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.

coldtea ranked #33 [karma: 90316]

>Some human still has to be accountable. Someone has to get fired / go to jail when something screws up.

Why? The logic of ever less personal pride, involvement, and care, is eventually to just put the blame on AI and be done with it.

Issues? Casualties? It's a bug, somebody fixes it and we move on. Or is just a cost we need to get used to to live in the great new world of AI.

We're in an era where nobody involved goes to jail for the Epstein case, and the world keeps turning, and we think people will care if nobody goes to jail if somebody loses their pension or gets wrongly imprisoned or dies on an operating table because of AI mistake?

If anything, legal, union and other limitations like that on who gets to decide (having to have a human ultimately responsible) might be torn down, to fullu embrace the blame-shifting capabilities of the digital bureucracy.

tptacek ranked #1 [karma: 417152]

The system of copyright enshrined at the time of the founders is drastically more restrictive than this, which undercuts your "sick joke designed to enrich lawyers" line.

tptacek ranked #1 [karma: 417152]

Right, but one problem is that people with kids do care a lot that they're going to school in the dark.

jacquesm ranked #2 [karma: 239360]

That only works as long as the powers that be don't start quoting this stuff themselves.

JumpCrisscross ranked #7 [karma: 177191]

Herman Miller's Jarvis [1]. I'm probably paying up for the brand, but I got it installed a few years ago (with the nano-textured Studio display), and it works beautifully.

[1] https://store.hermanmiller.com/home-desk-accessories/jarvis-...

walterbell ranked #30 [karma: 97078]

https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2026/03/m5-pro-and-m5-max-ar...

  Apple says that M5 Pro and M5 Max use an “all-new Fusion Architecture” that welds two silicon chiplets into a single processor. Apple has used this approach before, but historically only to combine two Max chips together into an Ultra.

  Apple’s approach here is different—for example, the M5 Pro is not just a pair of M5 chips welded together. Rather, Apple has one chiplet handling the CPU and most of the I/O, and a second one that’s mainly for graphics, both built on the same 3nm TSMC manufacturing process.

Animats ranked #10 [karma: 159930]

It begins to look like Citizens United [1] cost us democracy.

"That government of the rich, by the rich, and for the rich shall not perish from the earth."

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citizens_United_v._FEC

dragonwriter ranked #16 [karma: 127442]

US states cannot, under current federal law, go permanent daylight time (they can go permanent standard time, though), and they can't unilaterally make the latter have the same effect as the former by simultaneously switching time zones because they can't switch timezones without approval of the federal Department of Transportation. I don't see the current federal government making special accommodation for California, Oregon, or Washington on, well, anything in the next eight months, so...

PaulHoule ranked #25 [karma: 105310]

I’ll add that MacOS is crammed with spammy ads for Apple Music and other services I don’t want. To be fair somebody wants Apple Music whereas the Microsoft versions of those things are completely unwanted.

Ads and nags in the Windows World are drawn using the same HTML-based technology that has replaced Windows native apps since Windows 8, the ads and nags in MacOS are the 2025 anti-antialiased retreads of the 1999 MacOS X imitations of the modal dialogs from 1984 MacOS classic. It’s sad. When I set up a new Mac for my wife she was furious at how ad infested it was, especially to browse the web with Safari and if you want to add an ad blocked you need an Apple Account which is something she’s done without using macs for 20+ years.

dragonwriter ranked #16 [karma: 127442]

Note that this has very little bearing on the real interesting questions of whether and when human authors can copyright works where AI was used as a tool; this case is specifically about attempts by Thaler to apply for copyright listing an AI as author of a work for which he explicitly denied any human authorship.

jerf ranked #32 [karma: 91223]

From my post at https://jerf.org/iri/post/2026/what_value_code_in_ai_era/ , in a footnote:

"It has been lost in AI money-grabbing frenzy but a few years ago we were talking a lot about AIs being “legible”, that they could explain their actions in human-comprehensible terms. “Running code we can examine” is the highest grade of legibility any AI system has produced to date. We should not give that away.

"We will, of course. The Number Must Go Up. We aren’t very good at this sort of thinking.

"But we shouldn’t."

simonw ranked #27 [karma: 99797]

The "Nearly half of AI-generated code fails basic security tests" link provided in this piece is not credible in my opinion. It's a very thinly backed vendor report from a company selling security scanning software.

dragonwriter ranked #16 [karma: 127442]

> And if the big labs are able to reliably block distillation,

The big labs will not be able to reliably block distillation without further inhibiting general use of the models, which itself will help tip the balance away from commercial models.

pjmlp ranked #17 [karma: 126558]

Nah, some developers are lazy, that is all, lets not dance around the bush with that one.

