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11,502,264 | null | comment | tux | 1,460,696,101 | Mirror now available at <a href="https://freegeoip.io/" rel="nofollow">https://freegeoip.io/</a> Thanks to "andruby". | null | 11,502,257 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,263 | null | story | DiabloD3 | 1,460,696,101 | null | true | null | null | null | http://www.seek.com.au/job/30771191 | 1 | Meaningless Repetitive Work on the .NET Stack | null | null |
11,502,265 | null | comment | sitkack | 1,460,696,106 | If someone uses public money to erase your words isn't that cenorship? | null | 11,500,662 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,266 | null | comment | _sentient | 1,460,696,163 | This is wrong. Both the original suit and counter-complaint directly reference the fact that Kyle founded the company before meeting/engaging with Jeremy. | null | 11,502,107 | null | [
11502327,
11502328
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,269 | null | story | ericdolson | 1,460,696,210 | null | null | null | null | [
11506658,
11502288,
11503748
] | http://jixxit.com | 3 | Encrypt/decrypt text or files online. Best tool I have found – JIXXIT.com | null | 4 |
11,502,268 | null | comment | dmart | 1,460,696,183 | Most people don't seem to know this, but you basically can cut and paste in the Finder.<p>First copy the files you want, then move them instead of pasting (Command-Option-V). This gives you the same behavior without the confusion/danger of the files being lost in limbo between cutting and pasting, which I think is honestly better UX design. | null | 11,502,037 | null | [
11502375
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,273 | null | comment | daveguy | 1,460,696,286 | I would say this work is incredibly important. Like you said, the blood-brain barrier is a significant obstacle in pharmaceutical research. One thing pharma companies are very good at is producing antibody based drugs and their derivatives. By conjugation of molecules to the antibodies that are accepted through this pathway, essentially hitching a ride in the process, the blood-brain barrier could essentially be eliminated in drug development. Delivery method is one of the most important and difficult aspects of drug development. Characterization of this process is definitely a breakthrough. | null | 11,502,049 | null | [
11502378,
11503254
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,271 | null | story | chaosmachine | 1,460,696,223 | null | null | null | null | [
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11502530,
11514146,
11503528,
11503072,
11505703,
11503303
] | http://chromakode.com/post/18-years-in-8-hours | 186 | Backing up 18 years in 8 hours | null | 83 |
11,502,267 | null | comment | caf | 1,460,696,179 | It looks like the "Group Imbalance" and "Overload on Wakeup" bugs could be noticeable on a 2-node system under the right conditions. So could the "Missing Scheduling Domains" bug, but only if you are offlining / onlining CPUs.<p>None of them should affect a 1-node system, and the "Scheduling Group Construction" bug requires a multi-level node hierarchy. | null | 11,502,221 | null | [
11502290
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,272 | null | comment | possibility | 1,460,696,273 | And similarly I don't think YC would offer $4.5M if they knew they were (completely) in the right. | null | 11,502,171 | null | [
11502398
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,270 | null | story | khashmi78 | 1,460,696,218 | null | true | null | null | null | http://warezcrack.net/magix-photostory-2015-deluxe-serial-number/ | 1 | Magix Photostory 2015 Deluxe Serial Number Incl Crack Free | null | null |
11,502,274 | null | comment | shankun | 1,460,696,300 | No. The old way to change it was in product.json - the product configuration, which got rewritten on every update. The new way to do it is in user settings, which don't get modified. | null | 11,502,113 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,275 | null | comment | gus_massa | 1,460,696,319 | Nice. I'd like an "uncolor" button. It's not very useful, but I'd like to see again how the map I have draw is colored. | null | 11,502,244 | null | [
11517869
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,276 | null | comment | cassowary | 1,460,696,349 | i think the interesting thing about the oceanographers is that they say that if you are in the water, that means you're not in a bubble, it's only the air and some other gases that might be in a bubble.<p>the question is how much have you interacted with what's normal in America based on population numbers, not how much you've interacted with diverse groups.<p>also note their target audience. it's a pbs website. it's so far deep inside the bubble it probably couldn't get out if it worked on a factory floor for a year | null | 11,494,368 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,279 | null | comment | henrikschroder | 1,460,696,368 | In the countercomplaint, Jeremy says that he and Kyle first met in the beginning of October 2013.<p>Elsewhere in this thread, someone found that the company was incorporated in September 2013.<p>So a possible timeline is that Kyle creates the company with himself as the sole owner first, and goes looking for a technical partner. He finds Jeremy, they talk, they hit it off, and they decide to apply to YC together, and Kyle offers to split the existing company 50/50. But they don't put anything in writing, so on paper the company is still 100% owned by Kyle. Things go sour between them, and Jeremy leaves/is kicked out without the ownership of the company ever changing on paper. And then things move on, other people are brought into the company, shares and vesting schedules are formalized, and the whole thing is forgotten/buried. Until now. | null | 11,502,196 | null | [
