What are the most upvoted users of Hacker News commenting on? Powered by the /leaders top 50 and updated every thirty minutes. Made by @jamespotterdev.
The term I know / used for this is "trivial inconveniences", via an old article of Scott Alexander[0].
The quote from example from early in the article stuck with me for years:
Think about this for a second. The human longing for freedom of information is a terrible and wonderful thing. It delineates a pivotal difference between mental emancipation and slavery. It has launched protests, rebellions, and revolutions. Thousands have devoted their lives to it, thousands of others have even died for it. And it can be stopped dead in its tracks by requiring people to search for "how to set up proxy" before viewing their anti-government website.
(Now this is more poetic, but I suppose the much more insightful example that also stuck with me is given later - companies enticing you to buy by offering free money, knowing well that most customers can't be arsed to fill out a form to actually get that money.)
--
[0] - https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/reitXJgJXFzKpdKyd/beware-tri...
It is now, but back then it was 1 byte, with typical resolutions being 800x600. There were high-color modes but for a period it was rare to have good enough hardware for it.
Would Kamala have invaded Greenland? No, of course not, and you know it.
Plenty of people wouldn't even count her as "left".
Search "ciliary spasm".
I think the game is bugged. I placed a green chip on another green chip and it didn't capture, and when I asked about it, the LLMs said the bottom chip was yellow, not green.
There seem to be some state management issues, which make this game fairly unplayable. Too bad, because it's an interesting idea.
> The US is providing security guarantees to Qatar? When did the Senate vote on those?
Treaties aren't the only mechanism of security guarantees.
https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/09/assu...
I guess we find out how much of this is cult of personality and how much is just the propaganda system.
Great article, although some history bits are missing, that might be interesting.
DirectX was the second attempt, during Windows 3.x days a first attempt to bring game devs away from MS-DOS into Windows was made with WinG, an API that is almost impossible to search for nowadays, unless one knows where to look for.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WinG
https://archive.org/details/WING10
https://www.gamedeveloper.com/programming/a-whirlwind-tour-o...
Vulkan is not available on the PlayStation, and the support on the Switch is mainly for porting purposes, the main API is NVN.
Amiga's Agnus and AGA were baby GPUs already with programmable steps, even if rather basic.
On the arcades there was TMS34010 as one of the first programmable chips for graphics.
Santa Clara County had an active cloud-seeding program from 1954 through 1994.[1] Santa Clara County used to be a major agricultural area. The goal is not to create rain, but to move it. Get the clouds to dump over the agricultural areas instead of the inland mountains. It worked, a little. But there was a concern that it was making wildfires worse, by doing what it was intended to do and thus making the inland forests more dry.
[1] https://s3.us-west-1.amazonaws.com/valleywater.org.us-west-1...
Isn't the stock one open-source? Even if it isn't, Java is really trivial to decompile reversibly, and removing features is much easier than adding. Take advantage of Android the way it was meant to be taken advantage of.
Much less indeed, not all Webpack plugins capabilities are supported and now anyone that wants to make one has to learn Rust, which surely isn't the same as writing it in JavaScript.
The splitting communities effect always gets left out of these announcements, or gets positioned as something good.
Who is this badge for? It's so low-resolution it's not going to get used on any printed media and probably not on any websites either.
In this use case, the robot autonomously picked totes from a storage stack, transported them to a conveyor, and placed them at the designated pickup point for human operators.
Well, yes, you can use a humanoid robot for that, but there are far simpler robotic solutions. There are lots of systems for handling standardized totes.
It was also much easier to import cheap unlocked phones from abroad when the whole world used at most 4 frequency bands. Now there's several dozen and I don't think even the most expensive flagship phones support all of them.
To paraphrase a common phrase I've seen around here: The "G" in "LTE" stands for "global".
> I think it's just a small segment of terminally online people that are still hardcore supporters.