Most of those Electron folks would not manage to even write C applications on an Amiga, use Delphi, VB, or whatever.

Educated on node and do not know anything else.

Even doing a TUI seems like a revelation to current generations, something quite mudane and quite common on 1980's text based computing of Turbo Vision, Clipper and curses.

jerf ranked #32 [karma: 91223]

"It is entirely jarring if an AI NPC that says something that's not consistent with the game state, or changes the game state in a way that violates the constraint of the understood rules/boundaries of the game"

I played with the Mantella mod for Skyrim a few months back and one of the problems with LLMs is you can't keep them on topic. I even used a custom trained one just for Skyrim, but the problem was it still has vast real world knowledge it shouldn't. For instance I asked a town guard where I could find Taylor Swift, who said she might be down at the tavern playing music. While the conversation didn't super overtly break the theme, the guard "stayed in character" and didn't start gushing about specific songs of hers or something, he still "knew" who she was. Current-gen AIs can't be fenced in very well. And almost every game idea needs some sort of fencing in.

If you play along with the AI it's not bad but if you poke the edges the illusion breaks quickly. You can't prompt a current-gen AI to just "forget everything you shouldn't know because it doesn't fit in the game universe."

I expect future architectures probably will fix this and that will help a lot. But we don't have them yet.

ceejayoz ranked #34 [karma: 89492]

See also: Grocery stores. Prices went up "due to COVID". Prices will never come down again.

(I've no doubt the supply chain was a mess for a hot minute, but years later?)

PaulHoule ranked #25 [karma: 105310]

I think there's a certain antipathy between "hustle culture" and gaming

https://components.news/the-gamer-and-the-nihilist/

that is is, people who are caught in AI FOMO are performatively trying to appear to be productive and that's the opposite of fun.

dragonwriter ranked #16 [karma: 127442]

Is it more likely to be clear and reliable if it is AI-written, or are features associated (both directly and by correlation) with clear writing increasingly misperceived as “AI tells” because they are also favored in LLM training?

jedberg ranked #44 [karma: 77912]

Not sure I agree (and I made the jump from IC to management).

Look at the parallel tracks. A VP is the same level as a distinguished engineer, roughly. To be a VP, you have to be a great manager and got lucky with a few big projects.

To be a DE, you basically have to be famous within the industry. And when I look at a large tech company, while there aren't a lot of VPs, usually the number of DEs is countable on one hand (or maybe two).

They are very different skill sets. You shouldn't choose your role based on money or career progression, you should choose based on what you love to do, because especially in this world of AI replacing all the "boring" work, the only people who will be left will be the ones passionate about what they are doing.

steveklabnik ranked #29 [karma: 97109]

Regular variable definition shadows. Macros expand to regular Rust code, they could always be replaced by the expanded body.

toomuchtodo ranked #23 [karma: 107024]

The credential is of questionable value, it’s a checkbox to enable international folks to buy their way in via educational visas and to soak US students for student loan debt that can’t be discharged. It’s gating economic outcomes, not an objective measure.

Brajeshwar ranked #50 [karma: 71866]

Welcome back. One of my staple YouTube Subscriptions.

I’m today years old learning that the light that we actually see on earth today came out 100s of thousands of years ago.

pjmlp ranked #17 [karma: 126558]

Then support companies like Tuxedo, System 76, Dell, Asus,....

The only time Apple supported first class Linux on their consumer hardware was with MkLinux, and that was when everything was going down in flames and they needed to survive somehow.

pjmlp ranked #17 [karma: 126558]

Which majority?

I certainly only use Macs when being project assigned, then there are plenty of developers out there whose job has nothing to do with what Apple offers.

Also while Metal is a very cool API, I rather play with Vulkan, CUDA and DirectX, as do the large majority of game developers.

crazygringo ranked #38 [karma: 82300]

Google didn't do anything wrong, they lost their Yahoo and it was the only way they had of verifying their older Gmail. What do you expect, when you don't have access to your recovery method, and it's a free service so it's not like you can prove ownership of a credit card previously used for billing or something? And especially since that was presumably from before the days when Gmail required a phone number, so your recovery e-mail was the only mechanism, and things like 2FA authentication codes didn't exist.

bookofjoe ranked #26 [karma: 103686]

Spot on. 99+% of those reading/making these comments use an ad blocker; 99+% of non-techies like me never have and never will.

jacquesm ranked #2 [karma: 239360]

As you should be. I so far have not verified my age for anything, if that becomes a requirement I just bow out.

jacquesm ranked #2 [karma: 239360]

It isn't doing that now, but you can't be sure about what they're going to be up to a little ways down the line, the fact that they are clearly trying to misdirect the traffic is proof positive they're up to no good.