11502323
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,277 | null | comment | milkey_mouse | 1,460,696,351 | It's just hard to get the filesystem entries for the file back. rm doesn't specifically wipe, you're right, but the filesystem entries are deleted, which means you basically have to grep the disk for bits of the file you want with known contents. | null | 11,499,840 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,281 | null | comment | omonra | 1,460,696,382 | "what everyone hates about urban change and gentrification – first come the creatives and their coffee shops, then the young professionals, then the luxury high-rises and corporate chains that push out original residents"<p>I personally have no problem with it. And if we're talking about crappy and dangerous neighborhoods that are becoming upscale - I love it.<p>If anything I think it's the sort of process that benefits majority of population while extracting a cost on a minority. If we look at total effect, it's certainly net positive. | null | 11,501,545 | null | [
11502386,
11502341,
11504737,
11502803,
11503738,
11502549
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,287 | null | comment | hinkley | 1,460,696,483 | The two are not mutually exclusive! | null | 11,498,382 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,278 | null | comment | strcat | 1,460,696,356 | Yeah, Android pushes memory safety quite hard. Most code in the ecosystem is written in memory safe languages (Java and friends). That still leaves the entire kernel and lots of performance critical or legacy code. Languages like Rust could reduce the amount of memory unsafe code on the platform but there's still going to be a lot left over even it's mostly contained in a language runtime and the low-level libraries.<p>Despite Android's usage of Java, most vulnerabilities are memory corruption bugs. It makes sense to focus on those since it's low-hanging fruit. High-level security/privacy changes involve much more subjective changes and usually have a perceptible impact on users. Hardening the base system is invisible, and that's a good thing.<p>Android already does an amazing job at the access control level via very locked down SELinux policies. There's a lot of work to do there, but it involves making changes that are going to make some Android developers/users unhappy. For example, `hidepid=2` made it into Android N from CopperheadOS and there's going to be fallout from that: <a href="https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=205565" rel="nofollow">https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=205565</a>. I think Google will end up shipping it, but it's not a sure thing. | null | 11,501,736 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,294 | null | comment | harrumph | 1,460,696,522 | >Probably because your replies have an undercurrent of condescension in them.<p>I think I know better than you do what I mean with I've written, thanks.<p>You DO like long commutes and you DON'T like being near neighbors. Why not own it? | null | 11,500,610 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,290 | null | comment | brendangregg | 1,460,696,511 | right; almost all our systems are 1 node. And I'm already debugging some NUMA stuff for our 2 node systems. | null | 11,502,267 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,286 | null | comment | pdkl95 | 1,460,696,435 | > the "China Syndrome" hypothesis<p>Having seen the movie, suspect that a lot of people saw what they wanted to see, and not what the movie actually said. I'm fairly certain the comment about the core melting "all the way to China" was a joke/hyperbole. | null | 11,502,224 | null | [
11502503
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,283 | null | comment | hsivonen | 1,460,696,424 | Maybe not on Android but on GNU/Linux on something other than x86/x86_64 sure. | null | 11,500,068 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,293 | null | comment | ZenPsycho | 1,460,696,520 | well basically virtually anything other than JSON that's actually designed to be configuration would be better for configuration. There's dozens of them. that is the problem: JSON parsers and generators are ubiquitous in the way that no single <i>configuration</i> format is. Right now, I can just <i>use</i> json in any language and get data between any language and any other language. If I use it for config I get the advantage of even being able to config across multiple languages that might be getting used in a single system if I have to. No proper configuration format has that level of mindshare and interoperation. | null | 11,500,816 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,285 | null | story | mauricedecastro | 1,460,696,433 | null | true | null | null | null | https://mindfulpresenter.com/mindful-blog/the-secret-to-brilliant-presenting-and-other-aspects-of-life/ | 1 | The Secret to Brilliant Presenting: and other aspects of life… | null | null |
11,502,289 | null | comment | _sentient | 1,460,696,511 | This is exactly the right question. It's clear that Jeremy is not and has never been a formal shareholder in Cruise.<p>The question is whether having explored (and subsequently abandoned) a potential co-founder relationship constitutes sufficient basis for an equity claim. | null | 11,502,219 | null | [
