HN Leaders

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.

toomuchtodo ranked #24 [karma: 104892]
stavros ranked #46 [karma: 75230]

Does Photos have features you use that Immich doesn't? I've switched to the latter fully and love it (though I have an Android).

steveklabnik ranked #28 [karma: 96819]

Not your parent, but there are two ways:

1. If you use a custom deleter, then there's extra stuff to store that. this isn't common, and this API isn't available in Rust, so... not the best argument here.

2. There's ABI requirements that cause it to be passed in memory, see here for details: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/58339165/why-can-a-t-be-...

JumpCrisscross ranked #7 [karma: 174906]

> The sheer brazenness of calling legitimate congressional oversight 'circus-like publicity stunts' is on a whole new level

Is it? I feel like the mud slinging has been in vogue for a few decades.

The willful lawbreaking is new. But the rhetoric feels familiar.

> point do the MAGA folks realize that they are enabling a future Democrat in the White House to do the exact same thing

None of them do. (To be fair, administrations have been expanding the Presidenxy since WWII. We never had a Constitutional discussion of strategic nuclear command or a standing superpower’s army.)

My pet projects are shredding federal student loan records, tearing the turbines out of coal plants and ceasing enforcement on tariffs and duties on all imported food on day one.

userbinator ranked #35 [karma: 87629]

Rounded corners are ironically symbolic of the dumbing-down that's affected the software industry. Instead of the sharp precision of 90-degree corners, we get vague curves that don't make sense anymore as though the corners have been worn away.

JumpCrisscross ranked #7 [karma: 174906]

> Tiger to Snow Leopard era was fantastic. Things were simple and worked

Was it also great for developers? (Genuine question.)

toomuchtodo ranked #24 [karma: 104892]

Sell shovels during a gold rush.

simonw ranked #30 [karma: 94250]

This posts lists inexpensive home servers, Tailscale and Claude Code as the big unlocks.

I actually think Tailscale may be an even bigger deal here than sysadmin help from Claude Code at al.

The biggest reason I had not to run a home server was security: I'm worried that I might fall behind on updates and end up compromised.

Tailscale dramatically reduces this risk, because I can so easily configure it so my own devices can talk to my home server from anywhere in the world without the risk of exposing any ports on it directly to the internet.

Being able to hit my home server directly from my iPhone via a tailnet no matter where in the world my iPhone might be is really cool.

userbinator ranked #35 [karma: 87629]

I think the absurdity is the whole point.

Tomte ranked #10 [karma: 159404]

It‘s "remove". A common word, but many words are common and not on the list. Lesswrong also lists "prüf" (check), another common word.

walterbell ranked #29 [karma: 95945]

> hardware you can buy with $2000

Including how much RAM?

Animats ranked #11 [karma: 158877]

Right. Meta wants big enough plants that an AP1000 or two would be the right size. They're known to work. There are four in operation, two in the US, and another dozen or so under construction.

Most of the small nuclear reactor startups hand-wave the failure modes and argue that they don't need the hulking big expensive containment building. NuScale claimed that. They wanted multiple reactors sharing the same cooling pool. If they ever had a leak, the whole set of reactors would be contaminated, even without a meltdown.

If we look at the big reactor accidents so far, there's Chernobyl, with no containment building. There's Fukushima, with too small a containment unable to contain the pressure. And there's Three Mile Island, where a large, strong containment building contained a meltdown. Three Mile Island was an expensive disaster, but not hazardous outside the plant. That's the failure mode you want.

We might be better off at developing better techniques for welding thick sections to make hulking big, strong containment vessels. There's been progress with robotic welding of thick sections.[1]

[1] https://www.agrrobotics.com/trends-s-industry-analysis/roadm...

dragonwriter ranked #16 [karma: 126676]

The pain I’ve experienced running ComfyUI on windows is from (1) pytorch and the complexities of managing it through pip when python’s platform concept doesn't encompass CUDA versions, (2) dependency conflicts between custom nodes (some of which also involve #1 because they pin a specific pytorch version as a dependency), and (3) gratuitous breakage in ComfyUI updates.

None of which Linux makes any better.

JumpCrisscross ranked #7 [karma: 174906]

> surprised there's so many nuclear power companies

This is actually American capitalism working at its finest.

