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11,502,663 | null | comment | cossatot | 1,460,703,358 | I don't know a whole lot about the general outcomes of those slowly and progressively displaced by gentrification but in sufficiently small catastrophies (i.e. not Syria) the displaced lower classes often do better economically. For example, Katrina refugees who stayed away are reported to have more income and live in safer and less impoverished areas with better schools (e.g. [1]). The city is more diverse and affluent as well (look for Citylab article on this, I can't look up atm) so it might not be a selection bias thing.<p>However complaints all around are that social networks and cultures were destroyed. It seems that when it's time to move, people move towards economic opportunity rather than for culture, etc. Hopefully with time those social networks can develop into the next rich permutation.<p>[1]: <a href="http://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/houston-texas/houston/article/Ten-years-later-Katrina-evacuees-now-part-of-6458412.php" rel="nofollow">http://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/houston-texas/houston/a...</a> | null | 11,502,386 | null | [
11502695
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,668 | null | comment | kahwooi | 1,460,703,506 | What IOT platform and library are you using when using NodeJS? | null | 11,502,644 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,667 | null | comment | rampage24life | 1,460,703,487 | Thanks for the list of companies. Some of the companies we looked into are either dead or does not exist anymore. Some companies like GetMedal, BloomAPI, and Doctrly have been on our radar as well.<p>There is a difference between us and the list of companies listed here. I would love to talk more with you if you want. The more help we find, the better of a product we can make based on the people's perspective. | null | 11,502,141 | null | [
11515501
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,670 | null | story | natvert | 1,460,703,546 | null | null | null | null | [
11502682
] | http://amablog.modelaircraft.org/amagov/2016/04/12/urgent-write-the-senate-now/ | 2 | Congress is trying to ban home-built drones | null | 1 |
11,502,675 | null | comment | guelo | 1,460,703,619 | "People of the same trade seldom meet together but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public, or in some contrivance to raise prices." - Adam Smith | null | 11,502,465 | null | [
11502979
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,672 | null | story | 8sigma | 1,460,703,588 | null | null | null | null | [
11506977,
11506096,
11507060,
11508009,
11507328,
11507667,
11506389,
11506843,
11509435
] | http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2016/04/subsidized-work-programs/478302/?utm_source=SFFB&single_page=true | 43 | The Case for a New WPA | null | 31 |
11,502,664 | null | comment | hvidgaard | 1,460,703,417 | At least in Europe they recently passed a law about charger reuseability. I'm sure companies will at least see some pushback, because a vendor charger only is exactly what they tried to stop. | null | 11,502,465 | null | [
11502746,
11502712,
11502817
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,673 | null | story | idnan | 1,460,703,588 | null | null | null | null | [
11502740
] | https://github.com/Idnan/git-whore | 4 | Git Whore – Find the ones doing less everyday ..do not trust the blabber | null | 5 |
11,502,666 | null | story | boni11 | 1,460,703,483 | null | null | null | null | null | http://www.welivesecurity.com/2016/04/14/my-video-my-first-video-private-video-dont-fall-for-this-facebook-scam/ | 1 | My video, My first video,Private video:Facebook scam spreads as Chrome extension | null | 0 |
11,502,674 | null | comment | proksoup | 1,460,703,611 | Same as with patents and everything else.<p>The one's filing them and demanding what's rightfully theirs are selfish, the one's not filing patents are less selfish. | null | 11,502,631 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,650 | null | story | kiyanwang | 1,460,703,071 | null | null | null | null | null | http://richardminerich.com/2016/04/30-years-of-scrum/ | 1 | 30 Years of Scrum | null | 0 |
11,502,671 | null | comment | Manishearth | 1,460,703,555 | Yeah, Servo uses SM's GC for its javascripty things, it sort of has to. Hooking into spidermonkey to get a GC for a program where you just want a GC and not Javascript is suboptimal though.<p>(Note that all of these GCs use RAII under the hood, but not in the simple delete-when-destructor way) | null | 11,501,246 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,676 | null | comment | melchebo | 1,460,703,625 | The last paragraph of that segment says they pick it because it's the first in the list of idle cores. E.g. if a core is no longer idle it removes itself from the list, and it adds itself at the end, so effectively it's ordered in deminishing idletime time.<p>Though from my understanding of the patch they walk over all CPUs which is not precisely constant time, and it doesn't seem to be just the list of idle CPUs; for_each_online_cpu(_cpu): <a href="https://github.com/jplozi/wastedcores/blob/master/patches/overload_on_wakeup_linux_4.1.patch#L23" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/jplozi/wastedcores/blob/master/patches/ov...</a><p>That said from what I grasp of the code it also doesn't bail out when power management is enabled, so maybe the public code or the paper are not at the same stage of development. | null | 11,502,593 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,669 | null | comment | taternuts | 1,460,703,507 | Part of the reason I love Webstorm is because of how nice IdeaVim is | null | 11,499,562 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,680 | null | comment | sandstrom | 1,460,703,650 | Do you know why you are being investigated? | null | 11,499,587 | null | [
11504001
