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11,502,362 | null | comment | lpolovets | 1,460,697,535 | Seconded! In the meanwhile, Founder's Dilemmas is a great read (<a href="http://www.amazon.com/The-Founders-Dilemmas-Anticipating-Entrepreneurship/dp/0691158304" rel="nofollow">http://www.amazon.com/The-Founders-Dilemmas-Anticipating-Ent...</a>) | null | 11,502,302 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,374 | null | comment | jrbapna | 1,460,697,708 | But it's somewhat probable that they could (given their mission), and that's what makes this risky.<p>And even if they don't do it themselves, I imagine that uber will eventually release an API of sorts, allowing anyone to tap into their logistical network.<p>The food delivery startups faced similar risks, it'll be interesting to see how they fare now that uber eats is gaining momentum | null | 11,502,097 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,371 | null | comment | cb18 | 1,460,697,640 | Apropos of people see the world in different ways, you aren't the arbiter of what is relevant for everybody else.<p>You're feelings have no bearing on the range of legal actions available to other people.<p><i>regardless of whether or not the facts are true.</i><p>What kind of state of mind are you in bro?<p><i>whether or not the facts are true.</i><p>?<p>What do you think the definition of 'fact' is? | null | 11,501,711 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,373 | null | story | drewjaja | 1,460,697,705 | null | null | null | null | null | http://www.cso.com.au/article/598062/surviving-data-breach/ | 1 | Surviving a data breach | null | 0 |
11,502,364 | null | comment | hashatlas | 1,460,697,556 | In the future, post this as CSV and GitHub will turn it into an even-nicer tabular format. Not to mention retaining the machine readability. | null | 11,499,120 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,370 | null | comment | lomnakkus | 1,460,697,633 | Unfortunately, conflicts in white-space based languages can get even worse than regular conflicts because you have very few visual structural "anchors" to start to gain an understanding of the conflict. (If you have to resolve manually, that is.)<p>Granted, if the <i>number</i> of conflicts which cannot be automatically resolved is reduced by enough, then it might not matter in the grand scheme of things. However, I'd be worried that this would make "accidental" automatic resolution of <i>semantic</i> conflicts more common. That may be an unfounded/irrational fear, I don't know. | null | 11,499,127 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,369 | null | comment | pjmlp | 1,460,697,625 | Java has support for Go-like concurrency and much more in java.lang.concurrency packages.<p>The only difference is lack of special syntax and being harder to use for basic blog post examples.<p>Usually people that compare parallel programming in C++, Java or .NET vs Go, never went beyond the basic thread features. | null | 11,498,848 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,368 | null | comment | enraged_camel | 1,460,697,615 | Sam is obviously a very smart guy, but not a very wise one. He is, after all, only 30 years old. He let his emotional side (anger, frustration) get the better of him when he published that blog post. It's not how a competent leader would have acted. | null | 11,502,136 | null | [
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] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,367 | null | comment | p4wnc6 | 1,460,697,589 | The things you depict as "training" ought to be business-value-additive tasks that happen to be both my daily work and also tasks that facilitate the career growth I desire. If the business can't do that, then they hired me for the wrong reasons. If they can't fix it, but are happy with my performance on tasks not related to my goals, they may be disappointed when I leave, and hopefully learn that it's necessary to structurally build into the concept of hiring someone the need to empower their personal goal achievement, just as their labor empowers business success.<p>Also, there is no reason why compensation must be conserved when decomposed into some traditional monetary part and some part from goal achievement. It could just be that I become more costly to employ as time goes on while at the same time I never reach a degree of costliness that motivates my employer to end the relationship. In fact, that seems obvious and surely something businesses plan for when investing in a long-term hire.<p>Also, my value to the company is not only my short-term labor, but also my future stream of labor. If they want me to stick around such that they profit from that future stream, they may have to do things that reduce my short-term output. It all comes down to what is their discount factor.<p>Expecting zero support in this regard is the same as assuming a hyperbolic discount function (or an extremely low probability that you'll choose to continue with that firm).<p>Finally, some of this is simply non-negotiable biology. Self-Determination Theory and theories of heteronomous vs autonomous goal satisfaction are just biologically at odds with what you describe. Wise companies would factor this in rather than trying to shoehorn humans into non-human situations and require them to attempt to sublimate away the basic need or drive. | null | 11,502,228 | null | [
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] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,372 | null | story | drewjaja | 1,460,697,644 | null | null | null | null | null | http://www.computerworld.com.au/ask_a_cio/3/my-job-may-be-at/ | 1 | My job may be at risk as restructuring is occurring | null | 0 |
11,502,375 | null | comment | nommm-nommm | 1,460,697,719 | In windows if you don't paste the files somewhere they just go back to their original location like they were never "cut" in the first place. Cutting without pasting is not a dangerous or destructive operation. | null | 11,502,268 | null | [
11502865