On HN alone there are thousands of Trump supporters. It's completely insane because you'd think that they have zero excuses but it does not make any difference at all.
Six months ago they most likely couldn't point out Greenland or Denmark on a map and now they have many opinions and all of them are informed by the same crazy reasonings.
I've been doing lots, but I'm not in the USA, thankfully. Everybody is able to do something, something concrete and useful, you just have to figure out what that something is and then go do it. It may cost you though.
And you're disappointed. Just like me.
You sure about that? Look up Visible, Mint Mobile, Total Wireless, US Mobile, Tello... Same carrier networks, same quality of service. You can even pay a bit extra for prioritized data and other fancy features. You can get basic unlimited plans for $15-30 and premium plans in the $30-50 range vs $100+ at the big carriers. The only difference is that you aren't paying for your "free" phone.
> Both were bad options. Few expected a Trump administration would simultaneously be this unhinged and impactful this time around
He led an insurrection against our Constitution. He went along with folks who legitimately aimed to murder Senators.
Venezuela voted for Chavez. Gaza for Hamas. America for Trump.
I'm sure that this 50 years deceased guy is still promoting the progress of science and useful arts from his grave.
Also useful for things like DPoP: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc9449
Gerrymandering, money in politics, the electoral college, disproportional representation, failing checks and balances.
This isn't going to be solved in a decade, probably not even a couple of decades.
The speed of light is most frustrating. I find myself alternately wishing it was infinite or slowed down to 'disc world speeds' depending on which of the two would make my current project easier.
> It's symbolism
It’s not. If we go to war with Denmark, there is a real chance we sanction them as well.
> same goes for the literary canon that college professors claim as a requirement for real literacy. It's all despair at the perceived loss of status in society
Strongly disagree. I say this as someone who went to a state school and didn’t start reading literature until well after college.
The classics are classics for good reason. Even if one can’t learn to appreciate them, they’re critical for understanding entire epochs of political thought and history. It would be like trying to navigate modern retail politics while ignoring memes.
> a political group seeking SSA data to overturn election results
Guesses as to what they were looking for?
Old Soviet joke:
Under capitalism, man exploits man. Under socialism, it's the other way around!
In other arid areas, people use terracing on hills so the water runoff is slowed and the water can soak into the aquifers. Also, dikes are built around fields to hold the water and also let it soak into the ground.
Are these done in California?
This has been gospel among snooty network engineers for decades, but NAT was initially introduced to the wider market as a security feature, and it is absolutely a material factor in securing networks. The network engineers are wrong about this.
(IPv6 is still good for lots of other reasons, and NAT isn't good security; just material.)
It's the same as how Android is technically open but the vast majority of users are getting the Google version.
Anyone remember the game Leisure Suit Larry? To get the full 18+ experience, you had to answer five trivia questions that only adults should know. But it turns out smart teens who like trivia knew most of them too (and you could just ask mom and dad, they had no clue why you were asking which President appeared on Laugh In).
Most people, including people who work professionally with computers, spend more time per day looking at their phones than they do at their screens.
I expect people are VERY sensitive to mobile phone screen quality, to the point that it's a big factor in phone choice.
It does rain in deserts, California isn't mostly desert (about 38% by land area), and drought is defined relative to normal rainfall, so even a place that usually has very low rainfall can have droughts.
What is the advantage of using VMware Workstation Pro for this as opposed to using WSL2?
And is the only state with no drought right now. Although they way they figure it is a bit biased -- it's based on how much water there is compared to historical values, so it's easier to be "drought free" if you've been in a drought for a while.
At first glance this looks like a credible set of calculations to me. Here's the conclusion:
> So, if I wanted to analogize the energy usage of my use of coding agents, it’s something like running the dishwasher an extra time each day, keeping an extra refrigerator, or skipping one drive to the grocery store in favor of biking there.
That's for someone spending about $15-$20 in a day on Claude Code, estimated at the equivalent of 4,400 "typical queries" to an LLM.