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,683 | null | comment | p4wnc6 | 1,460,703,681 | That all sounds complicated and open to debate. Was Jeremy an employee? Did Kyle have any standing to fire him? What were the circumstances under which Jeremy left? Did Kyle use any primary IP contributions from Jeremy, like architectural designs?<p>Also, if there is sufficient evidence to declare that the 50/50 partnership existed, then Jeremy did not have to do anything to explicitly declare or let Kyle know that he (Jeremy) understood himself to still possess a 50% stake. There would be no such thing as an "implicit acceptance" of losing equity.<p>Basically the points you raise are not at all obviously addressable, and there are many ways they could play out that actually do support a significant award to Jeremy, regardless of whether that is a popular outcome. | null | 11,502,461 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,678 | null | comment | ngrilly | 1,460,703,638 | Thanks for replying.<p>I asked because so much people say "If you're serious about development then you need a serious editor: you should learn vim/Emacs because it's a once in a lifetime investment that will boost your productivity beyond what other tools provide". This mantra doesn't match my own experience.<p>I think Atom and VSCode provide 3 main advantages over vim: the out of the box experience is better; using a GUI offers a more powerful user interface; extensions are easier to install and work better.<p>It's like comparing fish and zsh: Atom and VSCode are more like fish; vim and Emacs are like zsh. | null | 11,501,179 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,681 | null | comment | threesixandnine | 1,460,703,674 | The thing is that most of us would do as sama did and the same as Jeremy as well. I know I would. I don't claim to be an angel though.... | null | 11,502,401 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,685 | null | comment | wluu | 1,460,703,726 | I assume it's this one? <a href="https://github.com/atom/vim-mode" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/atom/vim-mode</a> | null | 11,498,467 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,684 | null | comment | Aoyagi | 1,460,703,683 | How nice of Microsoft, that they want to use the data all for themselves... and how nice for them that almost nobody even thinks that "not harvesting every bit of data you get your hands on just because you can" is also a possible scenario. | null | 11,497,970 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,690 | null | comment | brongondwana | 1,460,703,809 | Con: you'll have to use vendor chargers.<p>Pro: you won't be able to use these:<p><a href="http://www.righto.com/2016/03/counterfeit-macbook-charger-teardown.html" rel="nofollow">http://www.righto.com/2016/03/counterfeit-macbook-charger-te...</a><p>or their moral equivalent<p><a href="http://www.righto.com/2012/03/inside-cheap-phone-charger-and-why-you.html" rel="nofollow">http://www.righto.com/2012/03/inside-cheap-phone-charger-and...</a><p><a href="http://www.instructables.com/answers/240V-Power-Socket-with-USB-outlets-leaks-currentno/" rel="nofollow">http://www.instructables.com/answers/240V-Power-Socket-with-...</a><p><a href="http://www.gizmodo.com.au/2014/06/please-dont-buy-cheap-phone-chargers-and-cables/" rel="nofollow">http://www.gizmodo.com.au/2014/06/please-dont-buy-cheap-phon...</a><p>... it's not as simple as "big bad charger conspiracy" - scummy manufacturers really are putting out deathtraps out there, and a protocol protection to convince you not to keep using them makes sense. | null | 11,502,465 | null | [
11502721,
11505042,
11502902,
11502705,
11502868,
11502928,
11502720,
11502940,
11502836,
11502917,
11504561,
11502847
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,677 | null | comment | febed | 1,460,703,625 | Great idea! But doesn't it work by intercepting keystrokes? What prevents Kite from reading keystrokes in other applications like a browser? | null | 11,497,111 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,679 | null | comment | nickysielicki | 1,460,703,647 | Yeah and while we're at it, we can rewrite the whole thing on top of the JVM-- get some killer constant folds goin' on.<p>Servers usually have super long uptimes, too. So the only valid criticism of JIT, which is warm up, will be a nonfactor!<p>(big /s if not obvious.<p>JIT and ML evangelists make me sick.) | null | 11,501,827 | null | [
11506139,
11504355
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,687 | null | story | oAlbe | 1,460,703,751 | null | null | null | null | [
11502926
] | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V9_PjdU3Mpo&feature=em-uploademail | 3 | Safe and Sorry – Terrorism and Mass Surveillance | null | 1 |
11,502,686 | null | comment | cyphar | 1,460,703,741 | That shouldn't happen if you look at fs/exec.c (search_binary_handler) there isn't a "fallback to shell" option. And fs/binfmt_script.c doesn't fall back to shell either. Are you sure you don't have some weird binfmt_misc hook enabled? | null | 11,501,714 | null | [
11503815
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,682 | null | comment | natvert | 1,460,703,678 | "These new provisions would require all UAS, including model aircraft, to meet new FAA design and production standards and impose unnecessary regulation on hobbyists who often build their own models at home..." They're also trying to maker it hard or impossible to fly, but I digress.<p>What if the Homebrew Computer Club was shutdown by Congress before the Steves met? | null | 11,502,670 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,693 | null | comment | melchebo | 1,460,703,826 | From the looks of it, this mainly applies if you are running a NUMA system. Which you probably are not. Though it <i>may</i> apply in other places where 'scheduling domains' are used to model hardware (e.g. hyperthreading and maybe big.LITTLE). | null | 11,502,504 | null | [
11502945
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,689 | null | comment | emp_zealoth | 1,460,703,781 | Well, the operators did do everything to magnify the scale of the accident<p>The test itself was criminally dumb, even if the reactor was running nominally.