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,365 | null | story | hccampos | 1,460,697,575 | null | null | null | null | null | http://voices.nationalgeographic.com/2016/04/14/shipwreck-hunter-discovers-500-year-old-treasures | 2 | After 500, Vasco da Gama’s Esmeralda shipwreck has been discovered | null | 0 |
11,502,366 | null | comment | Pyxl101 | 1,460,697,576 | The elephant in the room, and the aspect of this issue that no one wants to talk about is that players can play on these servers for free. Any player who drops their WoW subscription in favor of a private server is a loss for blizzard, and some players are thrifty enough to do this. Thus, even though the server might not be charging, it's certainly draining revenue from Blizzard. If the population was 150k, then some % of those were paying customers anyway, and some would play only if it's free, while others might pay for WoW if a free server was not available.<p>WoW currently costs $15/mo. Blizzard is in a much better position to have numbers for this, but let's say that the existence of the free server might have discouraged 50 K people from having subscriptions who otherwise would have. Assuming 50K, then that's a monthly loss of $750,000 in revenue; or if all 150K did not subscribe but would have, it's $2,250,000/mo. Given that servers are relatively cheap, probably a good portion of that would be profit.<p>The people who say that the servers do not threaten blizzard are naïve or at worst disingenuous. They threaten Blizzard exactly as much as they discourage people from having wow subscriptions whenever they would otherwise. A player who spends a lot of time on a private server is probably not going to see a lot of value in keeping their WoW account active, after all. Given the way network effects work, a popular server could have a runaway success effect (people tend to play where a critical mass of their friends play). Furthermore, it is probably quite difficult to convince a player to reactivate their account once the successfully play for a while on a private server and have friends there; the server is probably very sticky.<p>Rather than asking Blizzard to bring back old versions of the game, perhaps Blizzard should embrace a model where players can run their own servers and list them in a public directory, such the players still require a subscription in order to play. And perhaps the server gets song cut of the profit from players who predominantly play on their server, like 10%. Perhaps this could align the interest of Blizzard and server hosts too much greater degree. The analog of a gameplay mod in other games is more like a custom server in wow, and think of all the good that's come from mods like DOTA. There are still a number of reasons why Blizard would not want to do this, such as the fact they lose control of customer experience, but maybe it's closer to a workable model. | null | 11,500,656 | null | [
11503108,
11503992,
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] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,377 | null | comment | pjmlp | 1,460,697,763 | Since C++11, C++ has a standard API for GC integration. | null | 11,498,829 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,379 | null | comment | Andrew5210 | 1,460,697,774 | Hi, I am Andrew the other founder of Jobinder. Let us know if you have any question! | null | 11,500,959 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,381 | null | comment | mryan | 1,460,697,875 | > It's pretty common knowledge that if you need to send mission critical email, you should use a service specifically designed for that. Sending email programmatically directly from a web server has ALWAYS been a gray area.<p>I partially agree with this - dedicated email services have a higher deliverability rate than a random web server, especially a cloud-based server that might be using an external IP that was previously used to send spam. However, I can understand the parent poster being annoyed that their emails were being delivered one day, and not the next, without any changes on their end.<p>> At the VERY least you could have easily set up a gmail account and sent them from smtp. Choose the right tool for the job.<p>This is absolutely the wrong tool for the job. You should not be using a Gmail account to send out automated emails that you care about. | null | 11,502,050 | null | [
11502417
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,380 | null | comment | iamtrying | 1,460,697,863 | Please donate existing projects or hire C++, C, Python developers to contribute to the open-source community and pay the developers. There are tons of project they need either donation or developers which get paid for small amounts.<p>1 - FFMpeg for Windows to become more friendly
2 - NodeJS for Windows to become more easy and friendly so that we can stop using fooling us by moving to random programming languages : Java, C#, D, Go etc etc<p>3 - Please invest on TWAIN, ISIS, SANE protocol to be Freely available in NodeJS<p>4 - Please invest on rfc-turn servers
5 - Please invest VLC. To make for windows operating system to have screen-capture and then make that captured screen to be available as virtual webcam source. Like Manycam<p>6 - Please invest for Node-WebKit, to make it for windows bulletproof hackers browser. | null | 11,495,912 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,382 | null | comment | dingo_bat | 1,460,697,930 | >VSCode doesn't even change the way code was written on Mac or Windows.<p>That's probably because those two platforms have already had superior tools for a long time. On Linux, vim reigns supreme. So it is easier to revolutionize code editing on Linux | null | 11,500,745 | null | [
11503141