11502502
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,282 | null | comment | URSpider94 | 1,460,696,418 | I think that people are completely misinterpreting the article and the retraction in this thread, whether willingly or not.<p>I don't think anyone is seriously questioning the fact that some people have more aptitude or intelligence than others. That's pretty commonly accepted fact. However, the general belief is that intelligence follows a roughly Gaussian (bell curve) distribution, and that it's roughly continuous. Mechanistically, one can imagine that intelligence is a convolution of genetic and other factors that are so thoroughly mixed that there are no discrete steps.<p>The theory behind a two-humped camel model of aptitude or intelligence would then be that some magic x-factor is so significant that it splits the underlying distribution in two, into the "cans" and the "can nots".<p>While the existence of such an x-factor would be a really interesting finding, it wouldn't change the underlying fact that some people have more innate ability to program than others, just like some people have more innate ability to be doctors or lawyers or concert pianists than others. It would just tend to make that difference much starker.<p>What it also wouldn't change is the fact that innate ability doesn't always correlate to success in a given career, or in life. Many other factors other than innate ability, such as drive and ability to collaborate with others, affect whether someone is going to be successful at their job. Also, people can learn. Even someone who doesn't have innate talent can become very skilled, if they work really hard at it.<p>So, even if the study were valid, which it's not, the finding itself is more of an academic interest than an excuse to start treating coding job interviews as a "sword in the stone" test of whether you've got "it" or not. | null | 11,495,590 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,300 | null | comment | PascLeRasc | 1,460,696,588 | This is very similar to PG's most recent essay about making Pittsburgh a startup hub: <a href="http://paulgraham.com/pgh.html" rel="nofollow">http://paulgraham.com/pgh.html</a> | null | 11,501,545 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,302 | null | comment | DenisM | 1,460,696,608 | Write a book? I'd preorder. | null | 11,501,973 | null | [
11502362
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,288 | null | comment | gus_massa | 1,460,696,489 | Is this your site, or you only found it? | null | 11,502,269 | null | [
11506655
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,295 | null | comment | chrismcb | 1,460,696,532 | How did you come to the conclusion that cups are racists? | null | 11,501,783 | null | [
11502350
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,284 | null | comment | henryzhang0304 | 1,460,696,427 | I can reply you. I do not know whether their product will be any different, what I know for sure is Jobr sucks. I was researching all startups working on recruiting in bay area, and tried Jobr personally. The jobs there are few, low-quality, simply-matched with user's profile. After I deleted my profile and account, I kept receiving emails showing interests in referring me to be a Uber driver, which is impossible considering my visa status. | null | 11,502,030 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,296 | null | comment | kentonv | 1,460,696,554 | There is a well-defined solution to this problem: The Public Suffix List.<p><a href="https://publicsuffix.org/" rel="nofollow">https://publicsuffix.org/</a><p>blogspot.com is in it. github.com is not, but github.io (where Github Pages are hosted) is. I would guess this is what HN uses.<p>That said, it of course can't help with e.g. categorizing github repo links by user, since those are by path rather than subdomain. Ah well. | null | 11,500,011 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,297 | null | comment | threesixandnine | 1,460,696,558 | Why?<p>It's pretty obvious to me that they pushed him. First he was pushed out from the company and then they tried to push him out of the bigger deal with $100,000.<p>All Internet outcry in the last few days about this is also pretty indicative. They used their influence to portray Guillory as a bad character all in "we are angels" and he's a freeloader way. Which of course considering Guillory previous work in the field is suspicious. He certainly contributed at the beginning and probably that contribution was very, very important for the company. Otherwise they wouldn't go all the way to $4.5 million.<p>The interesting point you make about "presence of mind". Exactly. No one in this case has the presence of mind. It reeks of anger and revenge. I feel the same way so I am rooting for the small guy here. | null | 11,502,013 | null | [
11502343
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,298 | null | comment | pyrophane | 1,460,696,576 | Hacker News is a bit of a misnomer. It doesn't, nor has it ever, served hackers. This is a site for the startup kids, and you either love it or hate it, but you gotta accept it for what it is. | null | 11,501,510 | null | [
11502761,
11502897,
11513547,
11502538
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,291 | null | comment | insulanian | 1,460,696,511 | > As someone who uses Visual Studio for everything...<p>This is a classical hammer/nail example. Big red sign to me.