Have you seen a video of a slime mold "solving" a maze? It reaches out in every direction with thin tendrils until it makes contact. (Then the game shifts.)

We have a sense, like a slime mold picking up on the "scent" of food, that there is energy. But there are lots of good hypotheses for how we get there. So we try them. Not exhaustively. But multiply. When someone demonstrates they've got it, the game will shift to consolidation and scaling.

pjmlp ranked #18 [karma: 124527]

Maybe because Pix is quite good?

minimaxir ranked #48 [karma: 73407]

Even more of a crypto scam than usual:

> Disclaimer: $RALPH is a memecoin created to celebrate the Ralph Wiggum Technique and AI development culture. The token was created and is operated by BagsApp—Geoffrey Huntley did not deploy the smart contract and has no control over it.

pjmlp ranked #18 [karma: 124527]

What a mess, starting to really miss Balmer.

pjmlp ranked #18 [karma: 124527]

Which goes to show how often this comes up, yet Steam hardware survey is now about 3%, a decade later.

jacquesm ranked #2 [karma: 236410]

Well, sure. There is a price to pay for alienating research and investment in a particular domain. A decade is a long time in tech.

minimaxir ranked #48 [karma: 73407]

Even in normal human-written code, it's not guaranteed to get the code completely correct in one-shot. That's why code review and QA still exists.

The issue here is more organizational with the engineers not getting the code up to standards before handing off, not the capabilities of the AI itself.

hn_throwaway_99 ranked #47 [karma: 75143]

Can you provide a link with evidence of that? I haven't seen that reported.

I'd also note in advance there is a big difference in someone figuring out how to jailbreak Gemini or OpenAI, and then the companies responding swiftly to fix that, than what has been reported with Grok where it was basically wide open to create those images.

jacquesm ranked #2 [karma: 236410]

Or maybe they just don't like thieves or the parties that are currently in charge of these systems. There are as many reasons to like AI as there are to dislike it.

dragonwriter ranked #16 [karma: 126676]

Of course veteran industry insiders who had equity as a significant part of their compensation would have no motive to cement the existing oligopoly, would they?

jacquesm ranked #2 [karma: 236410]

Very nice, did you run into any interesting challenges?

jacquesm ranked #2 [karma: 236410]

Unfortunately the rest of the world also gets the leader the US deserves.

dragonwriter ranked #16 [karma: 126676]

> I never understood why the more strict rules of XML for HTML never took off.

Because of the vast quantity of legacy HTML content, largely.

> HTML 5 was an opportunity to make a clear cut between legacy HTML and the future of HTML.

WHATWG and its living standard that W3C took various versions of and made changes to and called it HTML 5, 5.1, etc., to pretend that they were still relevant in HTML, before finally giving up on that entirely, was a direct result of the failure of XHTML and the idea of a clear cut between legacy HTML and the future of HTML. It was a direct reaction against the “clear cut” approach based on experience, not an opportunity to repeat its mistakes. (Instead of a clear break, HTML incorporated the “more strict rules of XML” via the XML serialization for HTML; for the applications where that approach offers value, it is available and supported and has an object model 100% compatible with the more common form, and they are maintained together rather than competing.)

jacquesm ranked #2 [karma: 236410]

The 6502, for all its warts brought the best out in the programmers that used it.

walterbell ranked #29 [karma: 95945]

  Dell XPS 14 starts at $2,050, while the 16-inch model will demand $2,200 starting Jan. 6. If you think that’s high, that’s because Dell revised its price point from $1,650 and $1,850, respectively. 
25% / ~$400 laptop price increase due to market price increases for 16GB RAM?

bookofjoe ranked #26 [karma: 100564]
thunderbong ranked #19 [karma: 114571]

If my mailbox is breached, Instagram will be the least of my worries.

jgrahamc ranked #31 [karma: 93633]

Couple of blogs about my KIM-1:

1. My 1976 KIM-1 https://blog.jgc.org/2023/11/my-1976-kim-1.html

2. Getting the KIM-1 to talk to my Mac https://blog.jgc.org/2025/02/getting-kim-1-to-talk-to-my-mac...

jerf ranked #32 [karma: 90892]

Perhaps the most distinguishing characteristic of HTML5 is that it specifies exactly what to do with tag soup. The rules are worth a glance at some time, just to see how rather absurdly complicated they are to do the job of picking up the pieces of who knows how many terabytes and petabytes of garbage HTML were generated before they were codified in an attempt to remain backwards compatible with the various browsers prior to that. And then you'll understand why I'm not going to even begin to attempt to answer your question about how browsers handle various tag combinations. Instead my point is only that, with HTML5, there is in fact a very concrete answer that is no longer up to the browsers trying to each individually spackle over the various and sundry gaps in the standards.

