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geniuscarrier
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<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;camo.githubusercontent.com&#x2F;dcc4f80ba22343f81873d94c407cffa13c8e875a&#x2F;687474703a2f2f67656e697573636172726965722e6d652f696d616765732f7765627061636b2d626f696c6572706c6174652e676966" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;camo.githubusercontent.com&#x2F;dcc4f80ba22343f81873d94c4...</a>
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hysan
1,460,676,632
You won&#x27;t because you&#x27;re making it even easier on the defense. Trying to optimize for that spot would screw up the positioning for everyone else on your team. The defending team would have it easy because you&#x27;ve essentially killed all chance for high post plays, PnRs, and a good number of cut&#x2F;backdoor type plays. It would take far more time than I have to breakdown the why, but the main factors off the top of my head are:<p>1. Remember the NBA has legal zone defense.<p>2. Additionally, help defense is a lot easier in today&#x27;s NBA. Forced isolations would be very difficult and even if you do it, there is less ground b&#x2F;w help defense and the attacker.<p>3. You have many more quick and&#x2F;or lengthy 3&amp;D type wings in the NBA today. Help and close-outs are easier.<p>4. Long shots mean long rebounds. Putting wings one step in means the offensive team would lose out on one of the main disadvantages of zones - inability to secure defensive rebounds.<p>5. That one player will also be a liability on transition D. He will always be one step behind in case the opposing team forces a TO and runs.<p>That&#x27;s just scratching the surface, but there is a reason it&#x27;s called no-man&#x27;s land for shooters.
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philip1209
1,460,676,627
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[ 11501547, 11502094, 11501353, 11501441, 11501539, 11503111, 11502055, 11501585, 11501647, 11501239, 11501838 ]
http://techcrunch.com/2016/04/14/shuddle-the-uber-like-service-for-getting-your-kids-around-is-shutting-down-tomorrow/
62
Shuddle (Uber for kids) is shutting down tomorrow
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galistoca
1,460,676,787
From my experience in a lot of cases this is the manager&#x27;s fault or the system&#x27;s fault, especially if the guy was initially enthusiastic. Here&#x27;s an example: On my first day at work, I found some UX issue with our existing system and fixed and pushed the code. I told the manager what I did and he said &quot;well this is not in the sprint, so why don&#x27;t you roll it back?&quot; That was my first commit and I rolled it back. Also I realized working too hard didn&#x27;t do me any good. In the first couple of months I was super productive and just kept pushing out code, but nobody really cared and if anything I was being penalized for it because the more I commit the higher the chance that something will reopen, and I get even more workload--all without being much appreciated. Anyway stuff like this happened too much. After a while I started not caring at all and learned to become that guy you describe.
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samclemens
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http://www.tampabay.com/projects/2016/food/farm-to-fable/restaurants/
2
Farm to Fable
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merterdir
1,460,676,694
Ugh.<p>1) Posted the ApplyHN on facebook, couple friends got accounts to support me thinking it would help. Accounts with no karma algorithmically don&#x27;t matter, and they&#x27;re super easy to spot. Wouldn&#x27;t spend time on it.<p>2) I was actually thinking about this kind of tone: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=11500608" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=11500608</a><p>3) Also browsing HN I seem to see a negative atmosphere more and more. This is by far the best forum-style community I came across online. Would like to do my part to help keep it that way. :)
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geniuscarrier
1,460,676,672
Added a gif screenshot: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;geniuscarrier&#x2F;webpack-boilerplate" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;geniuscarrier&#x2F;webpack-boilerplate</a>
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dmoy
1,460,676,756
Right this mentality of human language always loses out (I guess unless you&#x27;re France?).<p>Literally now also literally means figuratively&#x2F;virtually. Etc etc...
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hmahncke
1,460,676,591
This was a great service and it&#x27;s a shame it closed. I used it every week.
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mac01021
1,460,676,698
That depends to a large extent on what skill you want your AI to be able to learn.<p>Many applications from recommender systems, to market analysis to drug discovery probably require large datasets of the sort that can only be collected by a large business.<p>But if you want to learn control polices for robotic agents that navigate the physical world, driving cars, stocking shelves, etc. then I think the physical world is presenting everyone with approximately the same data set regardless of company size.