The reactor was pushed so far out a normal working envelope it is a wonder no one though about resheduling
The reactor design itself is just abysmal. [1]<p>While I personally doubt vodka was involved in that one, it would not be surprising. [2]
Basically everyone apart from a goddamn trainee was drunk (as far as i remeber the story from when i first heard it)<p>Im on mobile, so i cant even read my own links (YAY "MODERB WEB 999.0)
/rant<p>[1]
<a href="https://books.google.pl/books?id=cuiZAgAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=nuclear+accidents+in+history&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiIvvu0h5DMAhUGWiwKHXzKC1UQ6AEIEDAA#v=onepage&q=nuclear%20accidents%20in%20history&f=false" rel="nofollow">https://books.google.pl/books?id=cuiZAgAAQBAJ&printsec=front...</a>
[2]<a href="http://rbth.com/politics/2015/02/27/total_ceos_plane_crash_due_to_drunken_airport_staff_report_indicates_44047.html" rel="nofollow">http://rbth.com/politics/2015/02/27/total_ceos_plane_crash_d...</a> | null | 11,501,070 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,692 | null | comment | pestaa | 1,460,703,823 | We use Wrike too. Getting rid of it completely can't happen soon enough. | null | 11,500,371 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,688 | null | comment | cb18 | 1,460,703,758 | impressive | null | 11,502,244 | null | [
11517872
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,691 | null | comment | brongondwana | 1,460,703,814 | Con: you'll have to use vendor chargers.<p>Pro: you won't be able to use these:<p><a href="http://www.righto.com/2016/03/counterfeit-macbook-charger-teardown.html" rel="nofollow">http://www.righto.com/2016/03/counterfeit-macbook-charger-te...</a><p>or their moral equivalent<p><a href="http://www.righto.com/2012/03/inside-cheap-phone-charger-and-why-you.html" rel="nofollow">http://www.righto.com/2012/03/inside-cheap-phone-charger-and...</a><p><a href="http://www.instructables.com/answers/240V-Power-Socket-with-USB-outlets-leaks-currentno/" rel="nofollow">http://www.instructables.com/answers/240V-Power-Socket-with-...</a><p><a href="http://www.gizmodo.com.au/2014/06/please-dont-buy-cheap-phone-chargers-and-cables/" rel="nofollow">http://www.gizmodo.com.au/2014/06/please-dont-buy-cheap-phon...</a><p>... it's not as simple as "big bad charger conspiracy" - scummy manufacturers really are putting out deathtraps out there, and a protocol protection to convince you not to keep using them makes sense. | true | 11,502,465 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,694 | null | comment | melchebo | 1,460,703,904 | The conference where this will be presented starts next week. So I think they'll post it after they catched up some sleep after that. | null | 11,501,708 | null | [
11503369
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,695 | null | comment | jacalata | 1,460,703,947 | Your link is subscriber only - does it address selection bias, eg perhaps those who relocated had an existing advantage? | null | 11,502,663 | null | [
11503288
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,697 | null | comment | cmurf | 1,460,703,967 | The first response was civil. I'd go straight to the HIPAA complaint now. They had their chance. Being overly polite is a waste of your time. For all you know you're being filtered by a moron covering his own ass. | null | 11,502,569 | null | [
11502900,
11508472
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,703 | null | comment | ccvannorman | 1,460,704,062 | What did one Chinese activist say to the other?<p>"Can't complain."<p>Anyway, this got me thinking. Is there some kind of statistics website where we can view hits from China to Chinese-banned web services? It would be interesting to see just how much of the population is circumventing + trends. | null | 11,502,413 | null | [
11502858
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,696 | null | comment | cyphar | 1,460,703,961 | Yeah, a copy is not a backup. It's a mistake too many people make. You need to have historical backups. | null | 11,498,759 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,700 | null | comment | gcb0 | 1,460,704,026 | good luck with THAT mindset.<p>edit: i never touched ios (except for my employer, but it's their data) and my Android phones all have my kernel and pf tables limiting all apps network access. specially to the local network! | null | 11,500,246 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,701 | null | story | kiyanwang | 1,460,704,035 | null | true | null | null | null | http://www.programmableweb.com/news/new-study-demonstrates-lack-focus-api-security/2016/04/08 | 1 | New Study Demonstrates Lack of Focus on API Security | null | null |