But honestly no answer to "what does the browser do with this sort of thing" fits into an HN comment anymore. I'm glad there's a standard, but there's a better branch of the multiverse where the specification of what to do with bad HTML was written from the beginning and is much, much simpler.

paxys ranked #42 [karma: 78118]

Am I missing something? The source they shared is a screenshot of a password reset email, which anyone can trigger if they have the email address of the account.

simonw ranked #30 [karma: 94250]

> The accepted practice is to not add lazy-loading to images above the fold, especially the LCP image.

I didn't know that. Apparently (at least according to Claude) you shouldn't use loading="lazy" on images that you expect to always display because doing so causes them to not be loaded until the browser has determined they are definitely in the viewport, which is a minor performance regression.

LCP = Largest Contentful Paint, the Core Web Vitals metric for when the largest visual element finishes rendering. That's usually the largest above-the-fold image.

simonw ranked #30 [karma: 94250]

There's a useful write-up of that here: https://pieterma.es/syntopic-reading-claude/#how-its-impleme...

simonw ranked #30 [karma: 94250]

> Also you seem to be living in a bubble - the average person doesn’t care about automating anything!

One of my life goals is to help bring as many people into my "technology can automate things for you" bubble as I possibly can.

jacquesm ranked #2 [karma: 236410]

In the early days there were as many formats as there were camera backs because the exposure was at the size of the print. These were positives that were developed directly rather than that they went through an intermediate step of a negative and subsequent enlargement.

jacquesm ranked #2 [karma: 236410]

I don't see how that is Linux' fault.

pjmlp ranked #18 [karma: 124527]

Note that C# 14 versus C# 1.0 isn't suffering from feature creap as well.

What has guided C++ are the 300+ volunteers that get to submit papers, travel around the world attending the meetings, and win the election rounds of what gets into the standard.

Unfortunately design by committee doesn't lead to a clear product roadmap.

jacquesm ranked #2 [karma: 236410]

This was one of the more surprising things to me when I lived in Canada: that there is so much of this. Depending on which region you are in you will either have state monopolies on the strangest things and/or a couple of families that have their fingers in just about every pie. And don't get me started on the telecommunications sector.

pjc50 ranked #23 [karma: 104973]

Doesn't Amazon incur compliance problems then? If they become the actual "importer of record".

pjmlp ranked #18 [karma: 124527]

Win32, MFC, Windows Forms, and WPF also exist and are quite usable.

Apple also doesn't always uses their stuff as they are supposed to, Webviews are used in a few "native" apps, some macOS apps are actually iOS ones ported via Catalyst, which is the reason they feel strange, and many other stuff I could list.

Two measures, two weights.

JumpCrisscross ranked #7 [karma: 174906]

Has February 6 been upgraded from NET?

pseudolus ranked #6 [karma: 182244]
thunderbong ranked #19 [karma: 114571]
JumpCrisscross ranked #7 [karma: 174906]

This is a particularly-dumb conspiracy theory as far as these go. It’s like arguing Ford was founded to build tanks.

Animats ranked #11 [karma: 158877]

With doom scrolling for the comments. And cat pictures.

pjmlp ranked #18 [karma: 124527]

On build your own PC desktop with known parts, yeah.

On random laptop regular people buy at computer stores and needs to be reversed engineered by volunteers, it will be business as usual.

tptacek ranked #1 [karma: 415763]

Without even touching this "cheese is not as good as you find in Europe", if you had deep-dish pizza you should know that's tourist pizza. I grew up with cracker-thin pizza from Fox's, cut into squares; the real Chicago pizza.

Animats ranked #11 [karma: 158877]

Would that be this item? [1] The product description and SKU match.

It's not clear who "FS" is. A reseller? A manufacturer? They seem to be in Singapore. There's no excuse for the external plastic sheath disintegrating. They must have formulated the plastic wrong. The terms specify a 30 day warranty.