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,376 | null | comment | jevinskie | 1,460,697,761 | My company now freely buys any employee a license, if they want one. Quite a few did and got a license.<p>I'm not really sure how a half-IDE/half-editor intersects with corporate concerns, to be honest. | null | 11,500,747 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,378 | null | comment | entee | 1,460,697,768 | Coupling small molecules to antibodies is tricksy :-P.<p>There have been a lot attempts at doing that (the first I recall is from the late 90's but possibly even earlier), but not many have made it into actual clinical practice. Turns out that the linkage is important, the pharmacokinetics can get complicated and getting the proper concentration in the bloodstream can be difficult. That said I've heard people are getting this kind of strategy to work more recently, particularly in oncology.<p>But of course, better understanding and finding an alternative method around the blood brain barrier is absolutely critical to drug development. It's a huge issue for any small molecule treatment for neurological disease, and regardless of how you conjugate or what you conjugate it to (now that we know something about it, maybe a full antibody isn't required, you could maybe get nearly the same effect with a shorter peptide), this is a breakthrough. | null | 11,502,273 | null | [
11502389
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,390 | null | comment | mbreese | 1,460,698,123 | Just because your ownership agreement stipulates a vesting schedule doesn't mean all companies are organized that way. In fact, I believe the default is to have no vesting, which is why we have vesting agreements in the first place!<p>I'm not arguing that having immediate vesting is a smart way to organize a company. But, to claim that a YC application 100% of the time implies anything is a stretch. | null | 11,501,901 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,384 | null | comment | danso | 1,460,697,976 | Uh, how do you <i>not</i> get that from Guillory's counter-complaint, unless you believe that Guillory is lying? He claims to have been forced out. The YC app has him listed as a 50% co-founder. Altman's blog post and the complaint against Guillory don't dispute that fact. | null | 11,502,331 | null | [
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] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,385 | null | comment | jboy | 1,460,697,997 | OK firstly, consideration doesn't have to be "valuable". It has to have _nonzero_ value, but that value can famously be as trivial as "a mere peppercorn" [0]. Furthermore: "a peppercorn does not cease to be good consideration if it is established that the promisee does not like pepper and will throw away the corn".<p>[0] <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peppercorn_(legal)" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peppercorn_(legal)</a><p>The point is that the law doesn't attempt to make everyone "be nice", nor does it protect you from making a bad business decision. It's really just ensuring that there was _some_ business (ie, some exchange of nonzero value) occurring at all.<p>Secondly, it's important to note that a written contract is not absolutely needed to enact shared ownership; a written contract (or a deed, or a shareholder's agreement) is just to formalize the agreement in writing to avoid disagreement later.<p>If you start working together, shared ownership is the _default_ in the absence of any mode-changing agreements. Were they working together? A recorded video, in which they take turns looking into the camera and effectively saying "We are working together" [1] is a pretty strong evidence that, at one point, they were working together.<p>[1] <a href="https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=_P6oXe1YI90" rel="nofollow">https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=_P6oXe1YI90</a><p>Thirdly, in the absence of formal documents saying "We are officially working together" or "We are officially not working together", the court has to fall back on attempting to determine the intention. It will have to fall back on looking for any evidence (like that video) that suggests they were in agreement about working together at some point. | null | 11,501,938 | null | [
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] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,388 | null | comment | reitanqild | 1,460,698,026 | No, it is implemented by each editor/ ide independently with their own modifier.<p>On the contrary we have mostly consistent ctrl/shift + arrow behaviour over the last 15 or more years(I don't know before that). :-) | null | 11,501,701 | null | [
11502574
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,386 | null | comment | nefitty | 1,460,698,005 | I can't help interpreting your opinion as, "it's ok to kick the poor people out, as long as the upper classes, government and businesses prosper." People aren't numbers to throw into a mean function. That "net positive" argument is what has been used to excuse globalization's "there have to be some losers" philosophy, which disproportionately affects those already in poverty.<p>A sense of community is one of the few things poor neighborhoods can offer their inhabitants. When those impoverished people are elbowed out and away from each other to make way for another coffee shop, it becomes hard to sympathize with the moneyed class's desire for late-night gourmet poke.<p>Edit: Taking a look at TulliusCicero's WaPo link is making me reconsider my position. | null | 11,502,281 | null | [
11502663,
11503497,
11504452,
11502994,
11502415,
11503997,
11502422