If Trump decides to go pull the plug on invading Greenland an uses the 11th Airborne, McBride would, I would assume, at a minimum, be relieved of his duties with the 11th Airborne and sent back to Canada, with either a subordinate ops staff officer or the Deputy Commanding General (Support) or some combination filling in for the duties of the Deputy Commanding General (Operations).
Depending on the details of timing of the operation and the US-Canada diplomatic situation as a result, what happens after he is relieved might not be as simple as a return to Canada, he might conceivably even end up as a POW.
> technical analysis of the stock
AKA pictures in clouds
This is a neat brute-force search system - it uses goroutines, one for each of the 1,200 books in the corpus, and has each one do a regex search against the in-memory text for that book.
Here's a neat trick I picked up from the source code:
indices := fdr.rgx.FindAllStringSubmatchIndex(text, -1)
for _, pair := range indices {
start := pair[0]
end := pair[1]
leftStart := max(0, start-CONTEXT_LENGTH)
rightEnd := min(end+CONTEXT_LENGTH, len(text))
// TODO: this doesn't work with Unicode
if start > 0 && isLetter(text[start-1]) {
continue
}
if end < len(text) && isLetter(text[end]) {
continue
}
An earlier comment explains this: // The '\b' word boundary regex pattern is very slow. So we don't use it here and
// instead filter for word boundaries inside `findConcordance`.
// TODO: case-insensitive matching - (?i) flag (but it's slow)
pattern := regexp.QuoteMeta(keyword)
So instead of `\bWORD\b` it does the simplest possible match and then checks to see if the character one index before the match and or one index after the matches are also letters. If they are it skips the match.
> Representatives can draft articles of impeached for the President.
Trump has been impeached twice. Even if you could get enough Republicans in the House on board to do so a third time (the GOP holds a majority in both houses of Congress), the threshold of 2/3 of the Senate to convict and remove is far out of reach; there aren't enough Republicans that aren't die-hard Trump loyalists (there are rumors that an actual armed invasion of Greenland might change that, but those kind of rumors of opposition often turn out to be overblown when situations materialize, with a decisive number Republicans offering some criticism and then finding an excuse to oppose actual action.)
> Senators can start impeaching various Secretaries
No, Senators cannot start impeachment, which regardless of which officers subject to it are targeted must start in the House. And the same problems which face impeachment of the President apply here.
> Where are all these much-vaunted "checks and balances" that I've been hearing about for so long?
They rely on the same malign faction not controlling both political branches as well as dominating the Supreme Court at the same time. Unfortunately...
The external power supply bricks aren't much better. I've had a few 27" LG 4k monitors, and the ones with a brick seem to fail more frequently (in the monitor, brick was fine).
I bought a launch LG UltraFine 5K that was in the batch of defective units but I was too lazy to return it. Somehow, it's held up just fine a decade later; only color bleeding is an issue.
This is a fun open problem. We've got stuff coming for it (don't want to hijack the thread, though).
Related:
Sega co-founder David Rosen has died - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46502239 - January 2026 (37 comments)
David Rosen, co-founder of Sega, has died - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46497897 - January 2026 (0 comments)
Based on just this article, it seems far most likely to me that it was a place to hide during an attack.
> And while three brave explorers in the 21st century once spent 48 hours in an erdstall, crawling to new sections whenever oxygen became scarce, it seems unlikely that they would have been constructed as hiding places, even temporary ones. Though they could have provided refuge for a small family, why would they be accessed from such public spaces?
I don't see why a whole bunch of people couldn't have hidden in them for several hours during an attack/raid? A hiding spot sufficiently known to a few, just big enough. And then it makes perfect sense the entrance would be in some central public place.
> The lack of exits is a further strike against this theory—if enemies became aware of such a tunnel being used as shelter, it would quickly become a death trap for its inhabitants.
