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.

JumpCrisscross ranked #7 [karma: 177930]

> What is the hedge for this?

Cash. So you can buy into the dip. It’s historically a losing position, however.

userbinator ranked #36 [karma: 88222]

MIPS, which RISC-V is closely modeled after, is also roughly 4 decades old and was massively hyped in the early 90s as well.

JumpCrisscross ranked #7 [karma: 177930]
JumpCrisscross ranked #7 [karma: 177930]

> Am I supposed to be impressed by this?

No. But it is noteworthy. A lot of what one previously needed a SWE to do can now be brute forced well enough with AI. (Granted, everything SWEs complained about being tedious.)

From the customer’s perspective, waiting for buggy code tomorrow from San Francisco, buggy code tonight from India or buggy code from an AI at 4AM aren’t super different for maybe two thirds of use cases.

userbinator ranked #36 [karma: 88222]

You have to grok it, and not just Grok it.

JumpCrisscross ranked #7 [karma: 177930]

> At some point this data will be breached

Yeah, not a fan of any state making records of where their religious and sexual minorities live.

JumpCrisscross ranked #7 [karma: 177930]

There are many interpretations of these data. This is not one of them. America will sacrifice its foreign lenders before it does its military.

paxys ranked #42 [karma: 80822]

That number 2 is Alexandr Wang, who most definitely initiated this acquisition (after being rejected by the OpenClaw guy).

jedberg ranked #44 [karma: 77957]

It’s a real problem you’re solving but the good news is that it’s already solved! You don’t have to build it yourself.

You’re looking for durable execution to solve your problem.

If you’re already running Postgres, check out DBOS[0]. It turns your app into its own durable executor using your database for coordination.

[0] https://github.com/dbos-inc/dbos-transact-golang

Animats ranked #10 [karma: 160110]

Right, that's been mentioned elsewhere.

A new area of research has opened up. This approach may be more useful for treatment than prevention. It's not really a vaccine; it's more like an induced vaccine response. Keeping the immune system in that state full time might be a problem. But after an infection, that's what's wanted.

doener ranked #41 [karma: 80861]
nostrademons ranked #39 [karma: 82305]

It's interesting that this article is funded by Francis Fukuyama, who famously wrote the "The End of History" [1] in 1992, which argued that the rules-based liberal democratic world order had won and there was no more need for geopolitical realism. This article represents a complete repudiation of his past beliefs, and basically an admission that he was wrong.

Anyway, just as how Fukuyama was right for ~20 years and then very, very wrong, I suspect this essay is too. The U.S. mapped out all the game theory around nuclear war in the 50s and 60s. If you have too many states with nuclear weapons, nuclear war becomes inevitable, just like if you have too many firms in a market a price war becomes inevitable. That's why the U.S. and other nuclear powers have put so much effort into nuclear non-proliferation. North Korea may have been right in the short-term national interest sense to pursue and continue its nuclear weapons program, but the end result here is that most of humanity is going to die in a nuclear war, and we won't have such things as states and nations afterwards.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_End_of_History_and_the_Las...

coldtea ranked #33 [karma: 90366]

One interesting actionable takeaway fact is that if you do such a project spending so much time on it, your life outside of it likely sucks.

coldtea ranked #33 [karma: 90366]

>You may as well keep increasing the number of second fine, because in no earthly circumstance will I ever be able to pay it back.

When that's the case, you'd be surprised what happens when the breaking point comes.

Or do you think countries haven't gone bankrupt before?

jacquesm ranked #2 [karma: 239649]

The main difference is humans are learning all the time and models learn batch wise and forget whatever happened in a previous session unless someone makes it part of the training data so there is a massive lag.

Whoever cracks the continuous customized (per user, for instance) learning problem without just extending the context window is going to be making a big splash. And I don't mean cheats and shortcuts, I mean actually tuning the model based on received feedback.

stavros ranked #46 [karma: 76202]

Recursive language models: https://github.com/doubleuuser/rlm-workflow

paxys ranked #42 [karma: 80822]

If someone was confident enough to push through an AI change without even reading/reviewing it themselves adding more buttons to the UI isn't going to change anything.

bookofjoe ranked #26 [karma: 103856]
jacquesm ranked #2 [karma: 239649]

No, don't dial it back. Just stop. The only way this will end otherwise is either with an account ban, a domain ban or both.

toomuchtodo ranked #23 [karma: 107148]

Homeowners have, in some cases, gotten a free ride when insurers did not have access to this data. They’re closing the gap with cheap, accessible property data.