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,393 | null | comment | karmacondon | 1,460,698,150 | YC includes a vesting clause as a standard part of their incorporation documents, in part for just this situation.<p>I've heard that a corporation was formed BEFORE the YC application. If shares were issued in that corporation without a vesting clause, then that's that.<p>If shares were not issued and the YC application is the only evidence of a 50/50 split, then why wouldn't one assume that vesting was part of that agreement? The question on the application was "describe the <i>planned</i> equity ownership breakdown...". Someone could reasonably argue that they agreed to a 50/50 split given the assumption of a vesting schedule, and would not have agreed to it otherwise. Which is to say, if the YC application is the proof of ownership, then how can you ignore everything that is also implicit in that application? | null | 11,501,470 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,398 | null | comment | slavik81 | 1,460,698,237 | They might offer that much if proving they're completely in the right could take long enough to scuttle their billion dollar deal. | null | 11,502,272 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,394 | null | comment | lalala12399 | 1,460,698,184 | unit economics<p>I would make 1.5m in rev so fast if I gave each of my customers $1 for $.90! | null | 11,502,213 | null | [
11505175,
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] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,402 | null | comment | flashm | 1,460,698,287 | 'Remains to be scene'<p>Who proofreads this rag? | null | 11,501,464 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,395 | null | comment | iamtrying | 1,460,698,192 | Google Cloud Platform - is amazing, almost better then Amazon. i bought some CentOS 7 instances and its working great. You can run tons of products and its challenging to take down Amazon. | null | 11,485,037 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,391 | null | comment | skelsey | 1,460,698,127 | Please don't let this be the reason you don't switch to Android. I think this is a stupid bug to exist, but it hardly affects most people. | null | 11,501,972 | null | [
11502497,
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] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,387 | null | comment | akg_67 | 1,460,698,022 | The media coverage of this dispute, Sam Altman blog post, details of claims and counterclaims are doing nothing more than tarnishing YC brand. YC need to settle this dispute as quickly as possible.<p>Protecting YC reputation as the ones in founders corner in the world of "Angels are demons and VCs are vultures" is more important. The salacious details of strong-arming, fire your lawyer hire mine, and exploding offers are doing nothing more than giving appearance of YC that it is not much different from the people they were trying to help founders deal with. | null | 11,501,470 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,403 | null | comment | GavinMcG | 1,460,698,313 | What value do you see in identifying the specific race?<p>(I think that including it struck the perfect balance between flavor and a refusal to propagate racism. Without it, there's a simple report of information that was relayed. With it, I can better put myself there.) | null | 11,502,383 | null | [
11502508
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,383 | null | comment | cb18 | 1,460,697,967 | Why are you intentionally obfuscating what you saw as relevant information with your [ethnic group] bit?<p>If you didn't see it as relevant information, or you didn't want to relay that information to us, then why not just say 'gangs'? | null | 11,501,416 | null | [
11502403
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,392 | null | comment | avmich | 1,460,698,137 | > Diameters might appear in drawings. But they NEVER appear in physics.<p>Even as a characteristic size in, say, Reynolds number definition? | null | 11,500,584 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,389 | null | comment | daveguy | 1,460,698,049 | I was thinking more of larger protein-antibody conjugates and I agree it probably doesn't need to be a whole antibody. Still a lot more to learn, but very exciting for central nervous system pharma development. | null | 11,502,378 | null | [
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] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,399 | null | comment | spyder | 1,460,698,258 | They used (or tried) a lot of remote controlled robots, but many of the break down due to the high radiation. There is a museum of them:
<a href="http://io9.gizmodo.com/a-museum-of-robotic-equipment-used-during-the-chernobyl-512831778" rel="nofollow">http://io9.gizmodo.com/a-museum-of-robotic-equipment-used-du...</a> | null | 11,500,969 | null | [
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] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,401 | null | comment | cookiecaper | 1,460,698,286 | Exploding offers suck <i>for whom</i>? That's what's missing from that post. They suck <i>for the disadvantaged party</i>. They're used because they're beneficial to the advantaged party. That blog post is propaganda for YC; it says "Hey, look, the other VCs are gonna try to be mean to you, but we're gonna be REEEEAL nice ;)". They just picked something that they knew was a pet peeve for founders and that they knew wouldn't really cost them substantially to exclude from their courting strategies (as YC already has the best reputation in the business, they don't need exploding offers to get founders to sign up with them). There was probably a list of 5 "X sucks" articles that could've been written and sama just picked the one he felt he could work with best that day. Such pieces should be recognized as the intentionally-placed PR pieces they are, instead of pretending like it's just a random, unvetted musing from the YC president.<p>sama really wants this deal to go through and he is pulling out all the stops to try to make it happen, including pressuring Jeremy in a way that he's already stated is unfair (though it's unclear how sincerely-held this belief is and how much is just an attempt to court more founders; sama's employment of this technique seems to imply he doesn't really think it's that bad) and then publicly shaming Jeremy to try to get control of the story's narrative and make it "lazy nerd tries to defraud noble investors who push the boundaries of tech" instead of "mega-rich investors won't let a founder get his share of a massive buyout".<p>Every action is a tradeoff. If I'm being honest, I would probably do a similar thing if I were in sama's shoes, and do everything I could to spin the situation in my favor, since I had already convinced myself that my position was fundamentally correct and that this guy really <i>was</i> trying to rip everyone off. I think most of us would, even if we're not willing to admit it on HN. | null | 11,501,951 | null | [