Which would contribute to their extreme secrecy. And the loops and dead ends and narrow spots make it all the harder for attackers to pursue you even if they find it.
> Besides, in either of these cases, one would expect at least some goods to have been left behind—remnants of food or clothing, cached or dropped valuables. Instead, there is nothing.
If they were intended for hiding for just a few hours, since oxygen would run out anyways, it makes sense for nothing to be left in there. You rush in and come back out when the raiders have moved on. Clothing was valuable, you weren't going to leave your shawl behind.
I've never worked as a lobbyist. I'll also point out that nobody who works for Google/Meta/etc. "discloses" that fact, even though those companies have a vested financial interest in commoditizing broadband as layer below their services: https://gwern.net/complement. Folks on HN have a strong financial industry in turning telecom infrastructure into “dumb pipes” so their employers can capture the quasi-monopoly profits at the next level up.
Also, the accusation I post on HN for self interest is hilarious. If that was true I’d pretend to be a liberal.
XPath may have "failed" for general use but it's generally well-enough supported that I can find a library in the common languages I've used when I went looking for it. In some ways the hard part is just knowing it exists so you can use it if you need it.
Canada simply needs to allow Chinese and European military bases on their land to defend against the US. You don’t need Canadian kids with guns, you need allies with weapons systems to defend against land and air attacks (with of course some soldiers trained to operate those weapons systems).
Note when discussing US politics:
This is the Whitehouse: https://www.whitehouse.senate.gov/
This is the White House: https://www.whitehouse.gov/
They are not the same.
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/trump-plays-down-consequenc...
Now, Trump is an opportunist and in the psat his talk of default has been a way to throw rhetorical stones at his political opponents and keep himself in the news while he was out of office. Back in office, he has sought to project some kind of commitment to fiscal responsibility and financial stability.
But let's be real here, he's making threats against a fellow NATO member on the daily and openly saying he wants to annex territory. If he gets it into his head that the Danes or the EU are being mean to him and hurting his fee-fees, he's fully capable of responding in irrational fashion and has a toxic personality cult that will back him up. Be honest, if I took this month's headlines and took a time machine a year into the past, would 2025 you have believed my warnings about what would be happening 1 year into the second Trump admin?
You are so far out from understanding why pension funds put money in foreign government paper that I'm not sure where to begin explaining it. But the key is simply portfolio diversification. Institutional investors have access to a very large number of options on where, how and for how long they want to park their money that it isn't some kind of forced move to put their money in US Treasuries.
It's just a way to hedge their bets. In the larger scheme of things $100B isn't all that much (it may be to you, but even a small trading desk of a mid sized bank or multinational, say Royal Dutch Shell, or such) have access to that kind of money. They are not going to take the chance that Donald Trump on Monday morning, after eating a bad burger the night before, decides to unleash the might of the US military on their territory and be left holding the bag.
One downside of running a trade deficit with the rest of the world is that they have you by the short and curlies; if they dump your paper you will have to buy it back as fast as they can dump it to avoid a crash of your currency. That can get expensive really quickly.
General strikes. Technically these are illegal when called by unions under the Taft-HArtley act, but if done at the popular level they can grind the country to a halt. But mass protest is the most effective way to bring down a corrupt government, and doesn't require waiting for an election and being disappointed by another round of political scams.
oh that isn't possible to organize No with that attitude
authorities will brutalize the protestors freedom isn't free
Americans are too comfortable/lazy to do mass political protest Well we'll see whether that's true I guess.
what if this leads to civil war If the alternative is corruption and tyranny, maybe that's a fight worth having. Authoritarian governments do not historically reach a point where they say 'well that's enough tyranny, let's not get carried away lest history think ill of us.'
One of my formative experiences was the summer between undergrad and grad school where I worked at the supermarket I worked at in high school. They weren't really hiring but they wanted to make a space for me so I answered directly to the store manager and did whatever random thing they needed when they needed it.