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mbrubeck
1,460,676,517
<a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;bugzil.la&#x2F;1243363" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;bugzil.la&#x2F;1243363</a> is where Rust code was enabled for Firefox 45 beta&#x2F;release on Linux and Mac.<p>If I understand correctly, having it disabled on Firefox 45 beta broke the build because of a script that tests whether the beta build config matches the nightly config. This forced a decision, and release engineering opted to enable it. So it wasn&#x27;t planned long in advance, but it was a conscious decision at the time 45 went to beta.
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11,500,867
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[ 11501489 ]
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caf
1,460,676,695
<i>Of the five corium creations, only Cherobyl&#x27;s has escaped its containment.</i><p>This is statement is a bit too definitive, because it simply isn&#x27;t known yet how bad the breach is at Fukushima Daiichi No. 2 - from muon radiography it certainly seems to have breached the primary (steel) containment.
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__derek__
1,460,676,799
&gt; Those players, with the exception of Michael Jordan who is an exception to almost all NBA players ever, are forwards or shooting guards.<p>I don&#x27;t understand that sentence. Jordan was a 2 who moved to the 3 later in his career.
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11,500,204
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[ 11501957 ]
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11,501,080
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Alupis
1,460,676,912
&gt; I don&#x27;t see any reasons why you could not cool radioactive isotopes to essentially zero Kelvin and observe the decay rate<p>See the GP, this has been tested and proved to have no effect.
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mesozoic
1,460,676,518
I can understand their desire. Some of my best gaming was on non EA Ultima Online shards that ran the version of the game before it was &quot;ruined&quot; or many thought it was.
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11,500,656
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[ 11501311 ]
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qbrass
1,460,676,919
Drones designed to kamikaze radio transmitters vs people with high powered radio transmitters designed to kill robots.<p>That&#x27;s got dystopian future game show written all over it.
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caf
1,460,676,999
By absorbing neutrons it reduces neutron-activation of elements in the surrounding environment. The downside is that elements like Cesium are water-soluble so you&#x27;ll be spreading stuff around a lot more.
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mindcrime
1,460,677,075
Strictly speaking, &quot;Fields of Endeavor&quot; restrictions violate the OSD.<p>However, my guess (and that&#x27;s all it is) is that in this case, the authors aren&#x27;t actually interested in enforcing such a restriction, but rather added the &quot;educational use only&quot; line as part of an attempt to avoid any liability for subsequent use of the code.
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11,501,021
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[ 11501402 ]
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tedmiston
1,460,677,104
&gt; I&#x27;ve set this thread to not be visible by anyone but yourself and Google.<p>Or not.
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11,500,981
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[ 11501092 ]
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nodesocket
1,460,676,978
pm2 is by far the best node process manager. It is excellent.<p>Though I don&#x27;t use pm2 for deployments. I create new servers (immutable infrastructure) on AWS every deploy, and use NGINX Plus dynamic upstream to add the new backends and remove the old ones. There is something pleasing about creating new servers and destroying old servers every deploy.<p>Also check out Drone (<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;drone&#x2F;drone" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;drone&#x2F;drone</a>) for all your CI and deployment needs. It uses Docker and written in go.