Here's a catalog of real mil-spec fiber optic cables.[2] This is overkill for home applications; you put these in a fighter jet.

In between are Telecom Industry Association compliant fiber optic cables. That's what telcos use. There are US manufacturers with real plants and addresses.

[1] https://www.fs.com/products/70220.html

[2] https://www.glenair.com/catalogs/fiber-optics.pdf

userbinator ranked #35 [karma: 87629]

What a bunch of BS. Once I buy a product I can resell it elsewhere. That's how ownership works. I do not need "permission" for this, beyond that guaranteed by the legal system, and exceptions such as export restrictions notwithstanding. There is a term for this that currently eludes me (first sale doctrine is a similar concept but not exactly.)

If I was a seller, I'd probably find this a good thing --- Amazon is effectively giving me more customers for free.

JumpCrisscross ranked #7 [karma: 174906]

> a more likely outcome is Iran comes out the other end of this on Monday morning with 5000 dead

Agree. But what would you wager on that today versus a year ago?

tptacek ranked #1 [karma: 415763]

Also it's "glyphosate", right? Not "glyphosates". It's not like some weird class of industrial chemicals; it's a specific herbicide, used since 1975, more commonly known as Roundup, notable because Monsanto owns patents on genetically-modified crops that are resistant to it.

userbinator ranked #35 [karma: 87629]

The link to the product says "TPU outer jacket". That's thermoplastic polyurethane, which is well known for degrading via hydrolysis:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyurethane#Hydrolysis_and_bi...

...so it is a bit amusing to see "TPU Jacket Features Water, Abrasion Resistance" in the product description. PVC or PE would be far better and more common.

anigbrowl ranked #27 [karma: 98328]

In 1996, Doris Kelley and her daughter, Katie Kelley-Mareau, filed a lawsuit against Clarence Lushbaugh, the pathologist who performed the autopsy on Cecil Kelley.[12][13] The case alleged the misconduct of doctors, the hospital, and the administration of Los Alamos in removing organs from the deceased without consent from next-of-kin over a span of many years (1958–1980).[14][15] Kelley's autopsy was the first instance of this type of post-mortem analysis, but Lushbaugh and others performed many more in later years at Los Alamos.[13] During a deposition for the case, Lushbaugh, when asked who gave him the authority to take eight pounds (3.6 kilograms) of organs and tissue from Kelley's body, said, "God gave me permission." The class action suit was settled by the defendants for about $9.5 million in 2002 and an additional $800,000 in 2007. None of the defendants admitted any wrongdoing.

The unwillingess to ever admit wrongdoing in a legal or social context is a political disease.

WalterBright ranked #41 [karma: 78494]

Storage units are the way station to the thrift store / city dump.

I had a storage unit for a while until I realized that the monthly bill was more than the value of the contents.

JumpCrisscross ranked #7 [karma: 174906]

> to communicate with doctors effectively

Did the doctors agree? I never thought of AI as a good patient navigator, but maybe that’s its proper role in healthcare.

pseudolus ranked #6 [karma: 182244]
ceejayoz ranked #34 [karma: 87642]

That’s where they got the idea.

mooreds ranked #36 [karma: 87214]
tptacek ranked #1 [karma: 415763]

Oh, if the Tranco list is interesting to you, you don't ever have to do any homework again; I continuously do it for you:

https://dnssecmenot.fly.dev/

A funny note here: I track changes, and in the last 150 days, there has been one (1) (someone turned DNSSEC off.)

toomuchtodo ranked #24 [karma: 104892]
JumpCrisscross ranked #7 [karma: 174906]

These are literally the rates. Not effectives.

tptacek ranked #1 [karma: 415763]

"Containers" are that, and fast, in part because they share kernels, so there's no serious rebooting happening. But the consequence of that design is you share a kernel with untrusted cotenants.

And then there's just the idea of being able to pull these out of the sky literally whenever you want one. If you want to try something new out real quick, it makes no sense to figure out which of your existing Sprites to use. Just make a new one. If you're a little OCD, like I am, every once in awhile you can go prune, if you really care.

WalterBright ranked #41 [karma: 78494]

> how have wolves shaped humans?

The bonds between humans and wolves go both ways. Humans love their dogs.

toomuchtodo ranked #24 [karma: 104892]

Memorialize accounts whenever possible to make them immutable.