11,502,699 | null | comment | melchebo | 1,460,704,022 | It should probably mainly be seen as a proof of concept for their scheduler decision visualization tools. Which are not public for the time being. That should make checking and fixing bugs easier in the future. | null | 11,501,965 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,698 | null | comment | Oletros | 1,460,704,012 | > From a developer's point of view, Android is known to be a mess.<p>Source for this? | null | 11,501,972 | null | [
11503502,
11502837
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,702 | null | comment | galtwho | 1,460,704,046 | Dan has written on Linkedin a summary of his experience as well.<p><a href="https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/when-comes-age-bias-tech-companies-dont-even-bother-lie-dan-lyons" rel="nofollow">https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/when-comes-age-bias-tech-comp...</a> | null | 11,484,783 | null | [
11502758
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,704 | null | comment | plaidturtle | 1,460,704,063 | Loved the humor in the intro video :D | null | 11,497,111 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,705 | null | comment | mihn | 1,460,704,065 | Dude its Universal Serial Bus for a reason and this just defies this reason. | null | 11,502,690 | null | [
11502793,
11505117
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,706 | null | story | signa11 | 1,460,704,072 | null | null | null | null | [
11502760
] | http://codeahoy.com/2016/04/14/mistakes-at-work-are-not-sins/ | 6 | Mistakes at Work Are Not Sins | null | 1 |
11,502,707 | null | comment | cyphar | 1,460,704,075 | Just using rsync to make copies isn't a backup. If you use rsnapshot (which stores each copy separately) then you have a backup. Copies are not sufficient if you find out that something broke three weeks ago. | null | 11,498,321 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,712 | null | comment | mihn | 1,460,704,158 | I hope so. It would be annoying to carry different chargers for all gear I carry. | null | 11,502,664 | null | [
11502864
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,710 | null | comment | jacalata | 1,460,704,134 | I don't know what platform you're on, but on the Xbox app there's no info button, you select the show and it takes you to the info page and also begins playing the episode. | null | 11,502,535 | null | [
11506175,
11502869
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,714 | null | comment | yread | 1,460,704,184 | I don't think it's gonna be all that bad. It will be based on certificates so if you are able to control which certificates are accepted you can have pretty fine control. | null | 11,502,465 | null | [
11502733
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,715 | null | comment | cyphar | 1,460,704,207 | No, the default is to do nothing. The (default) refers to "treat root specially" not the flag. | null | 11,500,137 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,708 | null | comment | enibundo | 1,460,704,103 | > Not everything cooked from scratch is healthy!<p>No shit Sherlock. I'm talking about cooked-home food. If you can't make the decision of what you should cook, what you need and what is healthy and how to do it then you're better off eating the shit they serve you at mcdonalds in that case.<p>>JUST BE HEALTHY, FAT PEOPLE! You don't need any education about macro/micro-nutrients, food portions, exercise routines, and/or preparation.<p>Actually you don't need to be a rocket scientist to eat properly/healthy. I'm sorry to tell you that. Internet is full of recepies etc. And I'm not talking about exercises at all, why do you bring that into discussion?<p>>You have to be kidding me.<p>No I'm not. Look at the origin of companies controlling unhealthy foodchain. | null | 11,500,823 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,709 | null | comment | noja | 1,460,704,129 | Bye bye USB! | null | 11,502,465 | null | [
11502974
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,713 | null | comment | pygy_ | 1,460,704,165 | Both anorexia nervosa <i>and</i> bulimia are likely linked to a single <i>E. coli</i> protein and the immune reaction against it.<p>The clinical presentation depends on whether the antibodies end up acting as agonists or antagonists of the receptor the bacterial protein targets.<p>There's experimental (causative) evidence in rodents and correlations in humans.<p><a href="http://www.nature.com/tp/journal/v4/n10/full/tp201498a.html" rel="nofollow">http://www.nature.com/tp/journal/v4/n10/full/tp201498a.html</a> | null | 11,502,102 | null | [
11503535