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11,500,325
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pcmaffey
1,460,676,597
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https://www.gitbook.com/book/worldaftercapital/worldaftercapital/details
1
World After Capital
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11,501,086
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mastazi
1,460,677,081
&gt; Vim and Emacs are still superior<p>I think the parent was talking about modern text editors such as Sublime, Atom, Brackets etc.; Vim and Emacs are completely different beasts (note: I love both).<p>Within the category of modern text editors, VS Code is in my opinion revolutionary in several ways - I will give you three examples<p>The first feature that I find &quot;disruptive&quot; is the way VS Code offers a standardised interface for debuggers, hence debugger plugins are much easier to create - and you can see that VS Code already has debugger plugins available for many languages: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;marketplace.visualstudio.com&#x2F;vscode&#x2F;Debuggers?sortBy=Downloads" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;marketplace.visualstudio.com&#x2F;vscode&#x2F;Debuggers?sortBy...</a> the availability of such plugins for Atom and Sublime Text is not nearly as good.<p>The second aspect where VS Code changed the game is the clever way it leverages Electron (the framework it&#x27;s made with, Atom is made with Electron too) - while creating clever workarounds to known Electron bugs - e.g. VS Code, unlike Atom, does not suffer from this bug <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;atom&#x2F;atom&#x2F;issues&#x2F;10720" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;atom&#x2F;atom&#x2F;issues&#x2F;10720</a><p>The third aspect is the git integration - since Atom is sponsored by Github, you would think it has the best git integration out there - but VS Code has gone the extra mile by giving you a great user-friendly UI interface for staging and committing (yeah, I know, anything more complicated than git add -A requires the command line - the fact is that nearly 50% of all the git commands I type are git add -A, LOL).<p>PPS I totally agree with you about the importance of tooling. But e.g. if you have a debugger that does not have an interface to your editor it becomes hard to set breakpoints. So the editor needs to integrate with your tools and VS Code is great at that.
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detaro
1,460,676,400
front page: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=11497970" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=11497970</a>
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monochromatic
1,460,677,097
Gotta be on the bevel, rather than the cutting edge itself.
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[ 11501307 ]
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11,501,094
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EugeneOZ
1,460,677,189
Have you tried this plugin: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;marketplace.visualstudio.com&#x2F;items?itemName=saviorisdead.RustyCode" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;marketplace.visualstudio.com&#x2F;items?itemName=savioris...</a> ?
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pdeuchler
1,460,677,119
It is in their interest. You want the best people at their best positions so you can leverage them to make more money. If your company doesn&#x27;t care about making sure people are empowered to make the business money then I&#x27;d be worried about how they&#x27;re going to pay your salary in the future.
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[ 11501141 ]
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maxerickson
1,460,677,152
Yeah, it&#x27;s probably not fair to speculate about it being a submarine piece, but it really does meander around and extol the many virtues of Tide.
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robotanna
1,460,677,194
why not? they&#x27;re cheap entertainment
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[ 11503483 ]
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Klathmon
1,460,677,161
a few comments later he asked for it to be made public again.
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cyberpanther
1,460,677,128
I had a Google engineer tell me once that the App Engine email api was never meant to send a lot of mail. That is why the quota is so low. I would recommend using a third party service to do e-mail.
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hackuser
1,460,677,185
CyanogenMod&#x27;s priority is not security; it prioritizes things like stability, compatibility, non-technical end-user experience, and relationships with developers. For example:[1]<p><i>Rule #1 of CM is &quot;Don&#x27;t break apps&quot;.<p>We recognize that there are nefarious apps out there, and many of our users would actually understand how to use permission controls (and the implications of using them). With our huge userbase, we have a responsibility to ensure that applications aren&#x27;t running in a hostile environment, and work as designed.<p>We are all privacy advocates at CM, but I am not willing to compromise our good relationship with application developers in order to implement features like this.</i><p>Much more here:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;plus.google.com&#x2F;+SteveKondik&#x2F;posts&#x2F;iLrvqH8tbce" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;plus.google.com&#x2F;+SteveKondik&#x2F;posts&#x2F;iLrvqH8tbce</a><p>[1] See Kondik&#x27;s 29 May 2013 message in <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;jira.cyanogenmod.org&#x2F;browse&#x2F;CYAN-28?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;jira.cyanogenmod.org&#x2F;browse&#x2F;CYAN-28?page=com.atlassi...</a>
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11,500,624
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[ 11501241 ]
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rbanffy
1,460,677,206
He really should not have made the first element of the path variable. Doing an &quot;rm -rf &#x2F;folder&#x2F;{$undefined_value}&#x2F;{$other_undefined_value}&quot; would have made his day much better.<p>Also, never having all backup disk volumes mounted at the same time is good practice.
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obmelvin
1,460,677,227
I don&#x27;t think the OP was suggesting that Obama has done nothing, but rather the opposite. Obama has definitely talked about the importance of cyber security in the past so it&#x27;s a bit weird to say that it&#x27;s a focus just this year.