Paint a metal strip around the store? Yes.
Deep clean the whole floor? Yes.
Learn to work the meat slicer and fill in at the Deli? Yes.
Somebody from the bakery is out sick? I've got your back.
It's been a pet peeve for me working in startups that a lot of younger people haven't had that kind of experience so they are hung up on job titles and stuff and don't just think "it's a small team so I'm going to do what the team needs"
I've learned to see that the value of my work is the value it has to my organization delivered by the team I am working in so I adjust accordingly. I can't say there is one thing to do that works all the time but rather you improvise and see what works with the people you are working with. If there is somebody who reviews your PRs for instance it is going to go smooth if you meet their expectations as opposed to what you think their expectations ought to be. Decide what boundaries you want to enforce and what you can't compromise on but be flexible about everything you can be flexible about.
Understand the contradiction between "doing what people need" and "doing what people want" and not be afraid to rub people the wrong way if you really have to while not promoting any excess antagonism. (It isn't easy!)
One of the best managers I ever had integrated me into a team by tasking me with completing a late project on a nearly impossible schedule and giving us all the understanding that I was supposed to ask for and get all the support I needed. We pulled it off and it was better than any "team building" exercise I've been in. (e.g. there are great ideas in "team building" as much the execution is often cringe.)
Are these LLM-generated causes of death? There are a couple startups here where I'm somewhat familiar with the "real" causes of death and the stated cause here is just fluff.
I used vi first in 1993 on Xenix, master it enough to use when nothing else is available, still not convinced.
People spend more money on sillier things on a regular basis.
I came to really appreciate React over time.
My initial objections were: (a) circa 2006 I was making very demanding RIAs such as knowledge graph editors and GIS decision support software and I've yet to see any modern framework that is as good as what I was using then (not in JS but rather GWT and Silverlight w/ the same async comms) and (b) the React model is not a 100% match for the form-based applications that we usually write with it (but boy do I love react-hook-form)
React is like the code in Graham's On Lisp [1] in that functional programming is used to create a sort of DSL. There are a lot of ways to implement reactivity that usually require a special interpreter (spreadsheets) or compiler (Svelte). React's system does show seams (you really need to be on top of identity and equality) but it is remarkably simple.
React shines, in my mind, for things that aren't form applications. For instance, VR applications with AFrame -- it's somewhere between VRML and Unity. I am working on a (mainly) heart rate variability biofeedback application [2] and it is so easy to make dashboards that display real-time metrics as well as Poincare sections and time series. That is, I can slap together a few data processing functions and widgets and make a new dashboard with new metrics and charts or new sensors. One goal is to get it working on a tablet in a two player version.
The disadvantage of React is that it does not work so well for highly dynamic layouts. In my case I have a library of functions to "fetch" the data stream and put them into the top of the component (may even package as hooks) and then put the layout together with JSX. I'd like to have a version where the user can drag and drop the components to make a custom layout and the system figures out the dependencies for the data fetching, preparation and processing like the things I made in 2006 and that kind of application with a dynamic layout (think programs like Photoshop with lots of different little widgets and property sheets) wants a different approach to reactivity.
[1] use of macros in that book is a red herring, the one example in it where you really need macros is when he is implementing cooperative multitasking, a feature that Python and Javascript already have -- most examples from that book as with Norvig's Lisp book can be coded up just fine with
[2] see https://github.com/paulhoule/VulpusVision it might "just work" if you npm install, npm run dev, and look at it in Chrome and connect with a Polar H10 or other BT monitor
Rust the language knows nothing about allocations. It’s purely a library concern.
> Shit is getting bad out in the actual software economy. Cash registers that have to be rebooted twice a day. Inventory systems that randomly drop orders. Claims forms filled with clearly “AI”-sourced half-finished localisation strings. That’s just what I’ve heard from people around me this week. I see more and more every day.
What? You can't argue "if the software is shitty, it must be vibe coded." People have been writing shit software with low standards since before 2023.