Animats ranked #11 [karma: 158877]

> More than 1 million people died in the US from the COVID pandemic so it seemed reasonable to work hard to get herd immunity but the backfire effect made that counter productive.

There is no herd immunity for COVID, because you can get it more than once. Vaccination only protects for a few months, and doesn't reduce spreading much. It's not a "sterilizing vaccine".

There are sterilizing vaccines for many childhood diseases. Measles, diphtheria, polio, etc. Can't get the disease at all if vaccinated. Those vaccines can almost eliminate a disease. With smallpox, this was taken past "almost" all the way to eradication. Here's a list of 14 almost forgotten diseases, eliminated by vaccination.[1] The current generation of parents has not seen most of them.

[1] https://www.healthychildren.org/English/safety-prevention/im...

Animats ranked #11 [karma: 158877]

Bindless Vulkan is in some ways simpler than binding for each draw. But there are now more synchronization conditions.

That big table of descriptors is an unusual data object. It's normally mapped as writable from the CPU and readable from the GPU. The CPU side has to track which slots are in use. When the CPU is done with a texture slot, the GPU might not be done yet, so all deletes have to deferred until the end of the frame. This isn't inherently difficult but has to be designed in.

The usual curse of inefficient Vulkan is maxing out the main CPU thread long before the GPU is fully utilized. This is fixable. There can be multiple draw threads. Assets can be loaded into the GPU while drawing is in progress, using transfer queues and DMA. Except that for integrated memory GPUs, you don't have to copy from CPU to GPU at all. If you do all this, GPU utilization should reach 100% before CPU utilization does.

Except most of this stuff doesn't work on mobile or WebGPU yet. Portable code has way too many cases. Look at WGPU.

What you get by using Unity or Unreal Engine is that a big team already worked through all this overhead. Most of the open source renderers aren't there yet. Or weren't as of a year ago.

toomuchtodo ranked #24 [karma: 104892]

Related:

How A Decline In Churchgoing Led To A Rise In ‘Deaths Of Despair’ - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46408406 - December 2025 (2 comments)

stavros ranked #46 [karma: 75230]

The question is which nation you'll have to depend on when you want a bug fixed. With OSS, the answer is "none".

toomuchtodo ranked #24 [karma: 104892]

I just use iMessages and Signal groups. I am willing to live without the features, what they offer for private groups is sufficient. Shared Apple iCloud albums for photos. Apple also has an Invites app for events management. “Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication.” —- da Vinci

I do donate monthly to Signal and pay for iCloud, so I suppose the answer is “I am willing to pay, but only these entities.”

bookofjoe ranked #26 [karma: 100564]
toomuchtodo ranked #24 [karma: 104892]

I see an interesting parallel to how people think about captured encrypted data, and how long that encryption needs to be effective for until technology catches up and can decrypt (by which point, hopefully the decrypted data is worthless). If all of these documents are stored in durable archives, future methodologies may arrive to extract value or intelligence not originally available at the time of capture and disclosure.

jerf ranked #32 [karma: 90892]

Fairly common from what I've seen. You're supposed to ooh and aah at the number of options they give you and not ask question about what they're actually going to be worth. This is one of the bigger reasons HN tends to advise people to treat stock options like lottery tickets rather than any sort of money in the bank. You generally have no idea what they've done to your "options" between giving them to you and you finally getting to exercise them, especially with the ever-lengthening time it takes for companies to finally go public. On the plus side, this has also driven the creation of other ways of getting options out of a company prior to an IPO.

Animats ranked #11 [karma: 158877]

Education can be viewed as intellectual property theft. There have been periods in history when it was. "How to take an elevation from a plan" was a trade secret of medieval builders and only revealed to guild members. How a power loom works was export-controlled information in the 1800s, and people who knew how a loom works were not allowed to emigrate from England.

The problem is that LLMs are better than people at this stuff. They can read a huge quantity of publicly available information and organize it into a form where the LLM can do things with it. That's what education does, more slowly and at greater expense.

Animats ranked #11 [karma: 158877]

Engine control alone can be self-contained. The Ford EEC IV of the 1980s had its program permanently etched into the Intel 8061 CPU, and was designed to last 30 years. It did. I finally sold off my 40 year old Ford Bronco, which was still running on the original engine and CPU.