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11,500,990
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[ 11501161 ]
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exar0815
1,460,676,382
Well, maybe, except the fact that the SU tried to use Robots built in Western Germany, and the radioactivity just fried them. They were absolutely inusable under those conditions. Read about radiation shielding in space missions and the problems that microelectronics have there.
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11,500,969
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[ 11502645, 11502576 ]
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ashwinl
1,460,677,209
<a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.army.mil&#x2F;article&#x2F;125989&#x2F;JIEDDO_launches_redesigned_IED_knowledge_portal&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.army.mil&#x2F;article&#x2F;125989&#x2F;JIEDDO_launches_redesigne...</a>
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steveklabnik
1,460,677,235
It&#x27;s interesting, there&#x27;s a weird dual-character to it. Some people see it like you do, some people see it as a low-level language with some extra features. :)<p>One thing that you may not realize, talking about HOF and such: LLVM is very good at compiling them down. If you use a closure that doesn&#x27;t actually close over anything, it will get turned into a regular old function, for example. Which means it can be inlined...<p>Rust pointers are not always fat. Slices are, but &amp;T is a regular old pointer, as far as the assembly goes.<p>&amp;mut T automatically gets `restrict` applied to it, basically, we do a lot of aliasing stuff as well.<p>Thanks for elaborating :) I should spend some time with Ada.
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[ 11512792 ]
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pklausler
1,460,677,225
Caesar was 1900 years ahead of his time when he threatened to decimate the 9th Legion, then.<p>The meaning may be obscure and obsolete, but the word does mean something specific.
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[ 11501704 ]
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story
cvigne
1,460,677,272
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https://clusterhq.com/2016/04/14/persistence-volumes-mesos/
1
Exploring persistent storage with Apache Mesos
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0
11,501,103
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comment
TaylorGood
1,460,677,246
Would love to play Unreal Tournament here and there.. N64 Goldeneye multi-player shall suffice in the meantime
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11,500,931
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[ 11501135, 11502314 ]
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alexflint
1,460,677,244
Yes but how much CPU and memory are you willing to spare? Parsing is quite CPU-intensive, hence the CPU drag you often see when IDEs start indexing, and type inference involves a lot of unpredictable lookups all over the index, so much of it needs to be in memory to get reasonable performance (yes this is still true if we&#x27;re talking SSD).<p>To see why: when you type &quot;x.foo()&quot; we need run type inference on the complete data flow chain that produced the value &quot;x&quot;, so that we know which particular &quot;foo&quot; you&#x27;re using. Throughout this analysis we may also need to know a lot about the python libraries you&#x27;re using, since you may be passing values into and out of arbitrary third party libraries. If each of the steps in this chain triggered an SSD read then you&#x27;d often have a multi-second lag between hitting a key and seeing the result.
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11,499,522
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[ 11501696, 11501428, 11501553, 11504264, 11501392, 11503291, 11505928 ]
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467568985476
1,460,677,239
Even with a proper exposure including a shutter speed as short as 30 seconds, a person walking in front of the camera won&#x27;t show up unless they stand still. You can use that technique to take a picture through a busy sidewalk and see the people vanish on the image. The image also appears to be lit by a small work-light on camera right (note the hard shadow of the foot and the reflection on the man&#x27;s helmet). He could have walked in the shadow and stopped in the light to increase that &quot;vanishing&quot; and reappearing effect (similar to how you might use a long shutter speed to blur a background while using a flash to &quot;freeze&quot; the subject).<p>Doing some back of the envelope calculations, with a somewhat bright room, you could take the exposure in anywhere from 15s to 2m which is plenty of time to walk across the room.<p>Of course all this is irrelevant because timers (mechanical and electronic) had been standard features in cameras for decades by 1996. It looks to me like he just moved in the midst of a 2 or 3 second exposure.