Just do a bit of risk assessment if something like this were to be shipped to people that have come to blindly trust the source and you'll see why letting this slip is a very bad idea.

minimaxir ranked #47 [karma: 73749]

The original comment is asking from a legal perspective in a very specific example, not an emotional one.

jacquesm ranked #2 [karma: 239360]

> With software engineers and office work you don’t have legal limitations on who can perform the work

Technically true, but if you want the IP to be covered by copyright you better make sure they're not using AI or you'll find out that there are some serious legal limitations in your future when you aim to either pick up investment or sell your IP.

jacquesm ranked #2 [karma: 239360]

> Only available in kit form after Apple complained.

That's several levels of disgusting. But then again, Apple long ago lost touch with the people that put them on the map in the first place.

jerf ranked #32 [karma: 91223]

World models do not belong here, or at least, we're still some years from figuring out how they would. If I want to text my wife I can imagine just telling my phone that somehow rather than using the current UI paradigm, but what "world model" am I going to pull up that is helpful to do that? World models belong in their own stream, along with rendering in general (movies, etc.), games, VR, and other similar things that we do not today classify as UI, for good reason.

In fact I suspect "world models" may let us re-experience some idiocy from yesteryear we thought we had put behind us, like [1]. Can't wait to go "shopping" in a "world model" of a store again! However do I survive in 2026 merely zipping around the store buying my favorite items off of my favorite's list as fast as I can think of the items and using search on the thousands of available items rather than WASD'ing my way through a "model" of the store.

By contrast I think the browser is undersold. GUI toolkits existed before browsers, but they were all based on widget layouts. That is, the top level of the widget hierarchy would be some layout engine, which had components, which had subcomponents, which had a widget, etc. Some were more dynamic and relative, some used a lot of absolute positioning, but they were all structured in this way. Browsers introduced a new paradigm, where textual layout was the "top level" of the tree, and the widgets all fit within that. Prior to a browser, a Mad Lib-style game where you have text boxes interspersed in a bunch of text was quite difficult. Many GUI toolkits would have required an individual absolutely-laid-out pane for each game you want to play because it couldn't do its own layout on interspersed text and widgets at all; most if not all of them (perhaps Tk excepted, though I'm not familiar with what it could do in the 1990s as I picked it up later) would have made heavy weather of it if they could do it. (Although GUIs made heavy weather of things in general before browsers.) Now all the GUI toolkits have a lot more support for textual-layout like browsers and of course the browsers have carried on like crazy.

AIs-running-in-browsers seem a very powerful paradigm to continue forward with.

With regard to the "world model" I would see "augmented reality" being the major move forward there. It has consistently failed for a long time but I think there's a very plausible case to be made that it was just premature tech, that it doesn't work without the powerful AIs that only recently came out and are still pretty hard to stuff on to a realtime platform. That will start to enable some very interesting UI paradigms here at some point. But that still really doesn't replace WIMPs, it's more a new frontier entirely. Again, I don't necessarily want to "use augmented reality" to text my wife. AR may prompt for it in some particular circumstance, but if I'm originating one out of the blue I'm going to use a conventional UI to do that, not try to wrangle AR into it.

[1]: https://www.shamusyoung.com/twentysidedtale/?p=35440

simonw ranked #27 [karma: 99797]

I feel like the more important question here is whether AI-generated code can be copyrighted.

Companies responsible for several billion dollars worth of software written over the past ~36 months would really like to know the answer to that one.

rayiner ranked #18 [karma: 125835]

The labor market for recent college graduates is very soft right now, so it seems like a good time for a pause on importing foreign workers: https://www.investopedia.com/workers-who-attended-college-ar...

walterbell ranked #30 [karma: 97078]

When they don't have to pay a percentage of sales price as royalty to Qualcomm.

bookofjoe ranked #26 [karma: 103686]
simonw ranked #27 [karma: 99797]

One thing that's worth remembering is that companies - especially in Silicon Valley - use titles as a way to compare salary levels with each other.

If you are an engineering manager looking to make the case for raises for your team members one of the tools you have available is usually an anonymized survey of similar compensation levels from other companies.

You can say things like "this person is a high performer and is being paid 85% of the expected level for this title at other companies nearby - we should bump them up".

Your company may use job titles in a non-standard way, but there's probably an HR document somewhere that attempts to map them to more standard levels in order to make these kinds of comparisons useful.