Animats ranked #11 [karma: 158877]

Yes. That should be done along hiking and biking trails under power lines. There's one in Silicon Valley along the bay shore line. The fluorescent tubes don't wear out; the filaments at the end are not in use. Just slip them inside polycarbonate tubes.

stavros ranked #46 [karma: 75230]

Drones consume something like 100W to stay in the air (ballpark, of course), so they'd probably never charge if they had to hover.

toomuchtodo ranked #24 [karma: 104892]

This is super cool imho. Check my mental model on this, but with a sufficient lookup table or index, you could cherry pick any file you wanted based on filename, SHA hash, etc from any publicly available container in OCI registries. Almost like a torrent swarm.

ceejayoz ranked #34 [karma: 87642]

That seems entirely unviable to me. Have you met… people?

“Trust me, bro!” is something I wish my power company would do, but they installed a meter instead.

toomuchtodo ranked #24 [karma: 104892]

Far-UVC and Eye Safety: Findings from a 36-Month Study - https://uvmedico.com/news/far-uvc-and-eye-safety - January 16th, 2025

> Far-UVC is a type of ultraviolet light emitted at a 222 nm wavelength that effectively deactivates microorganisms. Unlike traditional UVC light at 254 nm, Far-UVC doesn’t penetrate the outer dead layer of skin or the outer layer of the cornea, making it safe for use around people while maintaining powerful germicidal properties.

> The 222 nm wavelength is unique in its ability to decontaminate without causing harm when used within regulatory limits. Unlike longer UV wavelengths, it interacts only with the outermost layers of the skin and eyes, which naturally renew themselves. This makes it ideal for continuous decontamination in occupied spaces, as confirmed by the 36-month clinical study showing no adverse effects even after daily exposure.

References:

https://www.faruvc.org/ (disclosure: this is published by the same author as this post)

Sugihara K, Kaidzu S, Sasaki M, Ichioka S, Sano I, Hara K, Tanito M. Ocular safety of 222-nm far-ultraviolet-c full-room germicidal irradiation: A 36-month clinical observation. Photochem Photobiol. 2024 Dec 10. https://doi.org/10.1111/php.14052 Epub ahead of print. PMID: 39659140. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/php.14052

Sugihara K, Kaidzu S, Sasaki M, Tanito M. Interventional human ocular safety experiments for 222-nm far-ultraviolet-C lamp irradiation. Photochem Photobiol. 2024 Aug 19. https://doi.org/10.1111/php.14016 Epub ahead of print. PMID: 39161063. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/php.14016

Buonanno M, Hashmi R, Petersen CE, Tang Z, Welch D, Shuryak I, Brenner DJ. Wavelength-dependent DNA damage induced by single wavelengths of UV-C radiation (215 to 255 nm) in a human cornea model. Sci Rep. 2025 Jan 2;15(1):252. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-84196-4 PMID: 39747969; PMCID: PMC11696903. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-024-84196-4

bookofjoe ranked #26 [karma: 100564]
dragonwriter ranked #16 [karma: 126676]

I'm pretty sure hibernate has defaulted to off for quite a while and has to be turned on if desired (at least, the last several machines I've bought new that was the case.)

The UI switch is not particularly obvious, at Control Panel → Hardware and Sound → Power Options → System Settings

jedberg ranked #45 [karma: 76788]

Click through to the GitHub link at the bottom, which has the README. It explains everything.

toomuchtodo ranked #24 [karma: 104892]

https://archive.today/mrtnX

Related:

Urban World: Meeting the Demographic Challenge [pdf] - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46513422 - January 2026

Sinofuturism (1839-2046 AD) - https://www.lawrencelek.com/works/sinofuturism - 2016

Sinofuturism (1839 - 2046 AD) [video] - https://vimeo.com/179509486 - 2016

minimaxir ranked #48 [karma: 73407]

There really isn't a good way to put a note to those prompts in a headline (putting "I vibecoded this" would just get it flagged). I'll likely do a blog post discussing the prompt process at some point.

stavros ranked #46 [karma: 75230]

If you want to see a speedrun, I made the same thing around a month ago:

https://theboard.stavros.io

rayiner ranked #17 [karma: 125309]

From an American perspective, it’s not the “rhetoric,” it’s just “noticing.” My mom is an immigrant who was not brought up here to absorb the rhetoric. But when she went to Canada and Australia to visit family, she came back ranting about how poor everyone was and how small the houses were. (I take it you have fewer suburban McMansions and giant SUVs.) It’s hard not to notice our GDP per capita is 50% higher than yours. It’s big enough now where we notice it just going up there to visit family.