> “We're seeing an overreaction by insurance companies to data that they're now getting through new technology," Bach said. "We're seeing them drop homes that they've been insuring for decades - and nothing's changed on the homeowner's part."

> For Bennett, time is ticking. She said she has contacted other companies but has not found one willing to insure her home. She is also consulting with roofers as she weighs her options ahead of a May 1 deadline.

Observing that a roof is at the end of its service life using drones or satellite imagery is entirely reasonable, as would be consuming public permit data to determine the same. The homeowner does not need to take action for the risk assessment to change; the insurer is simply accurately pricing the risk in this scenario.

(State Farm customer)

Animats ranked #10 [karma: 160110]

"Before computers, a knowledge worker who had laboriously constructed essays in college quite likely wrote almost nothing for the rest of their working life. People talked face-to-face or on the phone, and dictated to secretaries."

Real men didn't type.

Even lawyers, whose job is producing written text, rarely typed; they wrote on yellow pads. Legal secretaries turned that into clean copy. Engineers on the Apollo program were still dictating to secretaries.

toomuchtodo ranked #23 [karma: 107148]

https://openlibrary.org/books/OL4904457M/Systemantics

(Systemantics is available for borrowing, Systems Bible is not yet, a copy has been sent for digitizing)

jacquesm ranked #2 [karma: 239649]

Bit manipulation instructions are part and parcel of any curriculum that teaches CPU architecture. They are the basic building blocks for many more complex instructions.

https://five-embeddev.com/riscv-bitmanip/1.0.0/bitmanip.html

I can see quite a few items on that list that imnsho should have been included in the core and for the life of me I can't see the rationale behind leaving them out. Even the most basic 8 bit CPU had various shifts and rolls baked in.

danso ranked #9 [karma: 167309]

The beginning of the thread is here: https://bsky.app/profile/randyhermanlaw.com/post/3mgq5nrqa2s...

Context from the OP:

> Today at 4:00 I will go over to Raleigh and sit in on a show-cause hearing. This will be my first time attempting to live-post a hearing in person. The case is Fivehouse v. DOD and the question is whether the DOJ attorney fabricated quotes in a brief.

toomuchtodo ranked #23 [karma: 107148]

Original title "Voice Beyond Words: Evidence That Managerial Tone Predicts Returns When Text Does Not" compressed to fit within title limits.

toomuchtodo ranked #23 [karma: 107148]
JumpCrisscross ranked #7 [karma: 177930]

I had swim teammates who made at least hundreds of thousands minting and selling autominers on eBay. I assume if I knew a couple who did that well some made millions.

PaulHoule ranked #25 [karma: 105773]

Somebody should have spoken for fiber everywhere 15 years ago rather than telling us rural people to drop dead.

PaulHoule ranked #25 [karma: 105773]

We used to call it a "phortress"

rbanffy ranked #5 [karma: 186705]

Don't blame the ISA - blame the silicon implementations AND the software with no architecture-specific optimisations.

RISC-V will get there, eventually.

I remember that ARM started as a speed demon with conscious power consumption, then was surpassed by x86s and PPCs on desktops and moved to embedded, where it shone by being very frugal with power, only to now be leaving the embedded space with implementations optimised for speed more than power.

ceejayoz ranked #34 [karma: 89616]

> He asked staff to attend the meeting, which is normally optional.

If I get a note from my boss like that, I consider it mandatory.

PaulHoule ranked #25 [karma: 105773]

My son would point out that the "incel cesspool" actually absorbed a lot of its vocabulary from 4chan and other "manosphere" spaces and there are a lot of people who talk that way who are not incels.

For instance that Clavicular guy who was profiled in the New York Times claims he is having sex and it seems he was actually "dating" a female influencer when he was being interviewed by an NYT reporter.

rbanffy ranked #5 [karma: 186705]

If we think of spacetime as some sort of cellular automaton, where each state of a given point is a function (with some randomness, because God likes to throw dice) of previous states of the surrounding points, if the rules for a new state generation are extremely complex, there will be some significant overhead in dimensions we don't see, because the rules need to be somehow represented outside the observable reality. Another issue with this idea is that while the rules might be "outside", the parameters themselves have to be somehow encoded in the state of a cell, and can't propagate faster than light, or one cell (an indivisible unit of space) per indivisible unit of time), which limits the number of parameters accessible to any given cell to the ones immediately surrounding it.