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coloneltcb
1,460,677,287
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http://arstechnica.com/security/2016/04/apple-stops-patching-quicktime-for-windows-despite-2-active-vulnerabilities/
2
Apple stops patching QuickTime for Windows despite 2 active vulnerabilities
null
0
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story
Jerry2
1,460,677,320
null
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http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/apr/14/court-rules-warrantless-collection-of-cellphone-location-data-constitutional
2
Court rules warrantless collection of cellphone location data constitutional
null
0
11,501,107
null
comment
dmoy
1,460,677,355
AP link in case you don&#x27;t subscribe: <a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;hosted.ap.org&#x2F;dynamic&#x2F;stories&#x2F;U&#x2F;US_MICROSOFT_SECRET_SEARCHES_WAOL-?SITE=AP&amp;SECTION=HOME&amp;TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&amp;CTIME=2016-04-14-18-06-40" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;hosted.ap.org&#x2F;dynamic&#x2F;stories&#x2F;U&#x2F;US_MICROSOFT_SECRET_S...</a>
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11,497,970
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[ 11501256 ]
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story
nomoba
1,460,677,359
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http://www.telesurtv.net/english/news/Worlds-First-Virtual-Reality-Surgery-Broadcasted-Live-Today-20160414-0028.html
1
World's First Virtual Reality Surgery Broadcasted Live
null
0
11,501,112
null
comment
rbanffy
1,460,677,478
He destroyed his company with a series of poor decisions. Running &quot;rm -rf &#x2F;&quot; was just the last one. And it was the last one because it successfully destroyed the company.
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tromp
1,460,677,429
Thieves like liquid soap in particular
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[ 11501650, 11501651 ]
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11,501,109
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l1ambda
1,460,677,415
I use vim, but Atom now primarily. Atom because of plugins: Beautify, Minimap, Markdown Preview, Convert css-to-inline, editorconfig, easy to split windows, and easy to search for text in whole directory. VSCode can&#x27;t split windows horizontally but it has a nice node debug. However I usually just &quot;node debug&quot; in the terminal. Atom also has a Racer plugin which is nice for Rust.
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lsiebert
1,460,677,470
Sadly, the Library of Congress Exemption for server based games (<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;assets.documentcloud.org&#x2F;documents&#x2F;2488067&#x2F;2015-27212.pdf" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;assets.documentcloud.org&#x2F;documents&#x2F;2488067&#x2F;2015-2721...</a>) doesn&#x27;t apply here.
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tluyben2
1,460,677,480
Are they? That makes people even weirder for doing what they do. Like said I am not against eating meat; if I known the animal was not tortured then I would eat it, completely by the way (brain and organs included). But buying some bacon in plastic from a factory where torture is the norm makes you rather a sick puppy if you know these animals are sentient. But I know people just don&#x27;t want to think about it. Especially here it is strange: the HN reader is rich so can actually go to a farm and pay something more for well treated eggs and bacon. And yet...
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steveklabnik
1,460,677,508
Interesting, thanks. We give you the ability to control layout as well, but it might not be as convenient as that.
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story
0708119253
1,460,677,542
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true
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1
The three idiots full movie download
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Kenji
1,460,677,571
The pain when your favourite private MMORPG server goes down - I know it too well (I&#x27;ve been programming for private MMORPG servers myself, though not WoW). It really is an entire world just disappearing. If I was the head of a large game company, I&#x27;d make good friends with the modding&#x2F;private server crowd (unless it&#x27;s in direct competition with one&#x27;s own product), they often create tight-knit communities that provide value for many years.
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[ 11501613 ]
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ashwinaj
1,460,677,513
Parsing&#x2F;indexing on Ubuntu 14.04 with an NFS mounted drive with a mix of C++, js and python is really slow.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;Microsoft&#x2F;vscode&#x2F;issues&#x2F;5282" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;Microsoft&#x2F;vscode&#x2F;issues&#x2F;5282</a><p>I&#x27;m really hoping they look into this. I miss the intellisense from VS ever since I moved full time to Linux development.
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cipherous
1,460,677,605
Amazing that Artur Korneyev, the guy in the picture, is still alive.
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OberstKrueger
1,460,677,607
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[ 11501457 ]
http://arstechnica.com/apple/2016/04/signs-point-to-apple-abandoning-os-x-branding-in-favor-of-macos/
2
Signs point to Apple abandoning OS X branding in favor of “MacOS”
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1
11,501,120
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Jemaclus
1,460,677,615
This is pretty rad. Is there a way to customize this for non-RSS feeds, or is this pretty much tailored for RSS&#x2F;Atom feeds?