I don't know how this works in other industries or countries, but I've seen this pattern play out in San Francisco Bay Area tech companies.

bookofjoe ranked #26 [karma: 103686]

>Some human still has to be accountable. Someone has to get fired / go to jail when something screws up.

I remember growing up and always hearing "The computer is down" as an excuse for why things were cancelled/offices closed/buses and trains not running/ad infinitum.

At some point I read a article that pointed out that the reason the computer was down was because a person made a [coding] error: the computer itself was fine.

I've yet to read about how a person who caused the computer to be down was disciplined.

paxys ranked #41 [karma: 80499]

You are right this would never happen in an advanced country like the USA, and certainly not in a top Federal court

https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/society-equity/two-fe...

rayiner ranked #18 [karma: 125835]

ARM designs are effectively paper launches. You get these press releases saying the new ARM matches Apple and AMD, but its years before you can buy a product with it. Google Pixels that came out in the fall are still on the X4, which was introduced in 2023. At this rate, Pixel 11 will launch with X925, which is an Apple A17/M3 tier core, when Apple is on the A20: https://wccftech.com/apple-a20-and-a20-pro-all-technological.... Outsourcing the core design creates a major lag in product availability.

stavros ranked #45 [karma: 76045]

AI-generated art can't be copyrighted, fine. But what does this mean for the huge spectrum between "I did some fingerpainting" and "Nano Banana spat out this painting"?

What if I use Photoshop and context-aware fill a cloud in? Is that AI-generated or human-generated art?

crazygringo ranked #38 [karma: 82300]

It's the editor's responsibility to set processes and standards to try to make sure this doesn't happen. If the rules exist but the reporter breaks them, then it's the reporter's fault and they get fired. As happened -- that's part of the process of maintaining standards. It's not the editor's fault. What exactly do you expect them to do? They can't fact-check and verify every single fact and quote in every article. They're not superhuman.

stavros ranked #45 [karma: 76045]

The whole project is a month old, and two weeks were more than enough for Google to rank the fake site first, so yes?

stavros ranked #45 [karma: 76045]

I saw a Pebble Index 01 and I really wanted one, but I'm not known for my patience, so I made something almost as good.

jacquesm ranked #2 [karma: 239360]

Indeed. The problem with that was that the browser would cache the whole bloody stream and that quickly led to issues. That's why we switched to JPEG, which also greatly improved the image quality over the GIF format, which really wasn't designed for dealing with camera generated images.

pjc50 ranked #24 [karma: 106793]

The advertising campaign is incredible.

pjc50 ranked #24 [karma: 106793]

I'd be cool fining Meta 1% of global revenue for every fraudulent ad on their platform.

Animats ranked #10 [karma: 159930]

Strange ad for a VPN. Without the controversy, would people get it?

paxys ranked #41 [karma: 80499]

It is simply summarizing the top few search results. If they are false then the summary will be false.

Animats ranked #10 [karma: 159930]

It does require really good maintenance-of-way work.

Having all trains inspect the track is feasible. The latest round of Shinkansen trains does that. They're moving away from running a Dr. Yellow track inspection train every 10 days.[1]

[1] https://www.railway.supply/n700s-trains-to-be-equipped-with-...

stavros ranked #45 [karma: 76045]

It's been four days, let it go man.

pjc50 ranked #24 [karma: 106793]

"Use OBS" is one approach that definitely works. If you run the browser inside OBS it also disables hardware acceleration, which may cause some issues but has the advantage of turning DRM support off.

pjmlp ranked #17 [karma: 126558]

I used to be on Year of Linux Desktop camp a few years ago with M$ on my email signatures and all, nowadays I rather take Windows and macOS, leaving GNU/Linux for Raspberry PI and servers, even with all the ongoing warts than the endless count of distros on Distrowatch, there is always that pain point that takes weekends to sort out, e.g. having a BRIX UEFI booting the desired distro, like I had to last year.

> My son wanted to try a Java minecraft app on his iPhone, but it required insane workarounds to enable JIT to get acceptable performance. This isn't a technical limitation, it's put in place specifically to protect Apple's walled garden, and their precious services revenue.

This would also not work properly in Android, because it is Android Java, not standard Java.

Animats ranked #10 [karma: 159930]

That's very nice. The nut dispenser is very effective. Small, and feeds well. The screw dispenser is starting to run into jamming problems. It will probably start to jam more as the acrylic gets scratched and friction becomes worse. But it's manual and low volume, so jamming isn't a big issue.

He's discovered that dispensing is easy, but order from chaos is harder.

There's a whole theory of feeder design.[1] There are clever tricks to orient strangely shaped parts using feeders made from passive components. A basic trick is to get parts aligned in one axis, then arrange it so that the ones that are backwards or upside down hit some obstacle or are not supported, so they fall back down for another try.