Disclaimer: I hope it's obvious, but I'm no physicist. This is just how I would build a universe.

PaulHoule ranked #25 [karma: 105773]

I think she charges a lot more than that.

PaulHoule ranked #25 [karma: 105773]

"...Windows 10 system sounds were leaked onto the air, followed by the transmission getting interrupted."

JumpCrisscross ranked #7 [karma: 177930]

The court order [1] finds likely violations of 18 U.S.C. § 1030(a)(2) as parsed by LVRC v. Brekka [2] which prohibits “(1) intentionally access[ing] a computer, (2) without authorization or exceeding authorized access, and that [it] (3) thereby obtain[s] information (4) from any protected computer (if the conduct involved an interstate or foreign communication), and [where] (5) there was loss to one or more persons during any one-year period aggregating at least $5,000 in value.”

[1] https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.cand.45...

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LVRC_Holdings_LLC_v._Brekka

simonw ranked #27 [karma: 100422]

"For the longest time, I would NOT allow people to write tests because I thought that culturally, we need to have a culture of shipping fast"

Tests are how you ship fast.

If you have good tests in place you can ship a new feature without fear that it will break some other feature that you haven't manually tested yet.

paxys ranked #42 [karma: 80822]

Why can't you do just that? You can configure file path permissions in Claude or via an external tool.

toomuchtodo ranked #23 [karma: 107148]

Thanks for the update and continuing to share this project. What does the roadmap look like into the future?

toomuchtodo ranked #23 [karma: 107148]

https://www.spatialintelligence.ai/p/i-built-a-spy-satellite...

It doesn’t appear they’ve made it publicly available, which is kind of annoying, but they used LLMs to build it so you can too (control-F “How I actually built this”).

hn_throwaway_99 ranked #47 [karma: 75620]

> If we were trying to adjust the time to track the solar time, wouldn't we need to adjust the clocks every day as days get shorter/longer?

No (not within a min or two). When days get shorter, it's not like they just lose daylight in the evening.

PaulHoule ranked #25 [karma: 105773]

I'll second this.

It is true that the indy game market is brutal but it's always been brutal.

You don't really hear about a crisis at the indy game level though, rather at the AAA game level there is much of "we'd like to use our market power to take out the risk in game development" and then years later we realize they took out all the value before they took out the risk and now they're doomed.

anigbrowl ranked #28 [karma: 99097]

A circus performer kept a troupe of monkeys and fed them 10 nuts each day. He fell on hard times and told the monkeys: 'from now on I can only give you seven nuts a day. I will give you three in the morning and four in the afternoon.' The monkey s were furious and raised a great clamor. 'Very well,' said the man, 'I will give you 4 nuts in the morning and 3 in the afternoon.' The monkeys were delighted.

rayiner ranked #18 [karma: 125861]

> Covered Entities are required by the law to provide the demographic survey to their portfolio company founders, but are prohibited from encouraging, incentivizing, or attempting to influence the decision of a founding team member to participate

So the data will be unusable because of response bias.

toomuchtodo ranked #23 [karma: 107148]

They will. Just keep grinding, this will be over eventually.

rayiner ranked #18 [karma: 125861]

> claimed that the Iran war is the first war that the US is waging without first politically appealing to its public

This is only true if you define this to be a “war” and don’t define other similar actions to be a “war.” Obama announced the air strikes on Libya in 2011 after they had already begun: https://www.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/africa/03/19/libya.us.missile...

> U.S. President Barack Obama confirmed that he had authorized "limited military action in Libya" and that "that action has now begun." He is planning for the U.S. portion of the military action in Libya to last just a few days, according to a senior administration official.