Because most Americans don't care about what's going on in the rest of the world and basically just care about inflation: https://harvardharrispoll.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/HHP... (p. 16). Even after everything, a majority of Americans say Trump is doing a better job than Biden, who had worse inflation on his watch (p. 18).
Americans don't care because they don't have to. In Germany, 40-45% of GDP is exports: https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/NE.EXP.GNFS.ZS?location.... In the U.S., it's just 10-11%: https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/NE.EXP.GNFS.ZS?location.... Exports to the EU are just over 1% of GDP. To put that into perspective, if exports evaporated completely, that would wipe out just three years of American GDP-per-capita growth. For Germany, it would wipe out more than two decades of GDP per capita growth.
That not only means that 90% of America's economy is domestic. It means that most people have no exposure to the rest of the world through their workplaces. To the extent they do, that experience is with Canada and Mexico--we have twice as much trade with those countries as with the EU. Canada and Mexico have essentially zero meaningful leverage over the U.S. So even for the relatively few Americans who have some exposure to the rest of the world, most of their exposure is to relationships where America is the utterly dominant party.
With that name, I was wondering if this is SFW initially.
For something like this, where you need durability, lightness, and heat resistance, you just can't be at ABS. If your printer can't print it, I think it's worth getting it printed somewhere else (after prototyping with other materials). Just the reduced weight alone will be worth it, let alone the fact that ABS is nigh indestructible.
China has been divesting for the last nine months, and continues to do so.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-12-18/foreign-h... | https://archive.today/4pfum
Loads of people do this! It's a big part of why accommodation is so expensive in major cities! It's just that it requires capital upfront, many have a degree filter, and it's still easy for the number of young people to outpace the available jobs.
> What if someone (could be an individual or even an uncoordinated group) bets millions of dollars on you not doing X, in the hopes of you taking the opposite bet and doing X?
From their POV, that's the purest form of voting with money. If you do X, they're presumably happy with the outcome they just paid for; if you do the opposite of X, they at least have their payouts as consolation prize.
What "user-triggered censorship" are you talking about?
Treat it as a pair programmer. Ask it questions like "How do I?", "When I do X, Y happens, why is that?", "I think Z, prove me wrong" or "I want to do P, how do you think we should do it?"
Feed it little tasks (30 s-5 min) and if you don't like this or that about the code it gives you either tell it something like
Rewrite the selection so it uses const, ? and :
or edit something yourself and say I edited what you wrote to make it my own, what do you think about my changes?
If you want to use it as a junior dev who gets sent off to do tickets and comes back with a patch three days later that will fail code review be my guest, but I greatly enjoy working with a tight feedback loop.
About a year ago I had some code I had been working on for about a year subject to a pretty heavy-duty security review by a reputable review company. When they asked what language I implemented it in and I told them "Go", they joked that half their job was done right there.
While Go isn't perfect and you can certainly write some logic bugs that sufficiently clever use of a more strongly-typed language might let you avoid (though don't underestimate what sufficiently clever use of what Go already has can do for you either when wielded with skill), it has a number of characteristics that keep it somewhat safer than a lot of other languages.
First, it's memory safe in general, which obviously out of the gate helps a lot. You can argue about some super, super fringe cases with unprotected concurrent access to maps, but you're still definitely talking about something on the order of .1% to .01% of the surface area of C.
Next, many of the things that people complain about Go on Hacker News actually contribute to general safety in the code. One of the biggest ones is that it lacks any ability to take an string and simply convert it to a type, which has been the source of catastrophic vulnerabilities in Ruby [1] and Java (Log4Shell), among others. While I use this general technique quite frequently, you have to build your own mechanism for it (not a big deal, we're talking ~50 lines of code or so tops) and that mechanism won't be able to use any class (using general terminology, Go doesn't have "classes" but user-defined types fill in here) that wasn't explicitly registered, which sharply contains the blast radius of any exploit. Plus a lot of the exploits come from excessively clever encoding of the class names; generally when I simply name them and simply do a single lookup in a single map there isn't a lot of exploit wiggle room.