I'm a long time Visual Studio user, and that what you are saying is exactly the problem I see in MS-based developer circles.<p>Visual Studio is not appropriate for everything. As a matter of fact I don't use it at all for SPA development anymore, but just for server side stuff.<p>However, to give you few arguments:<p>1. VS Code and Sublime work on Linux/OSX/Windows and I do work on all three of those. Having the same tool is a great gain here.<p>2. Editing capabilities of VSCode and Sublime are definitely superior to Visual Studio, to the point that I find myself copying pieces of code from Visual Studio to Sublime, editing it and pasting back to Visual Studio.<p>3. Speed is not comparable. Visual Studio has become a bloated beast. Sometimes it takes a minute to start it, and then you enjoy busy freeze times whenever you push it just a bit harder than it likes.<p>All in all, I find my self being much more productive when <i>not</i> using Visual Studio for anything except pure .NET development. | null | 11,500,065 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,280 | null | comment | tclmeelmo | 1,460,696,378 | I would imagine that this is supposed to help support their argument for conversion, that Kyle was inclined to use Jeremy's IP contributions in part because Kyle was otherwise incapable of practically accomplishing the company's goals.<p>It does seem harshly written, but the same could be said of the complaint and sama's post. | null | 11,501,638 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,292 | null | comment | oska | 1,460,696,518 | I recommend the included YouTube clip. It's from a series of short documentaries called <i>Look at Life</i> [1], produced between 1959 and 1969 in the UK.<p>[1] <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Look_at_Life_%28film_series%29" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Look_at_Life_%28film_series%29</a> | null | 11,501,545 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,301 | null | story | walterbell | 1,460,696,594 | null | null | null | null | [
11508556,
11507049,
11506750,
11508340,
11507114
] | http://techcrunch.com/2016/04/14/european-parliament-adopts-tough-new-data-protection-rules/ | 30 | European Parliament adopts tough new data protection rules | null | 11 |
11,502,299 | null | comment | akkartik | 1,460,696,588 | Ah, I see, so Python 3 only took a couple of years, about the same as any minor release: <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Python#Version_release_dates" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Python#Version_rele...</a> | null | 11,502,260 | null | [
11502526
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,303 | null | comment | adesuwa | 1,460,696,613 | my co founder just emailed you. | null | 11,501,162 | null | [
11502354
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,305 | null | comment | aprdm | 1,460,696,645 | I got an offer with a contract. It got cancelled two days before the start date. For a permanent position and a visa.<p>Def. happens... mainly with unprofessional start ups | null | 11,491,327 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,304 | null | story | deviceguru | 1,460,696,628 | null | true | null | null | null | http://hackerboards.com/udoo-spins-89-dollar-intel-braswell-hacker-sbc/ | 1 | Udoo spins $89 Intel Braswell hacker SBC | null | null |
11,502,306 | null | story | chris-at | 1,460,696,658 | null | null | null | null | [
11502423,
11503119,
11506411
] | http://www.theverge.com/2016/4/14/11434926/blackberry-encryption-master-key-broken-canada-rcmp-surveillance | 9 | Canadian police have had master key to BlackBerry's encryption since 2010 | null | 3 |
11,502,307 | null | comment | iamtrying | 1,460,696,670 | Use Google Drive? its old school you have excel, words, drawing. | null | 11,499,105 | null | [
11504380
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,309 | null | comment | dbcurtis | 1,460,696,731 | Ummmm... well, in California, anyway, anybody that works with kids needs to be fingerprinted and pass a Livescan and keep it current. My daughter's 80yo violin teacher has to keep her Livescan up to date, FFS. Now, how many Uber drivers have ever even heard of Livescan, much less have submitted to one? And jumping through all the hoops required to do activity sign-out, that is a bunch of paperwork, too. So the safety and security part of the equation is what makes it different from Uber. The regulatory landscape for a kid-oriented service is totally different.<p>But there are long-standing competitors like Kid's Kab, etc. Mostly they are a scheduled service, like to/from gym every Tuesday and Thursday at 4:00PM or something, not a ride-on-demand like Uber. | null | 11,501,441 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,308 | null | comment | jboydyhacker | 1,460,696,726 | If you had a partner who left after a month - then do a financing right thereafter with vesting schedules and the like it's easy to assume that those same schedules apply to everyone. If it were to be caught- it would have been at the Series A but it sounds like so much time passed and his involvement was so short people just forgot about the guy.<p>If Jeremy never said a word about it since it would never come up. If I owned 50% of a company and it did a financing- I'd certainly inquire about my shares. Sounds like he never even did that.<p>Kyle probably feels like shit I am sure- it's a sickening case to read but to be honest I could see it going down exactly like that. | null | 11,501,887 | null | [
11513620