11502545,
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] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,400 | null | comment | pekk | 1,460,698,280 | YAML's problem is not "significant whitespace" which really isn't a major cause of mistakes. | null | 11,497,826 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,397 | null | comment | gogopuppygogo | 1,460,698,233 | Thank you! That shed a lot of light into why he feels entitled to part of the company. This is a risk any technical founder faces if they assign their IP to a company and then agree to a vesting schedule to earn their equity in the business. If that's what happened I don't think he has much legal ground to stand on but I'm sure the lawyers involved will want to argue otherwise, after all I bet they stand to earn 30-50% of whatever is decided as a contingency fee.<p>Partnerships. They are the ship you launch that you expect to sink. | null | 11,501,607 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,396 | null | comment | bpchaps | 1,460,698,229 | Absolutely. I have zero interest in letting this go. :) | null | 11,502,129 | null | [
11502516,
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] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,405 | null | comment | saganus | 1,460,698,338 | This is very dense... wow. | null | 11,502,048 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,404 | null | comment | oluckyman | 1,460,698,336 | "UC Davis spent thousands...". Shades of Dr Evil. | null | 11,498,105 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,406 | null | comment | MrBra | 1,460,698,389 | IronRuby... good (and too short) memories.. I hope MS will embrace Ruby again sooner or later. | null | 11,499,888 | null | [
11506052
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,409 | null | comment | misframer | 1,460,698,424 | You don't need Paxos to elect a master. It's basically part of Paxos itself. | null | 11,501,535 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,407 | null | story | drewjaja | 1,460,698,395 | null | null | null | null | null | http://www.pcworld.idg.com.au/article/598055/quicktime-windows-immediate-risk-from-cyber-attacks/ | 1 | QuickTime on Windows at Immediate Risk from Cyber Attacks | null | 0 |
11,502,408 | null | comment | pjmlp | 1,460,698,409 | Modula-3 descends from Modula-2, although not directly.<p>Some of the Xerox PARC Mesa/Cedar researchers went to work for DEC (later Compaq) and created Modula-2+ with feedback from Niklaus Wirth. Which had actually used Mesa as inspiration for Modula and Modula-2.<p>Eventually Modula-2+ evolved into Modula-3.<p>Nowadays I would say part of its ideas live on C#. | null | 11,497,296 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,410 | null | comment | jcrites | 1,460,698,427 | Possible reason that email service providers and other email sending services might see an increase in new signups and free tier use recently: <a href="http://blog.mandrill.com/important-changes-to-mandrill.html" rel="nofollow">http://blog.mandrill.com/important-changes-to-mandrill.html</a> Mandrill in essence raised their price, eliminated free tier, and required prepurchased blocks of sending capacity IIRC<p>The numbers Mandrill released about that business suggest that they had a large number of low volume senders, who may now be looking for a new home. | null | 11,501,844 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,411 | null | story | antouank | 1,460,698,441 | null | null | null | null | [
11503778,
11506169,
11502654,
11506487,
11504013,
11506352,
11506588,
11507166,
11506592,
11506532
] | https://letsencrypt.status.io/ | 97 | Let's Encrypt: Active Incident, DNS errors causing service disruption | null | 26 |
11,502,416 | null | comment | coke12 | 1,460,698,541 | Seems they forgot to fill out this page: <a href="https://www.tumblr.com/txtventure/song.txt" rel="nofollow">https://www.tumblr.com/txtventure/song.txt</a> | null | 11,500,504 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,417 | null | comment | moondev | 1,460,698,549 | > This is absolutely the wrong tool for the job. You should not be using a Gmail account to send out automated emails that you care about.<p>Agreed, but better chance of delivery than directly from the server. | null | 11,502,381 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,415 | null | comment | sgillen | 1,460,698,493 | What exactly would you offer as an alternative to globalization? Purely curious. | null | 11,502,386 | null | [
11502466
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,418 | null | comment | anonymousab | 1,460,698,595 | >Also ignored for many years by the Android team.<p>The old "closed wontfix (tooboring)" affair seems sadly common. | null | 11,501,450 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,414 | null | comment | Terr_ | 1,460,698,490 | Right, it's up to the designers to communicate a useful mental-model for the user, and to provide whatever conventions/affordances help them find the controls to manipulate that model. | null | 11,502,192 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,412 | null | story | betolink | 1,460,698,447 | null | null | null | null | null | http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2016/04/pastafarianism-is-satire-and-not-protected-religion-court-rules/ | 4 | Worshipping the Flying Spaghetti Monster is not a real religion, court rules | null | 0 |
11,502,413 | null | story | williswee | 1,460,698,451 | null | null | null | null | [
11502703,
11503243,
11503312,
11503632
] | https://www.techinasia.com/medium-blocked-china-bcuz-of-course | 13 | Medium is now blocked in China | null | 5 |