In general though it lacks a lot of the features that get people in trouble that aren't related to memory unsafety. Dynamic languages as a class start out behind the eight-ball on this front because all that dynamicness makes it difficult to tell exactly what some code might do with some input; goodness help you if there's a path to the local equivalent of "eval".
Go isn't entirely unique in this. Rust largely shares the same characteristics, there's some others that may qualify. But some other languages you might expect to don't; for instance, at least until recently Java had a serious problem with being able to get references to arbitrary classes via strings, leading to Log4Shell, even though Java is a static language. (I believe they've fixed that since then but a lot of code still has to have the flag to flip that feature back on because they depend on it in some fundamental libraries quite often.) Go turns out to be a relatively safe security language to write in compared to the landscape of general programming languages in common use. I add "in common use" and highlight it here because I don't think it's anywhere near optimal in the general landscape of languages that exist, nor the landscape of languages that ought to exist and don't yet. For instance in the latter case I'd expect capabilities to be built in to the lowest layer of a language, which would further do great, great damage to the ability to exploit such code. However no such language is in common use at this time. Pragmatically when I need to write something very secure today, Go is surprisingly high on my short list; theoretically I'm quite dissatisfied.
[1]: https://blog.trailofbits.com/2025/08/20/marshal-madness-a-br...
Yes, agentic coding works and has massive value. No, you can't just deploy code unreviewed.
Still takes much less time for me to review the plan and output than write the code myself.
Like the homage.
I did spend quite a few afternoons with the Amiga version, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tcry314I7Ro
Unfortunely modern sims require top cards, which spoils the fun.
I think there is no point to hurry with AI features. Already I see glimmers of the future, like when I am at the library and ask Siri "Where do I find books about martial arts in the library of congress system?" and it punts to ChatGPT and tells me "GV1100-GV1198"
It will become a better and more integrated experience over time.
The thing is that we are in this Windows 8 moment where AI progress is being pushed by FOMO on the part of vendors and not pulled by customer demand and that's OK.
>His photographic memory manifested itself early — he would amuse his parents’ friends by instantly memorizing pages of phone books on command.
https://medium.com/young-spurs/the-unsung-genius-of-john-von...
I wonder if in Apple's skunkworks there's a never-to-be-released software/hardware NanoOn/NanoOff function....
https://jisho.org/search/queen : which word did you mean?
The translator's curse of a language having lots of synonyms, the subtleties of which don't map directly on to English. None of those seem particularly similar to queen/kvinne?
At least one guy had their ~ rm -rf'ed.
https://old.reddit.com/r/ClaudeAI/comments/1pgxckk/claude_cl...
The original game which probably inspired this, also worked on the 8-bit Atari: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F-15_Strike_Eagle_(video_game)
(a rare non-strategy Sid Meier game!)
Anthropic is a dictionary word already: https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/anthropic
of or relating to human beings
or the period of their existence
on earth
This is a big topic in disability rights activism; there are a lot of people who can do some work some of the time, with a certain level of accommodation, and would benefit from so doing.
But that's not how the system works. It forces everyone into binary categorizations, with the aim of removing help if at all possible. So it becomes economically necessary for people to present themselves as helpless and stay away from work or even volunteering, because doing so jeopardizes their means of surviving the bureaucracy.
> The challenge is, some people (most) get stuck on some emotional thing, and will drain you dry if you try to even engage with them on it. It’s especially prevalent right now.
Yup. I've long learned to suppress my problem-solver nature because "people want to be heard", but then what it gets is turning me into a sounding board for people who get stuck on something indefinitely. It's easy to not jump in with solutions the first time you hear a story, but it's much harder when you hear the exact same story, with exact same underlying emotion, dozen+ times in the span of a few months. The other side is clearly not really processing their emotions - so if not that, and not practical advice, then what's the point of even talking about it?