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,312 | null | comment | ancap | 1,460,696,762 | >Well, you are certainly entitled to your opinions. I guess we fundamentally disagree on how historical events should be interpreted.<p>As I said previously, I would love to hear the historical case you have in mind. Let's examine the facts and discuss further. Saying we disagree in the interpretation of historical events without even discussing any is a cop out and intellectually disingenuous.<p>>Industries don't exist to meet demands, they exist to create profit. Meeting an external demand can create profit, but so can unlawful or immoral business practices.<p>In a free (and freeish) market, businesses cannot survive without meeting customers' demands. It's possible a business owner could have a myriad of motivations, but the fact remains they must at least be meeting customer demands. But this goes back to the comment above. Please provide an example of an industry that was at least relatively laissez faire and failed to meet customer demands.<p>>This is the very reason why people seek an organized entity (like a government) to negotiate on their behalf.<p>I know very few people who view the government as an organization which negotiates on their behalf. In fact I can safely say I have never before heard anyone describe government in such a manner.<p>>Pristine economic theories work nicely in a bubble, but we don't live in one.<p>Unfortunately socialism doesn't even work in the bubble (it has been debunked thoroughly by economists such as F. A. Hayek, Ludwig von Mises, and Murray Rothbard among others), let alone the real world. Thankfully capitalism has an excellent track record and we know empirically of its efficacy to improve the standard of living and increase human cooperation.<p>>In what world is it good socialist policy to squander trillions of dollars?<p>I have no idea what "good socialist policy" is as it seems like an oxymoron to me, but I think it's only fair that those who had their money forcefully taken from them determine whether the money is being squandered. | null | 11,500,050 | null | [
11505638
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,313 | null | comment | lern_too_spel | 1,460,696,798 | On phones, <a href="http://developer.android.com/reference/android/telephony/TelephonyManager.html#getSimCountryIso()" rel="nofollow">http://developer.android.com/reference/android/telephony/Tel...</a> is probably a better estimate of the user's home country and getNetworkCountryIso() is a good estimate of the user's current country. The fact that my Android phone doesn't have en_CA as a locale option (maybe because they're too cheap to localize the system apps for Canadians, who mix British and American spellings) means that anybody who tries to get the country from the locale region code won't recognize Canadians with this phone. | null | 11,501,846 | null | [
11502732
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,310 | null | comment | 0xcde4c3db | 1,460,696,752 | I'm not really sure what the problem is with that. I feel like the broader infosec situation is bad enough that having them debate encryption would be like arguing over what lock to put on your cardboard door. | null | 11,502,148 | null | [
11502337,
11504403
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,311 | null | comment | iamtrying | 1,460,696,762 | When i was kid, i used to watch a lot of cartoon network channels and used to by CAR toys and open them to see inside how its made.<p>maybe let them play with stuff like how its make to discover themself then later they become good logical analyst. | null | 11,494,699 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,317 | null | comment | mc32 | 1,460,696,870 | When they don't have it people want it, and when they get it, they don't want it. Run down cities, rust belt cities wish for gentrification, people who live in places going down hill wish for it too, it brings safer neighborhoods, better stores, more jobs, on the other hand people decry rising rents and "changing the character" of the neighborhood, as if unemployment and the transients didn't also"change the character" of the neighborhood.<p>Basically people want it both ways. Have their cakes and eat them too. | null | 11,502,109 | null | [
11502440,
11502908,
11502550,
11502428
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,314 | null | comment | eropple | 1,460,696,822 | I still have UT99 LAN parties once in a while (maybe twice a year). Laptops and mice all over the apartment. | null | 11,501,103 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,318 | null | comment | thaumasiotes | 1,460,696,885 | > Maybe western law is mostly derived from a sensible universal moralism with certain exceptions.<p>It's actually easy to show that this isn't possible, because the amount of western law is much larger than a single person could ever hold in his head. This could not be the case for "universal" moralism, which is by definition shared by everyone.<p>> Many studies have shown your average criminal to be a fairly messed up individual: mental illness, strong personality faults, poor reasoning skills, poor executive control, poor discipline, etc.<p>I suspect these are studies of caught criminals. They can't apply to uncaught criminals, and they specifically don't apply to Paul le Roux (caught or not) without adjustment for the type of crime being committed. He filled a managerial role; "most criminals" in those studies (and most criminals generally) don't. | null | 11,499,053 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,320 | null | comment | insulanian | 1,460,696,924 | I wouldn't call it <i>just</i> an editor, but rather a development tool which is context aware and provides a lot of info about the codebase you're working on, plus helps with the excellent IntelliSense / code completion.<p>You should take a closer look at it's features. | null | 11,500,015 | null | [
11505560
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,319 | null | comment | jboydyhacker | 1,460,696,907 | If you owned a business and you thought you owned 100% of it- and worked on it for 2 years how would you feel if someone shows up at the end saying they actaully are 50% owners. And they never said a word about it the entire 2.5 years you were working on it?<p>You were marching along working your ass off thinking you owned X but someone else believed they owned half of X and didn't say anything?<p>Isn't that a bigger deception? I think under US law there is a concept where if you don't speak up and it leads people to bad assumptions it can be problematic suing later. | null | 11,501,954 | null | [
11503153
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,322 | null | comment | pjmlp | 1,460,696,928 | You generate a time limited root password alongside a reason why are you requesting it.<p>This applies to any OS being used.<p>If you are an external, might additionally need to have an employee sitting with you in case you are trying to use something business critical. | null | 11,500,478 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,321 | null | comment | joejev | 1,460,696,925 | so in this language these all do the same thing:<p>abc
"abc"
abc,
"abc",<p>How does increasing the scope simplify things?