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[ 11501206 ]
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uptownfunk
1,460,677,621
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http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-36046746
2
Monarch butterfly migration mystery solved by mathematicians and biologists
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0
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acqq
1,460,677,629
And who wants to pay for this data to make this even worth doing? Who can use such statistics for anything than this or similar article?
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ohjeez
1,460,677,640
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https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/to-your-health/wp/2016/04/13/250-million-300-scientists-and-40-labs-sean-parkers-revolutionary-project-to-solve-cancer/
1
Sean Parker’s revolutionary project to ‘solve’ cancer
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0
11,501,125
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ssalazar
1,460,677,665
&gt; Of course you have to get the information from somewhere the first time you learn something. What&#x27;s the problem with that?<p>The first time, and the second time if you haven&#x27;t looked at it in a month, and a third time a month after that. And so on.
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alexandrerond
1,460,677,659
From my own experience: probably no one cared to touch that server because no one knows what apache foo is running on it and they had better things to do than to worry about what the long time ago guys left there as long as no one complains.
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Tiksi
1,460,677,817
As a quick aside, you can set default variables in bash with ${var-default}, so your function can be condensed to:<p><pre><code> weather() { curl http:&#x2F;&#x2F;wttr.in&#x2F;${1-$WEATHER_CITY} }</code></pre>
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ivankirigin
1,460,677,712
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=buUAVQ9W7KI
1
DMX Krew Makes a track in his studio in realtime
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0
11,501,132
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snklee
1,460,677,783
That&#x27;s 65k &#x2F; 236k = 27.5% chance for petitioners without an advanced degree from US.
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catfights
1,460,677,696
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true
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http://putlocker.is/watch-proximity-online-free-putlocker.html#.VxAsO05I_zc.hackernews
1
Watch Proximity Online Free Putlocker – Putlocker – Watch Movies Online Free
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justinlardinois
1,460,677,749
It&#x27;s weird to me that commenting on a Stack Exchange question could get you quoted on several major news websites.
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11,501,126
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1,460,677,665
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mtviewdave
1,460,677,702
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https://medium.com/@tjparker/a-prescription-for-better-care-7facc9f4068e
1
A Prescription for Better Care
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0
11,501,131
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comment
uptownfunk
1,460,677,761
Thanks mate!
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11,499,988
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danieltillett
1,460,677,796
No it is the companies responsibility to pay you a salary (and any other conditions negotiated or legislated) in return for your labor.<p>Of course companies invest some resources in career development as part of their salary package, but it is likely to be less than what is ideal for you as an individual since you can walk out the door at anytime. Every developer needs to take control of their own career development because they gain the most out any investment.<p>This does not mean that you always take the highest salary, but you need to look at training and career development as an extra that is part of your overall salary package. In some cases the training offered to you is more valuable to you than it costs the company to provide and in other cases it is better to take the cash and invest it yourself. The important thing is take control of your own career development and don’t expect it to be handed to you by someone else.
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nickjj
1,460,677,911
Which component of Zeal allows you to pull in your own local code for completion?<p>Zeal definitely works great for popular third party library code and integrates with Sublime, but I haven&#x27;t seen options for it to integrate with your own libraries or third party libraries that aren&#x27;t quite big enough to be supported by Zeal directly.
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Haydos585
1,460,677,866
Perfect! This looks great. I&#x27;m looking forward to try it. I&#x27;ve had a lot of trouble getting through Facebook&#x27;s process of actually setting up a messenger bot even just for a hello world&#x2F;test example. I think there will be some great things built in the future given the size of Facebook&#x27;s user base.
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enraged_camel
1,460,677,972
&gt;&gt;I told the manager what I did and he said &quot;well this is not in the sprint, so why don&#x27;t you roll it back?&quot;<p>I hate managers who punish initiative-takers. I hope he got fired.