[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZlyuHIxSC-A

pjmlp ranked #17 [karma: 126558]

It has been there for me since 1993, in every single scenario as alternative to C, when the choice boils down to either of them.

Since 1993, I only have used C when required to do for various reasons out of my control, or catching up with WG14 standards.

Brajeshwar ranked #50 [karma: 71866]

This is Awesome.

On a different note, if you bring this up or think about India too, how will it impact manual farmers whose entire livelihood is tied to doing the job? Or am I reading it (automation) wrong?

Btw, I’ve never liked a website taking over my mouse pointer or the scroll UI and behavior. But yours is so well done, it is lovely, cute, and is indeed very fishy.

toomuchtodo ranked #23 [karma: 107024]
toomuchtodo ranked #23 [karma: 107024]

The US spent trillions of dollars and many lives during their last escapade into the sandbox, and still went home having lost. What evidence leads you to believe a coalition of countries can stamp out autonomous, independent, ideology driven, potentially perpetual attacks? The potential attack surface is enormous, and attackers need to win only once versus needing a constant, successful defense against them. “What is your threat model?”

Iran is already demonstrating how to exhaust a supply of $4M patriot missiles with $50k drones. Broadly speaking, chaos is cheap when asymmetrical power is available and successful and soft, undefended targets are numerous and readily available. The cost to defend everything at once is untenable, and in some cases, it is almost impossible to defend the target at all (artillery against an LNG loading facility, for example).

stavros ranked #45 [karma: 76045]

It's been popular for at least 20 years, as far as I know.

JumpCrisscross ranked #7 [karma: 177191]

Idk why you’re getting downvoted, the U.S. is looking for a quick win if it can have it. One of the destructive streaks in the Iranian regime (and among its proxies) is their glorification of martyrdom over pragmatism. It’s cost them historically and it’s costing them now.

danso ranked #9 [karma: 167288]

Why would apologizing for plagiarism and fabrication preclude you from facing sanctions for plagiarism and fabrication?

JumpCrisscross ranked #7 [karma: 177191]

> If you don’t want crazy and incompetent, don’t vote for it

We have less of a problem with crazies voting for crazies than non-crazies not voting. Because if the crazies can find compromise with someone approximately as crazy as them while the non-crazies are either too lazy to turn out or unable to get out of stitches because the less-crazy candidate disagrees with them on two issues, the crazies win.

JumpCrisscross ranked #7 [karma: 177191]

“Edwards also stressed that his colleague Kyle Orland, the site’s senior gaming editor who co-bylined the retracted story, had ‘no role in this error.’”

Has Orland issued a real apology? He bylined a piece containing fraudulent quotes.

toomuchtodo ranked #23 [karma: 107024]

They are a reflection of the electorate. If you don’t want crazy and incompetent, don’t vote for it. If you get what you voted for, don’t be sad about it, it’s what you voted for. Regime change will come with time, but it’s going to suck for a while because of this governance failure mode.

JumpCrisscross ranked #7 [karma: 177191]

> "Pacific time" is going to be so confusing

It’s already ambiguous. Just use a city and let your calendar do the rest. New York, Phoenix and San Francisco time are unambiguous in a way trying to name time zones is not.

TeMPOraL ranked #20 [karma: 113412]

At least for me, the effect is real, and is driven not by media consumption but ergonomics of use. But at the same time, I'd say you're not missing that much. I always preferred large screens because of productivity gains[2], but even as screens kept getting larger, the set of things that "I feel I’m better off opening a laptop" for remained the same for me.

That is, until I switched to a foldable phone (Galaxy Z Fold 7) half a year ago, and - I kid you not - I haven't used my personal laptop since that day.

FWIW, I still have a proper desktop PC; In the past decade+, I've been using a PC at home, and a "sidearm" on the go / away from home: always a 2-in-1 Windows laptop with top specs[0]. Being always with me, this laptop often replaced use of PC at home too, because of convenience & portability.

So by amount of productive use, for past 10+ years it was sidearm >> PC >> smartphone. But getting a foldable flipped it around. Having twice the screen size of a regular (large) phone is a big productivity win[1], but it's folding that makes the actual qualitative difference. Folded, the device becomes a regular smartphone - i.e. something that fits in my pocket, meaning it's always on me, in my hands, or less than 1 second away. Contrast that with tablets, whose form factor makes them basically just shitty laptops (same logistic as ultraportable, but toy OS of a phone).