Defining correct as "crashing less often" is a really bad idea, data formats _should_ be strict. | null | 11,497,826 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,324 | null | comment | make3 | 1,460,696,974 | They should keep a hash of the finger print info, not the info itself. I don't know how it would work, but keeping biometric data for authentification is indeed potentially worse than keeping plain text passwords.<p>Like, the output range of a convnet, or something. | null | 11,495,513 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,331 | null | comment | jamiequint | 1,460,697,057 | "If you apply to YC with someone who knows the YC partners better than you and your co-founder decides to push you out, your co-founder will be supported by YC against you"<p>What? One founder worked on the company for almost 3 years and the other party in question worked on the company for one month, yet this is a huge YC conspiracy? How do you get this crap out of the written complaints in any way? | null | 11,501,818 | null | [
11502421,
11502384
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,326 | null | story | barrysoetoro | 1,460,697,033 | null | true | null | null | null | http://www.freedomtruthfighters.blogspot.com/2016/03/this-is-news-over-100-of-voters-voted.html#.VxB3jBPvsAg.hackernews | 1 | “Obama Likely Won Re-Election Through Election Fraud” SHOCKER | null | null |
11,502,315 | null | comment | bbcbasic | 1,460,696,822 | If that is true, its is an effective a cartel for the universities. Join our courses or kiss goodbye to your middle income lifestyle dreams. | null | 11,499,738 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,323 | null | comment | p4wnc6 | 1,460,696,966 | > He finds Jeremy, they talk, they hit it off, and they decide to apply to YC together, and Kyle offers to split the existing company 50/50. But they don't put anything in writing...<p>One of the major questions is whether the YC application and any stated intent for a 50/50 split in it would <i>be that writing</i>. | null | 11,502,279 | null | [
11502461
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,332 | null | story | gnuvince | 1,460,697,098 | null | null | null | null | [
11506419
] | http://manpages.bsd.lv/ | 3 | Practical Unix Manuals: Free ebook on writing man pages | null | 1 |
11,502,329 | null | comment | dietrichepp | 1,460,697,038 | The doctrine of "consideration" means that both sides have to be getting something out of a contract, or else it is not a contract at all. Lots of people have argued for or against it, and the main rationale is probably just the fact that it is traditionally defined that way. This is why you often see people selling things for nominal values like $1 or whatever. | null | 11,486,279 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,328 | null | comment | snowwrestler | 1,460,697,034 | You're right about the date of incorporation, so my comments about "before paperwork" were wrong.<p>Anyway, my main point above was that giving Delaware $20 to download the incorporation documents is not likely to resolve the case. Thanks. | null | 11,502,266 | null | [
11505543
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,325 | null | comment | Aelinsaar | 1,460,697,030 | Sure, but again a company with Uber's money and network can afford to explore creating such a service, without having to fold before they can. More, they could sustain it, and generalize it to a network of "Trusted drivers".<p>So, to me, it seems much more viable as a sub-unit of a larger company. | null | 11,501,978 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,316 | null | comment | DigitalSea | 1,460,696,836 | The tabs feature is under the heading, "Initial investigations/explorations" something tells me they are not working on anything just yet. If the feature makes it through, we might not see it for sometime yet. Disappointing, tabs are a definite must for me. | null | 11,499,524 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,327 | true | comment | null | 1,460,697,033 | null | null | 11,502,266 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,330 | true | comment | null | 1,460,697,041 | null | null | 11,501,501 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,333 | null | comment | OmarIsmail | 1,460,697,101 | The YC application isn't a legal document and Kyle (having gone through YC) knows this. Legally he'd have full ownership and in the application specify 50/50 meaning if/when they formalize the relationship that is what the equity split will be. YC doesn't really care what the actual current/legal split is at the time you write the application. What they care about is what the split will be by the time you start YC because that is what is relevant to them.<p>And (my guess) is that the real reason they care about the split is that they're looking for red flags. i.e. is the cap table already messy with lots of people on it? Is the split NOT 50/50 signalling the founders don't consider each other equals which is a bad sign, etc. | null | 11,501,778 | null | [
11503753,
11503722
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,339 | null | comment | lomnakkus | 1,460,697,151 | If you're using a strongly typed language, XML even has one (IMO) massive advantage over JSON: You can use XSD to define a schema declaratively. This means you get<p>(1) lots of general tooling support, in particular you get at least decent editor support for your config file, and<p>(2) you can autogenerate the code needed to read your configuration into <i>structured data</i> without having to do any unnecessary duplication of "key names" (tags) as you have to with e.g. INI or JSON. You also get the data sturctures themselves for "free" (based on the XSD).<p>Alright, it's not the end of the world to not have these things, but they're both very nice to have. | null | 11,500,816 | null | [