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[ 11501749, 11501496 ]
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possibility
1,460,677,897
On reflection, perhaps this pointless diversion yields the following maxim:<p><pre><code> You can walk into a house through an open door, but you can&#x27;t walk into a computer.</code></pre>
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[ 11501414 ]
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Mendenhall
1,460,677,827
Two all time great shooters. Goldeneye, pistols only, health turned down.<p>I also loved all the boards an things you could do on UT, teleport disk and jumpboots for flag running etc.
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[ 11501705 ]
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lukeschlather
1,460,678,128
It&#x27;s pretty much required to keep CUA hotkeys in your head in some form. So I find switching between Emacs&#x2F;Eclipse tolerable and kind of necessary if I&#x27;m doing Java.<p>I think switching between Emacs and Vim is a good idea but more a question of keeping your hand&#x2F;mind coordination flexible for different input paradigms. I&#x27;d be skeptical that they&#x27;re really that different in terms of efficiency for a task, but I&#x27;d say learning both really well will make you more efficient in general.
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danieltillett
1,460,677,973
If empowering and training is in their interest then the company (if it is smart) will provide it. The problem is that because you can leave at anytime the ideal investment for the company is likely to be less than what is ideal for you.
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11,501,089
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[ 11501529 ]
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BjoernKW
1,460,678,006
Apache UIMA ( <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;uima.apache.org&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;uima.apache.org&#x2F;</a> ) and GATE ( <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;gate.ac.uk&#x2F;ie&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;gate.ac.uk&#x2F;ie&#x2F;</a> ) come to mind.<p>Those are not ready-made software products, though but rather frameworks that allow you to implement IE algorithms. While not exactly trivial, implementing something like what you&#x27;re suggesting is definitely possible with GATE.
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entee
1,460,678,067
I think part of this stems from the nuttiness that is government contracting and the massive organizational sprawl inherent in our current governmental structure.<p>Looking at some of the details it seems some agencies are somewhat better than others, it would be interesting to see the whole report and see which agencies do better and which really suck (NASA seems to have done quite poorly).<p>Given that the security needs for the EPA may quite different than those for the DoD, not to mention countless other agencies, it&#x27;s easy to understand how standards and enforcement could quickly fragment. A lot of these agencies will hire contractors to do the work, they&#x27;ll hire different contractors, who are themselves drawn from a limited pool of authorized contractors and soon enough you have Healthcare.gov version 1 again.<p>Additionally, if FB or Google have a breach, there&#x27;s a clear line of responsibility that ends up at the CEO. While in theory that&#x27;s true in government, in practice you have both the executive branch and congress that muck about in the operations of an agency, so although you may get security person X to resign, it&#x27;s far less easy to get at the people who are actually responsible (Which congressperson? How do you vote them out of a gerrymandered district? Should the president fire his cabinet secretary? How does he get a new one past congress)
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[ 11501521, 11501316 ]
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Maxious
1,460,678,034
I&#x27;ve been getting bounces on Google Apps hosted gmail for calendar notifications coming from [email protected]<p>Email is hard.
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[ 11501228, 11501406 ]
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bch
1,460,678,169
...and reminds me of this[0] where residents of hard-hit Beattyville Kentucky use Coke or Pepsi as currency to support their addictions. Both this soap situation and the cola situation are horrible, but it&#x27;s fascinating to see how people cope.<p>[0] <a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.theguardian.com&#x2F;us-news&#x2F;2015&#x2F;nov&#x2F;12&#x2F;beattyville-kentucky-and-americas-poorest-towns" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.theguardian.com&#x2F;us-news&#x2F;2015&#x2F;nov&#x2F;12&#x2F;beattyville-k...</a>
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prawn
1,460,678,109
#2 is an unhealthy conflict of interest that saddens me. I remember buying $100 textbooks that were quickly out of date and too heavy to lug around.<p>Anyone in a senior position like this should have the interests of students and their education at heart and be doing everything they can to provide students with accurate and affordable learning materials. In fact, I don&#x27;t see why their creation shouldn&#x27;t be subsidised and so they can be freely provided in electronic format to students. The curriculum should be free of copyright.
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henryzhang0304
1,460,678,274
Glad you replied. My email is in my HN profile. Just shoot me an email, and let&#x27;s talk.