11,502,420 | null | comment | Alphasite_ | 1,460,698,671 | Probably, but if pure runtime performance is a concern it should not be a huge issue and I imagine nail gin or something similar would help. | null | 11,474,954 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,421 | null | comment | snowwrestler | 1,460,698,675 | Would Cruise have been accepted to Ycombinator at all if it had just been Kyle applying?<p>Put another way, if Jeremy didn't contribute anything, then why did Kyle start working with him in the first place? Put him in the YC video? List a planned 50/50 equity split in the YC application?<p>These seem to be at least reasonable questions IMO.<p>All that said, I think the issue here is that Sam Altman personally invested in Cruise, which creates a subtle conflict of interest. It's in Sam's best interest as a Cruise director to crush Jeremy, but perhaps (as the parent suggests) it would be in YC's best interest to just stay out of it (above the fray). | null | 11,502,331 | null | [
11502455,
11502449,
11502474
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,422 | null | comment | gogopuppygogo | 1,460,698,675 | An "alternative to globalization", you say?<p>I vote for Inter Planetary Commerce. Let's give Musk a $3T budget for a couple of years and see where we get. Plenty of jobs will be created if he can terraform Mars. | null | 11,502,386 | null | [
11503293
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,419 | null | comment | tbrock | 1,460,698,628 | What editor? | null | 11,501,696 | null | [
11503146
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,428 | null | comment | paublyrne | 1,460,698,702 | Whats the point of having cake if you can't eat it? | null | 11,502,317 | null | [
11502451
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,427 | null | comment | the_zodiac | 1,460,698,701 | Sam, you messed up here. Your post just ended up giving more leverage to Jeremy.<p>There is a reason you should listen to lawyers and not just write something 'before the lawyers get to you'. | null | 11,501,470 | null | [
11503236
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,429 | null | comment | davemel37 | 1,460,698,704 | I know I would, and I think most others would gladly give sama a pass if he owned up to his bias and mistake and apologized to Jeremy publicly. | null | 11,502,368 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,423 | null | comment | starts | 1,460,698,679 | It's all about trust. This makes me nervous, obviously like blackberry said it's not good marketing to say one works with the police. To me just reading about a story like this I never want to own a blackberry.
It makes one wonder how much of apples resistance to the court case as just a big marketing ploy to gain more customers. How safe is our data on our phones? I think we need a way to encrypt our data and hold the keys ourselves on our phones, removing the need to trust these companies. | null | 11,502,306 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,430 | null | story | tomjacobs | 1,460,698,722 | null | null | null | null | null | https://medium.com/@TomPJacobs/what-housing-crisis-3c0568a5dd44 | 1 | What housing crisis? | null | 0 |
11,502,426 | null | comment | karlshea | 1,460,698,692 | Cmd-C and Cmd-Opt-V copy and move a file for me just fine in El Cap. | null | 11,502,040 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,435 | null | comment | jamiequint | 1,460,698,869 | I don't know, because I'm not delusional maybe?<p>Even if he was forced out how does this involve YC in any way. Everything in both timelines With regard to Jeremy and Kyle ceasing to work together happened prior to YC even agreeing to invest in the company. | null | 11,502,384 | null | [
11502509,
11502443,
11504704
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,432 | null | comment | syncsynchalt | 1,460,698,731 | A bit of trivia: there are actually letters assigned to all 24 hourly offsets, Z (Zulu) is only the most well known / useful.<p><a href="http://www.timeanddate.com/time/zones/military" rel="nofollow">http://www.timeanddate.com/time/zones/military</a> | null | 11,501,648 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,424 | null | comment | Ace17 | 1,460,698,679 | This is not what I said: I consider Atom and Sublime Text to be advanced general-purpose text editors, not IDEs.<p>I was indeed referring to Eclipse and Visual Studio.
From what I observed around me, for some reason, people don't use these to edit:<p>- shellscripts/perlscripts/batchfiles.<p>- Files written in a in-house domain-specific language.<p>- Configuration files.<p>- Makefiles and project files: vcxproj, sln ...<p>Actually, I observed that these kind of IDEs <i>discouraged</i> people doing the above things, giving them the impression that it's not "real development" (I suspect that this is, in part, where the bizarre term "scripting language" comes from, but this is another debate). | null | 11,500,600 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,439 | null | comment | Kristine1975 | 1,460,698,906 | The C standard already allows the compiler to remove calls to memset if the memory isn't used afterwards by the program (essentially dead-store elimination). C11 provides memset_s to clear memory for security reasons. | null | 11,499,249 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,436 | null | comment | niels_olson | 1,460,698,872 | I helped build a learning management tool for our med school, even set up SSO with their AD. They scanned the hell out of us. And we had flaws. But when the dean said he wanted it on the school's domain, on their server, IT did as told.<p>I don't know the answer. If you do interesting things, there will be bugs. And a university is full of people doing interesting things. If IT locks everything down you end up hamstrung, like the DoD often is. Another kind of pain I know all too well. | null | 11,502,396 | null | [
11502564,
11503691
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,437 | null | comment | cb18 | 1,460,698,876 | What's there to be worried about?