11503322
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,336 | null | comment | rokhayakebe | 1,460,697,139 | Something else I find interesting: people will find stealing despicable yet have no problem buying stolen goods if it is a good deal. | null | 11,500,471 | null | [
11502624
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,341 | null | comment | TulliusCicero | 1,460,697,182 | Fun related fact: when an area is gentrifying, more development is actually correlated with LESS displacement for the existing residents, not more: <a href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2016/02/12/the-poor-are-better-off-when-we-build-more-housing-for-the-rich/" rel="nofollow">https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2016/02/12/the-p...</a><p>"...the California Legislative Analyst’s Office recently released some positive data backing up this point: Particularly in the Bay Area since 2000, the researchers found, low-income neighborhoods with a lot of new construction have witnessed about half the displacement of similar neighborhoods that haven’t added much new housing." | null | 11,502,281 | null | [
11503430
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,337 | null | comment | studentrob | 1,460,697,139 | The commission is going to have to talk about encryption if they're to address information security. It might not be the same debate as the iPhone case, but encryption is central to cybersecurity. So, to say they won't talk about encryption is a non sequitur. | null | 11,502,310 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,335 | null | comment | iamtrying | 1,460,697,126 | +Desk: 5 desk.
+Chair: 2
+Monitor: 44" samsung, Medion 23". 3 Laptop (OSX, Surface pro 3 with windows 8.1 pro and linux, Alienware with windows 10, linux)<p>+Keyboard: no keyboard, only in my laptop bag i have one external keyboard. always use laptop<p>+Music: Never play music to concentrate on complex programming. Play music after official working hours which is from 8AM till 7PM<p>+Hours: 7AM till 03AM, round the clock. Eyes hurts, ass hurts. | null | 11,493,678 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,334 | null | comment | wyqydsyq | 1,460,697,113 | 1) Yes, kids die.
2) Yes, it's real.
3) Yes, it's the world we live in.
4) Probably not, the civilian fatalities are the result of poor judgement calls made by humans, not machine error.
5) Certainly, but the CIA (who is behind most of these strikes) tends to do whatever it feels like. | null | 11,502,135 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,346 | null | comment | dingaling | 1,460,697,225 | > Britian uses GMT a portion of the year,<p>For that period of the year we actually use a 0-hour timezone over UT1<p>GMT simply doesn't exist any more. The two maintained timebases are UTC and TAI. | null | 11,502,239 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,347 | null | comment | sunnyps | 1,460,697,233 | I would really like to use VS Code as my primary editor but it has some issues that need to be fixed first, most importantly how slow the go to file functionality is. I work on a project (Chromium) that has tens of thousands of source files and while Sublime Text can handle that without issues, VS Code can't.<p>I would also like to see the C++ intellisense plugin that's under development improved further. I've found it to be a lot slower than QtCreator at indexing symbols. | null | 11,498,000 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,340 | true | comment | null | 1,460,697,169 | null | null | 11,498,873 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,343 | null | comment | possibility | 1,460,697,187 | Why would I take the money? Because I've seen someone sue and win a lawsuit and I just wouldn't want to go through the stress of it. Even if I thought I was right and could win. Everyone has their price, maybe Jeremy would have settled for $20M. | null | 11,502,297 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,338 | null | comment | adesuwa | 1,460,697,148 | We decided to work on this idea because we wanted to introduce the convenient factor in the job application process. This is different because not only are we creating a match system but we are accelerating the actually hiring process with PRIB, We figured why not have one websites rather than have two or more outlets to achieve those steps individually. Jobr is basically tinder for jobs and really does not convene enough jobs. | null | 11,502,030 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,348 | null | comment | verroq | 1,460,697,247 | And uses spaces instead of tabs. Someone will need to go fix them up. | null | 11,501,841 | null | [
11504291
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,349 | true | comment | null | 1,460,697,282 | null | null | 11,501,768 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,344 | null | comment | Jemaclus | 1,460,697,209 | I deal with a lot of custom feeds, so not a lot of standard formats. I'll take a look at goxpp! Thank you! | null | 11,501,206 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,355 | true | comment | null | 1,460,697,419 | null | null | 11,502,023 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,351 | null | comment | snowwrestler | 1,460,697,317 | Apparently Cruise was incorporated by Kyle in September, before Kyle met Jeremy. | null | 11,502,158 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,350 | null | comment | possibility | 1,460,697,315 | That is what I learned from the censorship of the officer's statement. | null | 11,502,295 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,342 | null | comment | cheapsteak | 1,460,697,182 | That's not as good as the SVC because you'll still get unnecessary diffs when prepending to the list<p>SVC allows you to both prepend and append without adding extra diffs | null | 11,501,560 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,356 | null | comment | _sentient | 1,460,697,429 | Are you really both asserting that the mere fact someone is willing to litigate acts as evidence to the merit of their claims?<p>This is California. Frivolous lawsuits make up a meaningful portion of our GDP. | null | 11,502,166 | null | [