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[ 11502303 ]
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owyn
1,460,678,028
There&#x27;s an amazing documentary about this that contains a lot of footage of the actual incident and cleanup called the &quot;Battle of Chernobyl&quot;.<p><a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;topdocumentaryfilms.com&#x2F;the-battle-of-chernobyl&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;topdocumentaryfilms.com&#x2F;the-battle-of-chernobyl&#x2F;</a><p>Things that still haunt me: the helicopter pilots who put the initial fires out flew in 120-180C temperatures and pretty much all died of radiation. And the sequence that starts about here:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;youtu.be&#x2F;ezohqY-vg4s?t=3430" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;youtu.be&#x2F;ezohqY-vg4s?t=3430</a><p>Where they are picking up radioactive materials by hand and throwing it off the roof next to the reactor because the robots they were trying to use all break down. Even 1 hour of exposure was deadly so they rotated through shifts, and the guys who did it were called &quot;Bio Robots&quot;
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[ 11502048, 11501434, 11501462, 11516969, 11503735 ]
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comment
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1,460,678,013
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chewbacha
1,460,678,064
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https://github.com/jashkenas/coffeescript/wiki/list-of-languages-that-compile-to-js
2
The list of languages that compile to JavaScript
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enraged_camel
1,460,678,263
Something can be important but not a priority.
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kevin_thibedeau
1,460,678,208
Notepad++ is very useful but I wish some features would be updated. The dialogs are awkward to use at times. The XML for defining custom syntax highlighting is atrocious. It&#x27;s like they took a pre-XML config file and shotgunned tags into it without planning a rational format. Keywords are specified using long strings delimited by CR&#x2F;LF entities for no good reason other than to destroy readability. It would be nice if an more modern hightlighting engine could be inserted as an alternative to the clunky ad-hoc design it currently has.
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11,501,150
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story
0708119253
1,460,678,095
null
true
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https://news.ycombinator.com/bookmarklet.html
1
Y Combinator: Bookmarklet
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qzervaas
1,460,678,399
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[ 11503232, 11501817 ]
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-04-14/apple-said-to-pursue-new-search-features-for-crowded-app-store
7
Apple Pursues New Search Features for a Crowded App Store
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rconti
1,460,677,996
Tide is HUGE in the hood. Hell, it&#x27;s even huge ON the hood of a NASCAR team.
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GFK_of_xmaspast
1,460,678,212
Just because SV is an employee&#x27;s market that doesn&#x27;t mean that everywhere is, or that everybody has a lot of mobility in their personal life.
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hackuser
1,460,678,083
Copperhead seems designed to protect against malicious attackers, but does it protect confidentiality against commercial tracking (another kind of attack)?<p>I&#x27;ll add: I haven&#x27;t come across another fork of Android that focuses on security so I&#x27;m rooting for these guys.
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[ 11501302, 11501923 ]
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PuerkitoBio
1,460,678,224
It is ambiguous only if you think it can be a completely useless format. If you decide to use it, chances are you considered it useful, and the only useful way this can parse is as a number, otherwise it would&#x27;t be able to represent numbers, booleans and null. I&#x27;d say it parses pretty much as expected, and as such, contrary to other comments, you don&#x27;t have to go back to the docs every so often.
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pedrocosta
1,460,678,244
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http://www.androidcrush.com/run-ios-apps-on-android/
1
Run iOS apps on Android
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0
11,501,154
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zxcvcxz
1,460,678,200
I&#x27;ve built large web apps in vim.<p>Honestly you sound very misinformed. Vim is capable of pretty much everything that VS code is capable of and then some.
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remwfnnz
1,460,678,256
Relevant: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.linkedin.com&#x2F;pulse&#x2F;building-past-how-runescapes-official-legacy-server-avoided-kemp" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.linkedin.com&#x2F;pulse&#x2F;building-past-how-runescapes-...</a><p>A Jagex employee&#x27;s view on how they managed to reopen a legacy server and keep it alive (and growing).
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cb18
1,460,678,231
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https://www.newscientist.com/article/2084438-never-before-seen-galaxy-spotted-orbiting-the-milky-way/
2
Never-before-seen galaxy spotted orbiting the Milky Way
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0