I didn't expect this. I didn't even feel this change - I only noticed two months later that my laptop has been sitting unused on my desk, covered by a pile of stuff. Doing "laptop tasks" on a mobile device is still annoying (no keyboard, toy OS), but combining tablet-sized screen with portability of a phone makes them less annoying than logistics overhead of a laptop - and at least in my case, this eliminated the entire[3] space between "smartphone" and "PC".

--

[0] - Think Microsoft Surface, except I could get better specs at half the price if I bought an off-lease but pristine Dell or Lenovo.

[1] - It's not immediately obvious to people, but as things are today, a foldable phone isn't any better at media consumption than regular one, because almost all cinema, TV, videogames, etc. are all produced for widescreen - meanwhile, the inner screen of my Fold is approximately square, so e.g. for most TV, half or more of it is black at all times. However, all that extra space allows to effectively use multiple (3+) apps on screen, not to mention makes spreadsheets actually usable.

[2] - Bigger screen = less scrolling and tapping in menus, but also with text size scaled to minimum, my previous phone (S22) had a big enough screen that running two apps in split-screen became useful on a regular basis.

[3] - Well, almost. There are some tasks I really like physical keyboard and larger screen for - but for those, I just plug the phone into the screen via USB-C, and volia, it turns into a regular desktop. A shitty one, but good enough for occasional use.

coldtea ranked #33 [karma: 90316]

"Apologized on Blue Sky" is absolutely no reason to keep them. The author did the absolutely worst things a journalist can do (short of actual corruption) and is unfit for the job:

- He didn't care for his story,

- he didn't care to verify his story,

- he published bullshit made up stuff,

- and put words in a real person's mouth

- and he didn't even care to write the thing himself

Why keep him and pay him? What mentality all the above show? What respect, both self respect and respect for the job?

If they wanted stories from an LLM, they can pay for a subscription to one directly.

Hope this sends a message to journalist hacks who offload their writing or research to an LLM.

toomuchtodo ranked #23 [karma: 107024]

This sounds like a push piece from a throwaway account waiting for the comment suggesting a crypto recovery firm.

stavros ranked #45 [karma: 76045]

I'm puzzled by this conversation, because Amazon did get on the agent bandwagon with Alexa Plus (I have it, it's buggier than regular Alexa and it's all making me throw my Echos away since they can't even play Spotify reliably).

Also, my Alexa does advertise stuff to me when I talk to it. It's not Budweiser, but it'll try to upsell me on Amazon services all the time.

stavros ranked #45 [karma: 76045]

I know half the point of OpenClaw is to let it run wild on your personal data so it can do anything, but, if you're looking for a secure but still capable AI agent/assistant, I built one I really like:

https://github.com/skorokithakis/stavrobot

Everything is sandboxed and plugins have fine-grained permissions, so you can tweak the security/usability tradeoff to your liking. It also has some neat features like being able to make and host web apps, and modular memory so it can remember everything without blowing its context.

mooreds ranked #35 [karma: 88602]

FusionAuth | Senior Java Engineer, Technical Support Engineer, Account Executive , Solutions Engineer | Varies between REMOTE (in USA, also in Europe but only for the account exec/solutions engineer positions) and ONSITE in Denver, CO, USA, details in each job desc | Salary ranges listed on job req, but for the Senior Java Engineer it is 140k-180k

At FusionAuth, our mission is to make authentication and authorization simple and secure for every developer building web and mobile applications. We want devs to stop worrying about auth and focus on building something awesome. We also recently acquired a fine-grained authorization company ( https://fusionauth.io/blog/fusionauth-acquires-permify ) and are going to be building in that area as well.

There are a lot of companies in the auth space, but we feel like we have something special:

* a unique deployment model (self-host on-prem or in your cloud or run in our cloud)

* A well designed API first approach; one customer compared our APIs to petrichor

* a mature product (the code base is nine+ years old and we've found and fixed a lot of the sharp edges around core login use cases; but don't worry, there are plenty more features to add)

* our CTO is the founder and still writes code

* a full featured free-as-in-beer version which makes the sales cycle easier; prospects often come in having prototyped an integration already

Our core software is commercial. We open source much of our supporting infrastructure. Technologies and standards that you will work with: modern Java, PostgreSQL, Docker, Kubernetes, MySQL, OAuth, SAML, OIDC.

Learn more, including about benefits and salaries, and apply here: https://fusionauth.io/careers/ ( Click/tap the 'View open positions' orange button. )

stavros ranked #45 [karma: 76045]

What the hell? I thought the videos went to the phone directly, they're all getting uploaded to Meta? I don't know why I let my guard down against that company for one second.