It's really draining and in some cases I'm not in a position to disengage either.
I really don't understand Tailwind. I heard great things about it, and then I tried it and it seemed like setting style="" on all elements, but with extra steps.
Did we go off semantic CSS and returned to setting properties on each element, or was I using it wrong?
I just tried a few launchers and none of them forced a search bar (or do you mean not on the home screen?). In fact, in Lawnchair and Octopi, I had to manually add a search bar if I wanted one.
Once your exploit machine is good enough, you can start using stolen credentials to mine more exploits. This is going to be the new version of malware installing bitcoin miners.
Neither of those is going to be obsolete in 5 years. Might get rebadged and a bunch of extensions, but there's such a huge install base that rapid change is unlikely. Neither Firewire nor Thunderbolt unseated USB.
s/embodied/embedded/, and this is how LLMs understand.
As others already mentioned, the secret is that arithmetic is done on vector in high-dimensional space. The meaning of concepts is in how they relate to each other, and high dimensional spaces end up being a surprisingly good representation.
Apart from Toyotas, hybrids are kind of unpopular precisely because they're a compromise. Not many people who do make the switch to EV go back.
Additional tipping points will come when cities start banning combustion engines on emissions grounds. Then gas stations start closing. After a while you get the reverse condition to EV range anxiety: having to drive further and further out of your way to fill up. Maybe you get a script-flipping service, an EV comes to the few remaining unconverted combustion vehicles with a small bowser of fuel.
Later models were quite interesting as well - the last one was a PowerPC workstation with an s390 board.
Until recently, I've been a smog-skeptic; I figured it must be an overblown issue, as regardless of what the digital sensors and pretty graphs say, having spent almost my entire life in Kraków, I never saw it, never felt it. Still don't. Air in Kraków feels perfectly fine to me. And every time I saw someone complain, it was because of "see the PM2.5 PM10 thru the roof omg zomg!", not any actual health-related issues or discomfort.
What changed my mind about the whole thing was my kids. I may not feel the particulates in the air, but my kids do, especially my eldest daughter (who has early childhood asthma, in remission) - winter comes, particulates go up, they start coughing uncontrollably all day. Particulates go down, suddenly they're healthy again (+/- running nose).
I have limited sympathy for conspiracy theories, and very little for those burning trash in their homes, but I do understand where the smog-skepticism comes from. I still remember when Krakowski Alarm Smogowy became a thing, winter 2012; back then, this felt like a huge fad pushed by young activists on the Internet.
It was the crash of the stock markets that eventually created the social situation that pushed people into WW.
Good thing no one ever invented a way to transport invading forces and equipment across a body of water that doesn't rely on sea transports.
It's things like this "super impactful!!!" style it has:
> Enter Claude Code 2.0.
> The UX had evolved. The harness is more flexible and robust. Bugs are fixed. But that's all secondary.
It's OK for emphasis on some things, but when you see it on every blog, it's a bit much.
Plus, I dislike that everything is lists with LLMs, it's another thing that you just start seeing everywhere.
Ah, thank you, that's why I couldn't find it on the site.
It was ahead of its time, now we have people shipping Electron all over the place.
It was fought by the South over slavery and by the North over federal power. Both sides were fairly explicit about this at the time.
Of course, long after the fact, popular opinion on slavery has moved enough that people like to pretend the side that they prefer fought primarily for the opposite reason; the South over (opposition to) federal power and the North over (opposition to) slavery.
Unfortunately they are all over the place on corporate code.
The real problem is service providers that you are somehow forced to use that will in turn use AI for various data extraction. They are effectively gatewaying your data to the AI companies and not all of them are sufficiently transparent about this. Mobile phone companies, rental agencies and various other service providers in turn are part of the funnel.