And you can say what you want about safety nets for poor people, but that doesn’t affect most Americans. My parents are on Medicare and they head down to the ER every time have a stomach ache and get a CAT scan. Meanwhile my family is convinced that Canadian healthcare nearly killed my aunt when she had a kidney issue because they didn’t immediately schedule her for a million tests and surgery. (I suspect that isn’t true and the Canadian system reasonably triaged the care.)

And to be clear, I like Canada (and I love Denmark). I’d rather have a more orderly society with an efficient and expansive government that’s focused on comprehensive outcomes across the population, in contrast to our system where you have McMansions but randomly you can fall through a giant crack. But Americans temperamentally are biased towards upside potential and they devalue downside risk. This is a cultural trait that seems very quickly absorbed even by immigrants. My immigrant family isn’t meaningfully American in many respects—they don’t have Anglo sensibilities about things like civic institutions and personal freedoms—but they’re indistinguishable from other americans in their materialistic optimism

crazygringo ranked #40 [karma: 80583]

If you think you'll ever want to use third-party tools to process that markup, or if some of your private files will transform into public files at some point, then yes, considering popularity makes a lot of sense.

If they're just text files you edit raw that will never interact with anything else but your text editor, then of course popularity doesn't matter at all. But in my experience, my use cases tend to expand over time.

The article even talks about org mode's interoperability, mainly about the fact that pandoc supports it. And then bizarrely ignores the fact that it has much less ecosystem support than Markdown. So this is very much a subject the article itself brings up, and something that therefore also deserves to be critiqued.

bookofjoe ranked #26 [karma: 100564]

>NASA has said it will announce a target return date in the coming days.

nostrademons ranked #38 [karma: 82012]

Sure. Development at Google is glacially slow because nobody does any work, and so they're only publishing releases bi-annually because there aren't enough substantive changes to make quarterly releases seem important. This will also allow the teams to move to biannual OKRs instead of quarterly, which lets ICs and line managers do half as much work while giving executives justification for why they need twice as much headcount.

When it comes to large bureaucracies, always assume laziness over malice or strategic competence.

crazygringo ranked #40 [karma: 80583]

The problem is that final decisions tend to be made in the last 30 seconds of a meeting. If you're a manager with a stake in the outcome, you can't leave the meeting until you've ensured that the outcome works for you. Leaving 5 min early is often simply not an option. While arriving 5 minutes late is. It's not an ego thing -- it's the fact that meeting leaders often let meetings run long.

crazygringo ranked #40 [karma: 80583]

> Apple's weather app still isn't as precise or accurate

Is it not? The rainfall-per-minute over the next hour on iOS seems about the same accuracy as Dark Sky had -- I used Dark Sky for years. It wasn't perfect but it worked well enough, same as iOS did after. You can even scrub the precipitation map predictions and they look the same to me.

I know the Dark Sky prediction accuracy was greatly dependent on where you lived -- this is something that was widely discussed back in the day. If you've seen a drop in accuracy, did you simply move?

rayiner ranked #17 [karma: 125309]

Europeans have compromised “democracy” in an effort to protect “liberal.” And that will unravel the whole thing.

bookofjoe ranked #26 [karma: 100564]

See also:

Polaroid

Pebble

Palm

Oldsmobile

Tower Records

Borders

Pan Am

bookofjoe ranked #26 [karma: 100564]
ceejayoz ranked #34 [karma: 87642]
bookofjoe ranked #26 [karma: 100564]

Here in Charlottesville, Virginia, U.S.A., I NEVER see people out and about wearing masks (perhaps 1% of people overall at most; very rare) using anything but the cloth/surgical masks seen in operating rooms. Same with sporting events on TV: the rare person in the crowd wearing a mask always has a surgical-type mask.

PaulHoule ranked #25 [karma: 103718]

Deliverability. If you run your own mail server you’ll find your mail’s won’t go through to many people.

The flip side of that is that spam can eat you alive.

stavros ranked #46 [karma: 75230]

I love Signal, but this is one thing I wish it did better. It's much easier to write Markdown than long-press and format.