-25T22:56:05Z" | comment | 32,977,266 | 32,976,978 | null | null | null |
166,939 | null | null | iOS also has a call blocking and identification interface apps can hook into. I haven't found a good spam call blocker app though. | null | wilg | null | 1,573,327,501 | "2019-11-09T19:25:01Z" | comment | 21,493,680 | 21,493,548 | null | null | null |
166,940 | null | null | <i>> For better or for worse, these types of distribution agreements are fundamental to how the media industry works.</i><p>They are not fundamental at all. <i>They are PRed as such</i>. Yet, counter examples of DRM-free distribution disprove any need for them.<p><i>> It's likely not changing any time soon because as you said, it makes the owners of this IP a lot of money.</i><p>It can change depending on competition. Advance of crowdfunding helps artists and independent studios to release their works without involvement of thick-skulled publishers who drag this DRM insanity into the distribution. Most indie releases are DRM-free. One can ponder why that is. They also need to make money, so one can't claim they have less business sense than legacy publishers.<p>For example, in computer games there are more and more DRM-free releases coming out each year. And this already includes funded by publishers, and not just indie games. With more competition releasing something DRM-free, there would be more reasons for publishers to change their attitude. With movie industry that doesn't happen yet because competition is still weak. Most publishers are a tight conglomerate of related companies which follow the same policies and agree on common terms. It can be enough for one strong disruptor to break that situation. | null | shmerl | null | 1,400,184,195 | "2014-05-15T20:03:15Z" | comment | 7,751,865 | 7,751,843 | null | null | null |
166,941 | null | null | I also do not understand his<p>"We actually have real _problems_ due to this in the kernel, where people use "off_t", and it's not easily printk'able across different architectures (we used to have this same problem with size_t)."<p>I see the problem with printk, but giving up the ability to typedef architecture-dependent types such as size_t because of it? The proper reaction, IMO, would have been to fix printk. Given that gcc already checks compatibility between format strings and arguments, it should not be that hard to add a special format character (say %?), and have the compiler replace it by a correct character for the argument passed. | null | Someone | null | 1,287,092,355 | "2010-10-14T21:39:15Z" | comment | 1,792,749 | 1,790,993 | null | null | null |
166,942 | null | null | That's not really a plastic way to look at it. One of the highest predictor of success (in both entrepreneurship and life) is "rolling with the punches". So if life handles you lemon? Make a tea, and get the best of it.<p>You're a twenty-something. Your larger window of opportunity to "get your own thing going" is a direct function of, well if not age, then exactly things like this that builds up experience, connections, and exposure to pressure-intensive situations, <i>that you will wish you had</i> whenever you decide to strike out on your own.<p>Despite what you read on HN, there is really no rush. So use this opportunity as a stepping stone upwards, wherever it leads. | null | sdrinf | null | 1,287,092,353 | "2010-10-14T21:39:13Z" | comment | 1,792,748 | 1,790,733 | null | null | null |
166,943 | null | null | There are dozens of competitive providers in major cities, and many people subscribe to multiple (I buy broadband from Verizon (LTE) and TWC (cablemodem)).<p>Even small cities usually have a cable, dsl, and wireless option. The smallest rural cities I'm thinking of offer WiMax or some kind of similar service which is cheaper than cable for many customers. | null | grandalf | null | 1,400,184,123 | "2014-05-15T20:02:03Z" | comment | 7,751,860 | 7,751,021 | null | null | null |
166,944 | null | null | Works really nicely, and great interface. Keep iterating, I'll test it with my friends for you | null | jdross | null | 1,297,925,666 | "2011-02-17T06:54:26Z" | comment | 2,230,118 | 2,227,646 | null | null | null |
166,945 | null | null | When science is done behind closed doors with bouncers keeping out non-members, what other option do we have? | null | Groxx | null | 1,297,925,675 | "2011-02-17T06:54:35Z" | comment | 2,230,119 | 2,229,768 | null | null | null |
166,946 | null | null | I loved the site and completely agree with the "under $5" suggestion. It makes the user's life easier | null | Rariel | null | 1,297,925,592 | "2011-02-17T06:53:12Z" | comment | 2,230,116 | 2,229,802 | null | null | null |
166,947 | null | null | I believe this comes down to interfaces. It's fair to assume that programmers will have greater ease in a UNIX command line environment after overcoming the learning curve. On the other hand, standard user would be better off interfacing with a GUI as it is superior to command line for tasks that are different than a developers. Data creation vs. Data consumption. | null | wopsky | null | 1,297,925,497 | "2011-02-17T06:51:37Z" | comment | 2,230,114 | 2,229,833 | null | null | null |
166,948 | null | null | s/Scsh is something/Guile is something/ | null | chalst | null | 1,297,925,481 | "2011-02-17T06:51:21Z" | comment | 2,230,112 | 2,226,500 | null | null | null |
166,949 | null | null | Does anyone want to trim down that hyperbolic 887-word rant into a concise bug report? I just don't have the energy to do it myself. Something about Remote.app on OS 3.1.x? That's as far as I could get. | null | thought_alarm | null | 1,297,925,484 | "2011-02-17T06:51:24Z" | comment | 2,230,113 | 2,229,778 | null | null | null |
166,950 | null | null | If the point you just made was a person, I think I'd walk alongside him for 3/4 of a mile, and then stop right there. Do some people have trouble staying organized? Of course. Are they hopeless lost causes whom technology can't help? That's going too far.<p>The productivity field is an interesting area where, if you want to build something great, you need to do some real research on human behavior and psychology. If you had the world's most delicious ice cream, I doubt you'd try selling it in Siberia. Nor would you sell balloons at a funeral. Or cars without gas in the tank. So what's troubling is, plenty of people make seemingly-great productivity tools, and then promptly ignore obvious issues... like the fact that people tend to lose motivation over time. There's a reason we're building Taskforce in the inbox, and it's not because we're hopping on the "email overload" bandwagon.<p>We think that with enough intelligently-directed effort, we can create something that really does make people better at what they want to do. | null | csallen | null | 1,297,925,388 | "2011-02-17T06:49:48Z" | comment | 2,230,110 | 2,228,892 | null | null | null |
166,951 | null | null | Similarly I've often wondered if it results in hotter coffee to mix your milk with the coffee when it goes into the thermos, rather than when it comes out. I'm pretty sure it is better to do it this way - my reasoning is that the hotter black coffee, because of a greater temperature difference with the surroundings, loses heat more rapidly through the thermos walls than the milk + coffee mixture. But I'm unsure how significant the effect is. Perhaps I'll measure it some time. | null | phaedrus | null | 1,297,925,473 | "2011-02-17T06:51:13Z" | comment | 2,230,111 | 2,229,758 | null | null | null |
166,952 | null | null | It doesn't matter as far as errors go though.<p>There should not be any errors, period.<p>Yes, you can find mitigating factors, whatever. But that the end of the day we want to reduce all errors. | null | ars | null | 1,462,381,933 | "2016-05-04T17:12:13Z" | comment | 11,629,811 | 11,629,673 | null | null | null |