And why would it be relieving that it is 'not necessarily racial'?<p>It is 'racial' in the sense that it is a finer distinction of races. It fits in a hierarchy like --
people --> races --> ethnic groups<p>For example:<p>Whites --> Danes, Basque, Serbs<p>Blacks --> Yoruba, Luo, Kalenjin<p>It is strange and concerning that because there is so much walking on eggshells around these matters there is such ignorance[0] on basic matters.<p>[0] I mean that in the least offensive way, just basically not informed, or educated on a matter. | null | 11,502,359 | null | [
11502735
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,433 | true | comment | null | 1,460,698,810 | null | null | 11,501,493 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,434 | null | comment | pjmlp | 1,460,698,826 | Safe systems languages already existed before C was a thing.<p>Modula-2 is just one example.<p>Burrough B5000 was programmed in safe systems programming in 1961.<p><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Executive_Systems_Problem_Oriented_Language" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Executive_Systems_Problem_Orie...</a><p><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NEWP" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NEWP</a><p>"NEWP is a block-structured language very similar to Extended ALGOL. It includes several features borrowed from other programming languages which help in proper software engineering. These include modules (and later, super-modules) which group together functions and their data, with defined import and export interfaces. This allows for data encapsulation and module integrity. Since NEWP is designed for use as an operating system language, it permits the use of several unsafe constructs. Each block of code can have specific unsafe elements permitted. Unsafe elements are those only permitted within the operating system. These include access to the tag of each word, access to arbitrary memory elements, low-level machine interfaces, etc. If a program does not make use of any unsafe elements, it can be compiled and executed by anyone. If any unsafe elements are used, the compiler marks the code as non-executable. It can still be executed if blessed by a security administrator."<p>Sounds similar to modern practices? Done before C and UNIX were a thing.<p>C and UNIX have survived this long, because they go together as one, just like JavaScript is the king of the browser, C was the only way to go when coding on UNIX systems. | null | 11,496,663 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,438 | null | comment | Avshalom | 1,460,698,900 | But J. Random DevOps doesn't foot-gun <i>himself</i> he foot-guns the whole Op. You can fire him because it turns out he didn't know better but it's not going to fix the problem he created, the problem now affecting the whole company. | null | 11,500,949 | null | [
11508069
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,425 | null | comment | Terr_ | 1,460,698,689 | Right: It was designated with the letter "Z" quite a long time ago, and only later did military (esp. NATO) communication-guides bring "Zulu" into the picture, as a way to disambiguate individual letters like Z, T, C, D, etc. when spoken. </joke-frog-dissection> | null | 11,502,181 | null | [
11502448
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,442 | null | comment | Kristine1975 | 1,460,698,972 | Why not just write a function is_ptr_less that does all the casts.<p>P.S: In C++ std::less is guaranteed to do the right thing(tm). | null | 11,498,853 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,441 | null | comment | Dateki | 1,460,698,957 | I would have expected the film to be completely blackened, once brought to proximity of a strong source of gamma radiation. (i.e. the "Most Dangerous Radioactive Material")<p>Even if the camera was put into lead encasing, the shielding shutter was opened for quite a long time and pointed directly at the source of the gamma rays. | null | 11,500,623 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,431 | null | job | prayag | 1,460,698,725 | null | null | null | null | null | https://jobs.lever.co/leadgenius/224b13b7-fc9f-4e74-8928-5ac22a2007d7 | 1 | LeadGenius Hiring a Data Engineer | null | null |
11,502,443 | null | comment | snowwrestler | 1,460,698,986 | It has the appearance of involving YC because the president of YC posted an aggressive blog post about it. | null | 11,502,435 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,440 | null | comment | Terr_ | 1,460,698,916 | Or maybe people want a middle-ground (in outcome or in rate-of-change) which for whatever reason doesn't seem to be in the cards. | null | 11,502,317 | null | [
11503160,
11502476
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,446 | null | comment | nazmunsuma | 1,460,699,051 | I agree. | null | 11,502,209 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,444 | null | comment | gpvos | 1,460,698,988 | This tendency to show suggestions more prominently than other, more useful, UI is most likely because this enables Netflix, Amazon, et al. to make more money, i.e., payola. | null | 11,501,952 | null | [
11502610
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,450 | null | comment | reitanqild | 1,460,699,070 | > Have you actually tried sitting in front of Emacs or vim for more than 30 minutes, to the clock?<p>Not parent but I have. I still would recommend something else for all the stuff I work with.<p>That said, it is amazing, I just believe in my line of work people are better off spending time learning an ide, esp refactoring, efficient search/ replace as well as how to enable block selection. | null | 11,500,680 | null | [