You’re correct that U.S. Presidents haven’t sought to persuade the public when the engagement involves air strikes instead of boots on the ground. But that’s been true for a long time.

toomuchtodo ranked #23 [karma: 107148]

Mark got lucky enough once he can be wrong the rest of his life and still not be exposed to a cost for it. Purpose of the system is what it does.

pjmlp ranked #17 [karma: 126996]

A few places, Fujitsu also has Solaris servers, and if you care about security, Solaris SPARC is the only production UNIX with hardware memory tagging in active use since 2015.

toomuchtodo ranked #23 [karma: 107148]
bookofjoe ranked #26 [karma: 103856]
bookofjoe ranked #26 [karma: 103856]
toomuchtodo ranked #23 [karma: 107148]

Perhaps we’ll be lucky and it’ll stick a bit after oil markets normalize, like remote work and the pandemic. “Never let a good crisis go to waste.”

tptacek ranked #1 [karma: 417263]

Not really. The idea that "fiduciary duty" requires companies to maximize shareholder value is a pernicious Internet myth.

tosh ranked #8 [karma: 173001]

Tony Hoare on how he came up with Quicksort:

he read the algol 60 report (Naur, McCarthy, Perlis, …)

and that described "recursion"

=> aaah!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pJgKYn0lcno

dragonwriter ranked #16 [karma: 127555]

> boomers were children of hippies

The hippies largely were Boomers, not their children.

jacquesm ranked #2 [karma: 239649]

I was holding back from writing precisely that, thank you.

toomuchtodo ranked #23 [karma: 107148]

Who would you say is your primary competitor (besides Stripe) and how are you better than them today?

simonw ranked #27 [karma: 100422]

Moltbook both asks you to verify with Twitter and has you verify an email address too.

Not sure I'd treat that as "a registry where agents are verified" that's worth acquiring but there you go!

pjmlp ranked #17 [karma: 126996]

Rest in peace, he hasn't seen the industry change.

"A consequence of this principle is that every occurrence of every subscript of every subscripted variable was on every occasion checked at run time against both the upper and the lower declared bounds of the array. Many years later we asked our customers whether they wished us to provide an option to switch off these checks in the interests of efficiency on production runs. Unanimously, they urged us not to they already knew how frequently subscript errors occur on production runs where failure to detect them could be disastrous. I note with fear and horror that even in 1980 language designers and users have not learned this lesson. In any respectable branch of engineering, failure to observe such elementary precautions would have long been against the law."

-- C.A.R Hoare's "The 1980 ACM Turing Award Lecture"

jacquesm ranked #2 [karma: 239649]

Sorry, but no, that is not a detail, that is a major sticking point for me.

dragonwriter ranked #16 [karma: 127555]

> I’m tired of every AI capability at SaaS companies charging usage fees. I get it: they both have their own token costs and want to make a profit on the feature. But it makes a $50 a month product potentially hundreds if I’m not careful.

Well, I understand how, as a user, yoou’d prefer your $50 subscription to include hundreds of dollars of subsidies for the costs of consuming third-party AI resources, but other than a startup spending VC to buy a userbase and force the traditional unsubsidized competition out of business before milking their new monopoly hard to payback investors, how do you expect a firm to justify that?

jgrahamc ranked #31 [karma: 93858]

He was the professor in the Programming Research Group (known universally as the PRG) at Oxford when I was doing my DPhil and interviewed me for the DPhil. I spent quite a bit of time with him and, of course, spent a lot of time doing stuff with CSP including my entire DPhil.

Sad to think that the TonyHoare process has reached STOP.

RIP.

toomuchtodo ranked #23 [karma: 107148]

Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantic_meridional_overturnin...

dragonwriter ranked #16 [karma: 127555]

State censorship is a different kind of centralization.

bookofjoe ranked #26 [karma: 103856]

>... its ability to expand when swallowing enormous prey, right up to the size of a cow, which is virtually impossible for most people to comprehend.

bookofjoe ranked #26 [karma: 103856]
jedberg ranked #44 [karma: 77957]

> and approaches Linux performance in some areas (e.g. Networking)

I started using FreeBSD 26 years ago when I worked for Sendmail, who had a couple of core committers on staff or staff-adjacent. Back then the refrain was "it can't do nearly as much as Linux, but what it does do it's much better than Linux".

And specifically it was known that if you wanted the best possible networking stack, FreeBSD was the choice to make (And also why Netflix uses it, for the networking stack).

All this to say, is it true that Linux now has better network performance, or did you mistype that?

pjmlp ranked #17 [karma: 126996]

There are already several ones in Europe.

jerf ranked #32 [karma: 91282]

The only things I'm aware of that I consider actual problems it solves are "it breaks classical encryption" and "you may be able to use it to directly model other quantum systems like for protein folding and such".