EDIT: Wait, is this when you use the "ask Meta" feature? I do expect that to send all the clips to a server for an LLM to process, it's not done on-device. It's not clear to me whether it's that or just all videos/photos you record with the glasses.

paxys ranked #41 [karma: 80499]

More like - try not to be someone the government deems a terrorist

toomuchtodo ranked #23 [karma: 107024]

Why did you have to shut down? What would you have done differently? What would the future roadmap look like if you had been able to continue to build?

userbinator ranked #36 [karma: 88173]

It's worth noting that in China, where the whole country is on a single timezone (which is roughly solar time in the eastern part, but far from it in the western part), places in the west simply have a different notion of time.

toomuchtodo ranked #23 [karma: 107024]

“When someone shows you who they are, believe them.”

crazygringo ranked #38 [karma: 82300]

> another reason is that generally driving conditions are worse in the morning than they are in the evening

Wait, why? Where? I've never heard this. Which driving conditions are you talking about? Rain? Snow?

Brajeshwar ranked #50 [karma: 71866]

Haaa! I also paused reading at “as a kid.”

I bought the 1st Gen iPad for my daughter while I was in the States for work (2010). Not a phone, big enough, and can be Internet-connected with a SIM. Lots of Games, and later my feeling of having bought something amazing was that my daughter learnt to speak brilliant English with Peppa Pig, way before her formal school started.

Palo Alto Stanford Shopping (USA) › FedEx to a Relative in Maine (USA) traveling to Manipur (India) › he trimmed a local SIM to fit the Nano-SIM tray › Happy Daughter on her 2nd Birthday.

jedberg ranked #44 [karma: 77912]

Oh, this is really interesting to me. This is what I worked on at Amazon Alexa (and have patents on).

An interesting fact I learned at the time: The median delay between human speakers during a conversation is 0ms (zero). In other words, in many cases, the listener starts speaking before the speaker is done. You've probably experienced this, and you talk about how you "finish each other's sentences".

It's because your brain is predicting what they will say while they speak, and processing an answer at the same time. It's also why when they say what you didn't expect, you say, "what?" and then answer half a second later, when your brain corrects.

Fact 2: Humans expect a delay on their voice assistants, for two reasons. One reason is because they know it's a computer that has to think. And secondly, cell phones. Cell phones have a built in delay that breaks human to human speech, and your brain thinks of a voice assistant like a cell phone.

Fact 3: Almost no response from Alexa is under 500ms. Even the ones that are served locally, like "what time is it".

Semantic end-of-turn is the key here. It's something we were working on years ago, but didn't have the compute power to do it. So at least back then, end-of-turn was just 300ms of silence.

This is pretty awesome. It's been a few years since I worked on Alexa (and everything I wrote has been talked about publicly). But I do wonder if they've made progress on semantic detection of end-of-turn.

Edit: Oh yeah, you are totally right about geography too. That was a huge unlock for Alexa. Getting the processing closer to the user.

paxys ranked #41 [karma: 80499]

"Most employers" definitely don't allow flexible working hours. You have to be in specific sectors – basically just "modern" tech companies – to have that privilege. And that is a very tiny slice of the working population.

toomuchtodo ranked #23 [karma: 107024]
rayiner ranked #18 [karma: 125835]

Holy crap, 32MB of SRAM on the chip for AI.

crazygringo ranked #38 [karma: 82300]

Don you carry a cell phone? Do you walk into rooms where other people have smartphones with Siri or Google Assistant? Those are literally no different from Alexa.

bookofjoe ranked #26 [karma: 103686]
crazygringo ranked #38 [karma: 82300]

They definitely do. But in my experience they "accumulate".

Like, things all work pretty well at first. And then god only knows what happens as config and preference files get into weird states, and temp files accumulate and never get deleted, and cache files get stuck with old info and refuse to update, and god only knows.

So people with relatively new installations have a pretty good time, while people who have migrated their data across three MacBooks over ten years are encountering problems left and right.

I reinstalled Sequoia fresh last year because some mystery process would slowly consume 50GB of disk space over the course of every two weeks, no disk utility could locate any file responsible, but restarting reset it. But with the fresh reinstall, everything started working fine again. It's annoying. Then I upgraded to Tahoe and zero problems. But I'm sure they'll gradually start appearing over the next year or two.

bookofjoe ranked #26 [karma: 103686]
bookofjoe ranked #26 [karma: 103686]
jerf ranked #32 [karma: 91223]