11502658
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,447 | null | comment | theoracle101 | 1,460,699,057 | So if the issue of stock wasn't in writing for a Delaware company, then his 50% claim is not valid as he was never issued stock? I'm sure #2 is a non issue for Cruise | null | 11,502,122 | null | [
11504156
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,457 | null | comment | Zardoz84 | 1,460,699,133 | And i should remember SDLang that now have a few years and reference implementations on Java, C# and Dlang . I don't see why we need reinvent the wheel again and again...<p><a href="https://github.com/Abscissa/SDLang-D/wiki/Language-Guide" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/Abscissa/SDLang-D/wiki/Language-Guide</a> | null | 11,497,826 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,458 | null | comment | drauh | 1,460,699,176 | And space as in astronomy.<p>Or any global project where people in different countries have to coordinate times for events. | null | 11,501,896 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,453 | null | comment | Ace17 | 1,460,699,088 | As long as half people in clinical trials are given placebos, the answer must be "to some extent". | null | 11,502,225 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,456 | null | comment | abawany | 1,460,699,128 | Reuters article on the topic: <a href="http://www.reuters.com/article/us-gm-cruiseautomation-lawsuit-idUSKCN0XC063" rel="nofollow">http://www.reuters.com/article/us-gm-cruiseautomation-lawsui...</a> . | null | 11,490,763 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,454 | null | comment | Kristine1975 | 1,460,699,094 | <i>>Can we have a #pragma that tells the compiler to abort with an error if the target machine uses any representation for signed integers other than twos-complement?</i><p>This should do it (off the cuff):<p><pre><code> typedef int NOT_TWOS_COMPLEMENT[(unsigned int) -1 == UINT_MAX ? 1 : -1];
</code></pre>
In C++ use static_assert. | null | 11,499,923 | null | [
11502874
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,460 | null | comment | dredmorbius | 1,460,699,209 | Realise that pretty much anything that hits YouTube or FB also hits Wikpedia.<p>(I'm trying hard to avoid making plays on "pediwikia" without success. And not faulting Wikipedia but rather those who'll post that kind of content, or other rot, if they can.) | null | 11,501,475 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,459 | null | comment | joehillen | 1,460,699,205 | That is blatantly false. Type-safety can prove (as in a mathematical proof) that whole classes of bugs are impossible. | null | 11,497,004 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,449 | null | comment | sandGorgon | 1,460,699,059 | They did get accepted into YC without Jeremy (who had already parted by the time the interview was done).
Perhaps your question should have been "would they have been shortlisted".<p>Given Kyle's background... The answer is yes. | null | 11,502,421 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,451 | null | comment | mc32 | 1,460,699,084 | Sure, eat it and then you won't have any left. So, you can have the cake or you can eat it, but you can't have and also eat it. | null | 11,502,428 | null | [
11505152
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,455 | null | comment | jamiequint | 1,460,699,117 | > Would Cruise have been accepted to Y Combinator at all if it had just been Kyle applying?<p>Are you seriously asking if YC would have accepted the former co-founder of a company that sold for over a billion dollars? Isn't the answer to that question obvious? | null | 11,502,421 | null | [
11502528,
11502478
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,445 | null | comment | boto3 | 1,460,699,037 | This is gold:<p>In early October 2013, Guillory met with 28-year-old Vogt, a self-proclaimed MIT drop-
out who had spent a month to earn a degree in installing Microsoft Windows. | null | 11,501,470 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,461 | null | comment | henrikschroder | 1,460,699,214 | Kyle fired(?) Jeremy after a month, was that a valid withdrawal of the verbal promise to give Jeremy 50% of the shares? Jeremy left, and did not in any way indicate that he still thought he had 50% of the company, is that an implicit acceptance of losing his promised shares? | null | 11,502,323 | null | [
11502683
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,462 | null | comment | ghshephard | 1,460,699,224 | Well, at the very least, moving forward if there is a mention of another founder on a YC application, that later leaves, I'm sure YC will probably suggest that the departure is formerly written/signed/witnessed to avoid this type of issue in the future. | null | 11,502,122 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,463 | null | comment | vonklaus | 1,460,699,246 | looks good, I've been trying to find a free CI(never used one) but they're usually non-trivial to set up or cost money. This looks like a decent write up and semaphore seems pretty user friendly, just wish they had gitlab support. | null | 11,500,325 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,452 | null | comment | milkey_mouse | 1,460,699,088 | But that's not blatantly illegal. Annoying, but not illegal. | null | 11,488,537 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
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