11506982
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,353 | null | comment | mikeryan | 1,460,697,366 | I'd imagine most of them start that way. Most startups go without a formal partnership agreement or incorporation until they need it (like being funded). Look at the winklevosses and facebook | null | 11,502,259 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,345 | true | comment | null | 1,460,697,212 | null | null | 11,502,259 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,352 | null | story | shawndumas | 1,460,697,339 | null | null | null | null | [
11505123
] | http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-04-14/yahoo-changes-employee-severance-plan-ahead-of-possible-sale?cmpid=yhoo.headline | 2 | Yahoo Changes Employee-Severance Plan Ahead of Possible Sale | null | 1 |
11,502,354 | null | comment | henryzhang0304 | 1,460,697,391 | Thanks! | null | 11,502,303 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,360 | null | comment | anthonymonori | 1,460,697,509 | How do you plan to maintain the data in Sure? You mentioned that you crowd-sourced the current data in SF and Copenhagen from local bloggers, but did you had somebody double check these places? What happens if one of these places do get shut down or closed? Having a chatbot on Messenger means that people are placing trust on you - and will be hard to gain back once it's lost or given a bad choice of place. Will people be able to flag places as closed within the conversation? What about preferences? E.g. If I don't want to be recommended the same place again next time I talk to Sure?<p>All this aside, great job guys! Try to surf the ride and do not fall down! | null | 11,500,213 | null | [
11505122
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,359 | null | comment | rokhayakebe | 1,460,697,497 | For those worried about [ethnic]. I believe a black, white, asian, hispanic, etc... can have the same ethnicity. It is not necessarily racial. | null | 11,501,416 | null | [
11502437
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,357 | null | comment | hhandoko | 1,460,697,439 | NTLM auth is but one of various other roadblocks in a corporate environment.<p>In my previous job, the company runs a MITM proxy, it broke SSL checks for package managers. You ended up having to disable SSL checks and load up company-issued certs.<p>I asked whether we can find a solution to this issue on the company forum, as there are other developers and data analyst whose life can be made easier if this <i>just</i> works, the response I get was: "just download them manually", I kid you not. | null | 11,499,702 | null | [
11502772
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,358 | null | comment | idrios | 1,460,697,487 | Very cool! Thanks, I just ordered it | null | 11,501,794 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,363 | null | comment | Aelinsaar | 1,460,697,551 | Oh boy... it's actually not that hard to imagine a future of spambot's running on neural networks. :/ | null | 11,501,920 | null | [
11503024,
11502507
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,361 | null | comment | atombender | 1,460,697,523 | A lot of people are focusing on your sorting comment, but I want to point out that your 1M LOC is already benefiting from generics. Slices, map and chan are polymorphic types, and functions like make(), len(), append(), copy(), etc. are generic.<p>The only distinction is that they're built in. But they are <i>demonstrably useful</i>, and your codebase would be worse without them.<p>It's hard to argue the hypothetical effect, good or worse, of generics on a codebase. You can't claim to know it for certain, seeing as the definition of generics isn't even completely defined. Maybe it wouldn't be hugely better. I don't think anyone is claiming that generics would be magical.<p>But well-designed generics (Haskell, Ocaml) can improve in other ways, some more or less subtle than others: You get less boilerplate, more code reuse, expressiveness. Go is pretty easy to read, but I find that the lack of expressiveness tends to obscure the meaning more than it reveals it. For example, you tend to end up with clunky C-style loops where a map would be much more concise, expressive and readable.<p>Another example: map types. I frequently find myself writing awkward code to copy maps, merge them, apply a common access pattern (such as [1], which coincidentally horrific and probably not performant) and so on. The ergonomics are terrible.<p>I disagree that it's not a "bother". It probably depend on what the project is; I also work on distributed apps, though.<p>[1] <a href="https://gist.github.com/atombender/01a07926115a17d3a56145adc0402c02" rel="nofollow">https://gist.github.com/atombender/01a07926115a17d3a56145adc...</a> | null | 11,497,843 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
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