Everything else I consider pretty silly. "It can improve logistics" - I'm fairly sure computers are already as good as they can be, what dominates logistics calculations isn't an inability to optimize but the fact the real world can only conform so closely to any model you build. "It can improve finance" - same deal, really. All the other examples I see cited are problem where we've probably already got running code that is at the noise floor imposed by reality and its stubborn unwillingness to completely conform to plans.

If I had $1 to invest between AI and quantum computing I'd end up rounding the fraction of a cent that should rationally go to quantum computing and put the whole dollar in AI.

By far the most exciting possibility is one that Scott Aaronson has cited, which is, what if quantum computers fail somehow? To put it in simple and unsophisticated terms, what if we could prove that you can't entangle more than 1024 qubits and do a certain amount of calculation with them? What if the universe actually refuses to factor a thousand-digit prime number? The way in which it fails would inevitably be incredibly interesting.

tosh ranked #8 [karma: 173001]

SSD is 2x faster read/write

toomuchtodo ranked #23 [karma: 107148]

Additional citation:

Why $100 Oil Isn't Going to Spark a New Shale Boom – Oilprice.com - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47324000 - March 2026

ceejayoz ranked #34 [karma: 89616]

Even some cheap Kindles came with a SIM card.

I expect this to happen if enough people block ads on TVs. (They'll probably promote it as a "backup connection" or something.)

ceejayoz ranked #34 [karma: 89616]

But this isn't corporate censorship.

This is Russian government censorship. Where "constitutional rights" don't really apply, either. And probably quite a bit less sueable than Cloudflare.

pjc50 ranked #24 [karma: 106919]

https://tradingeconomics.com/germany/electricity-price chart is extremely noisy, and is quoting wholesale rather than retail, but to my eyes that actually looks flat over the period from before the Ukraine war. It seems to have started that spike in late 2021, before the war in February 2022 (which of course shoots it upwards, that's the "doubling in late 2022" you mention).

PaulHoule ranked #25 [karma: 105773]

I built a landing page for my "business cards" that is all about React, Bootstrap and all that, even uses Helmet when I really should have just set the title directly -- and it came out to around a 512k bundle so if you wanna impress me with an unframework page you got to get it down to 200k or less.

crazygringo ranked #38 [karma: 82469]

If you want to reduce air travel for environmental reasons, then tax it more.

Shaming individuals doesn't seem to be productive or helpful.

Air travel works for people if the benefits outweigh the costs. The only thing that changes behavior is to change the costs.

And even if costs were 10x there are still plenty of people who will fly tons, because it would still be economically productive. There are always going to be people who fly 10x more than others, because certain jobs and roles simply require it.

PaulHoule ranked #25 [karma: 105773]

My guess is the best market for space-manufactured objects is in space, particularly for objects which take advantage of the unique space environment, say, large solar sails or solar collectors.

1 and 2 were hyped up for the Space Shuttle in the 1990s and you know how that went. 3 is newer but all the time I read stuff on "why biological systems don't work quite right in zero gravity" so it might be more like space travelers will want to go to Earth or spin things like an O'Neill colony to do those things than the other way around.

From the viewpoint of "get some numbers to run that can show it makes money" I like "new patents on blockbusters" but I'm skeptical that people on Earth won't find equivalent methods of manufacturing or that politicians will let you make those profits.

toomuchtodo ranked #23 [karma: 107148]
mooreds ranked #35 [karma: 88787]

Congrats!

What convinced you this was the right moment and the right company to join?

You went from founding to acquisition in roughly a year and change.

Did something about the AI security landscape cause this offer to make sense? Or was it the impact you could have inside OpenAI? Or something else?

paxys ranked #42 [karma: 80822]

I feel like I'm the only one not getting the world models hype. We've been talking about them for decades now, and all of it is still theoretical. Meanwhile LLMs and text foundation models showed up, proved to be insanely effective, took over the industry, and people are still going "nah LLMs aren't it, world models will be the gold standard, just wait."

PaulHoule ranked #25 [karma: 105773]

I did a lot of study of Lotus Notes circa 2015 when I was thinking about a no-/low-code future. It is still ahead of its time when it comes to having a document database that supports merging but it's unthinkable that you'd build a system like that around email today as today an email system is 99% spam filter and 1% other stuff.