It sounds like you think govulncheck can analyze your code and detect vulnerabilities that you wrote in your code. That's not what it does. It analyzes the libraries that you use and determines if you are using them in a vulnerable way. For a free tool, govulncheck is somewhat nicer than average in its class because it does call flow analysis and won't claim you're vulnerable just because you used a module, you have to actually have a call that could go over the vulnerable code, but "somewhat nicer than average" is as far as I would take it. But many languages have similar tools, and when you say "static analyzer" this isn't what I have in mind. For that I'd cite golangci-lint, which is a collection of community-built analysis tools, and it's nice to be able to pick them all up in one fell swoop, but they're nothing like Coverity or any real static analysis tool.

paxys ranked #41 [karma: 80499]

I'm happy for the existence of the e line mainly because it forces them to bump up the specs on the base iPhone. 17 is so good now that there's very little reason to get the 17 Pro.

coldtea ranked #33 [karma: 90316]

>Which is really silly, because if someone needs to do actual work they are not going to do it on an iPad no matter how capable it is. The form factor simply does not work for getting work done.*

Nonsens. The iPad is basically a 11 to 13 (Pro) monitor+computer with an amazing touch screen. Adding the official keyboard folio, or any bluetooth keyboard/mourse is trivial, and it makes for an excellent on-the-go machine. Not different to the 12-inch MacBook (circa 2015) and the older fan favorite 12-inch PowerBook G4 (circa 2003), and I know several devs who swore by them. Linus used and loved one of the latter (with PPC Linux on in his case).

The only issue is the lack of OS level support for some stuff, not the form factor.

Admins, devs working mostly on the Cloud, photographers, and writers already use it for "getting work done", I've seen execs too.

PaulHoule ranked #25 [karma: 105310]

I'd argue that people can put words together to make new meanings or coin new words when they have to. The real magic of language is not "we have words for everything" but we have grammar.

Animats ranked #10 [karma: 159930]

"Today, Motorola also introduced Moto Analytics, an enterprise‑grade analytics platform designed to give IT administrators real‑time visibility into device performance across their fleet."

So they put in a back door for business users?

bookofjoe ranked #26 [karma: 103686]
stavros ranked #45 [karma: 76045]

I made a secure one:

https://github.com/skorokithakis/stavrobot

Everything runs in containers (I run it on a server along with everything else), plugins have a permission system so eg the AI can read emails but not delete or send, etc.

I really like it, I run it as my main agent and it has been extremely helpful.

dragonwriter ranked #16 [karma: 127442]

> If you had a 386DX then I believe you had the math copro? The 386SX did not have an FPU and needed the additional 387SX.

The 386DX/386SX distinction was the external databus (32-bit on the DX, 16-bit on the SX)

DX was “Double word eXternal", SX was “Single word eXternal”. Neither had an FPU builtin, and there were corresponding 387DX and 387SX coprocessors.

Then Intel used the same naming split (despite the abbreviations not applying) for high-end vs low-end of the 486 where the DX had a builtin FPU and the SX required a “487SX coprocessor” to get an FPU (which IIRC was internally just a 486DX processor which went into a separate “coprocessor slot” which just bypassed the “main” processor when populated.)

WalterBright ranked #43 [karma: 79047]

Germany didn't have patent laws in the 1800s. Their economy rapidly industrialized and boomed.

I don't believe on balance that patents would be a net improvement. Are companies really going to stop making things better if they couldn't patent it?

Note that Tesla open sources its patents.

dragonwriter ranked #16 [karma: 127442]

> Cops can't move vehicles that they don't own because of liability. The only way for them to move a vehicle without liability is to use a tow truck.

While the precise boundaries of liability depend on the laws of the particular jurisdiction (they aren't consistent across the whole US) police generally can take reasonable action to move vehicles obstructing the road in an emergency without liability for any damages incurred, whether or not they use a tow truck to do it.

bookofjoe ranked #26 [karma: 103686]
crazygringo ranked #38 [karma: 82300]

People take tons of photos and videos on their phones. Download 40 GB of music and podcasts on Spotify. Keep 50 GB of videos in their messages. All at once.

iPads usually aren't used as much for these things. They're used for browsing, streaming, gaming, reading... mostly things that don't take up nearly as much space.

It's not spite, just matching device capabilities to user needs without unnecessary upgrades that will lead to a higher price point.

I use tons of storage on my phone. Not much on my iPad. Pretty much just downloading TV shows before a flight, but 128 GB gives you plenty of hours of that.

dragonwriter ranked #16 [karma: 127442]

> There is a legally protected right of publicity.

There is not a general right of publicity in federal law in the US; in certain states there is with different parameters, including as to who is even protected.

There is a false endorsement provision in the Lanham Act, 15 USC § 1125(a), that provides a very narrow protection around misleading commercial endorsement, though.