PaulHoule ranked #25 [karma: 105773]

    ... liquid glass isn't very liquid anymore. it's frosted.
is an important point. Liquid Glass does not come across as "a bold design idea which is slightly flawed" but rather something which failed so bad when they tried it that they dialed the intensity back to the point where it doesn't make a statement anymore. So it looks like they hired an intern to randomly add anti-antialiasing here and there for no good reason.

bookofjoe ranked #26 [karma: 103856]
jacquesm ranked #2 [karma: 239649]

That's a very cute domain name. Thank you whoever wrote this up and posted it, I'm in the process of building something that has a crystal on it and I did not realize this was a risk.

pjmlp ranked #17 [karma: 126996]

I miss what attempts were made to improve the code using modern C#, spans, ref structs, scoped, stackalloc, fixed arrays, and Native AOT, before going into full rewrite.

pjmlp ranked #17 [karma: 126996]

While tag dispatching used to be a widely used idiom in C++ development, it was a workaround for which nowadays there are much better alternatives with constexpr, and concepts.

coldtea ranked #33 [karma: 90366]

>I guess I don't necessarily hate it, it's more of a neutral thing, but who is deciding these strange things??

Probably nobody, just some artifact of the overlay APIs used default behavior that they didn't bother to streamline.

coldtea ranked #33 [karma: 90366]

> I don't buy the 10x efficiency thing: they are just lagging behind the performance of current SOTA models. They perform much worse than the current models while also costing much less - exactly what I would expect.

Define "much worse".

  +--------------------------------------+-------------+-----------+------------------+
  | Benchmark                            | Claude Opus | DeepSeek  | DeepSeek vs Opus |
  +--------------------------------------+-------------+-----------+------------------+
  | SWE-Bench Verified (coding)          | 80.9%       | 73.1%     | ~90%                 |
  | MMLU (knowledge)                     | ~91         | ~88.5     | ~97%               |
  | GPQA (hard science reasoning)        | ~79–80      | ~75–76    | ~95%             |
  | MATH-500 (math reasoning)            | ~78         | ~90       | ~115%            |
  +--------------------------------------+-------------+-----------+------------------+

pjmlp ranked #17 [karma: 126996]

It is quite common when being around WG21 stuff, just as info.

pjc50 ranked #24 [karma: 106919]

The GPL talks about "the preferred form for modification of the software", and I'm starting to think that anything which involves any kind of LLM agent should be including all the text that the user gave to it as well. Prompts, etc.

Of course, even then it's not reproducible and requires proprietary software!

stavros ranked #46 [karma: 76202]

When you grow up you should want universal healthcare...

stavros ranked #46 [karma: 76202]

No, the number is made up, I'm saying that there's a point where the advice makes sense. Whether or not that's actually the case now is then a matter of statistics.

pjmlp ranked #17 [karma: 126996]

The right way to start is with LispWorks or Allegro Common Lisp, exactly the surviving Common Lisp IDEs, instead of building your own IDE out of Emacs and SLIME.

However I do agree with the AI part.

pjmlp ranked #17 [karma: 126996]

Outside US those demographics will be buying cheaper PC laptops under 500 euro, with higher RAM.

Open a couple of Electron crap apps, and the 8 GB are gone.

pjc50 ranked #24 [karma: 106919]

Also, despite the CPU being 1000x slower, redraws were extremely fast. If they weren't quite fast enough, then the combo of deterministic keyboard nav and a reliable type ahead buffer meant the user could queue up a burst of actions from muscle memory.

tosh ranked #8 [karma: 173001]

And yet: current state of the art models are also great at navigating and trying language ecosystems that aren't as mainstream. So if you're curious it's now great to explore topics, languages, concepts that — even if not mainstream — were so far a bit out of reach.

pjmlp ranked #17 [karma: 126996]

Yes, used it on MS-DOS 3.3, until getting hold of Works for MS-DOS.

pjmlp ranked #17 [karma: 126996]

I won't be public shaming, but on a .NET podcast I just heard of an internal Microsoft project that took 7 years (!), to become public, it was a plain single Assembly .NET library nothing special (1 DLL).

dragonwriter ranked #16 [karma: 127555]

Is that because you don't believe we should use AI, or because you do not agree with “if you aren’t paying for the product, you are the product.”

dragonwriter ranked #16 [karma: 127555]

No, the President does not have “full naming rights” over entities defined and named in statute law. The President is bound to faithfully execute that law, but to change it (even if that change is merely to the name of a department or title of an officer specified within it) requires a bill to that effect to be passed by a majority of each house of Congress, which the President may then sign into law, effecting the change.