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,711 | null | comment | TeMPOraL | 1,460,704,146 | Then simply <i>ask them</i>. The whole idea of an app automatically tracking your location and localizing the content <i>without the ability to pin your location</i> is frankly idiotic. It's like whoever comes up with that great plan doesn't know people <i>travel</i>. Websites are especially guilty of that. | null | 11,501,846 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,720 | null | comment | gcb0 | 1,460,704,287 | just because you want a paid walled garden doesn't make it less of a business conspiracy.<p>it is what it is.<p>you're giving away freedom to buy a better brand than oem or to build your own, just to be protected against buying a cheap charger that you probably know before hand on price alone that it's counterfeit. pretty sure the funding father's had a saying for that situation... | null | 11,502,690 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,718 | null | comment | Kunlun | 1,460,704,227 | Sweet. Any documentation to point at? I am trying to stream the microphone of my iPhone through Safari and could not find any compelling way to do so, with plugins or anything else. | null | 11,488,471 | null | [
11537292
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,719 | null | comment | Perceptes | 1,460,704,271 | rustc/cargo support any target for which a Rust stdlib is distributed, but you are left on your own to install and manage other software which will be needed to do the compilation such as a C cross-compiler for the target, etc. This is much more troublesome for some combinations of host/target than others. Personally, I have yet to get OS X --> Linux working, but Linux/glibc --> Linux/musl was pretty easy. | null | 11,501,333 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,716 | null | comment | chromakode | 1,460,704,219 | I feel your pain. Especially with tricky formats like Clarisworks (or in my case, old Cakewalk and Hash Animation Studio) reviving the data might require emulating the entire OS and environment they existed in. At least for full disk images, the backups contain copies of the software used to create the files.<p>It's really disappointing when software uses unnecessarily complex file formats. Chat logs are an important example: I was dismayed to discover that my Yahoo Messenger chat logs on Windows are stored XOR-obfuscated! [1]<p>There's a lot of compromises to be made between the convenience of making backups and their long term viability. My hope is that by greedily saving all of the bits, there will be enough context to make sense of the data if I really needed to, even if it is an intensive process.<p>A good alternate strategy would be to scoop up the most likely interesting files when processing the backups and re-encode them in more future-ready formats, as derefr suggested.<p>[1] <a href="https://cryptome.org/isp-spy/yahoo-chat-spy.pdf" rel="nofollow">https://cryptome.org/isp-spy/yahoo-chat-spy.pdf</a> | null | 11,502,529 | null | [
11503137
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,717 | null | comment | nicolapcweek94 | 1,460,704,225 | Yeah, it was first announced in 2011 (!) I think, and it's still on preorder<p>I'm waiting on my signature edition though, hopefully they took their time to make it decent enough...<p>I'd assume the lag is a software issue, it should be solvable with software updates in theory | null | 11,502,169 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,722 | null | comment | tazjin | 1,460,704,322 | MaNGOS is GPL-licensed so I would hope that they release their changes :) | null | 11,500,872 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,721 | null | comment | striking | 1,460,704,300 | It doesn't make sense to require authentication on chargers, because then either only a small elite group can make chargers and charge insane prices, or everyone can make a charger after licensing the authentication procedure and then we're back at square one.<p>It doesn't solve the problem, it moves the stupid somewhere else. | null | 11,502,690 | null | [
11502784,
11502849,
11502780,
11502779,
11502781,
11502961
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,723 | null | comment | cyphar | 1,460,704,336 | That's not a backup. If your "backup script" requires mounting the backup on a production machine, then it's barely a copy of your data. | null | 11,500,224 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,724 | null | comment | dmckeon | 1,460,704,338 | Publishing moderation policy details would be like
crowd-sourcing cryptography software development -
creating a fractally increased attack surface
with a less profitable business model.<p>Social media companies operate in a market economy.
These are not public utilities or government programs.
Feel free to propose a more cost-effective approach. | null | 11,502,573 | null | [
11516400
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,731 | null | comment | cel1ne | 1,460,704,555 | My exact thought. I also think elsewhere im europe there were cafes and bars where especially writers would work. | null | 11,502,597 | null | [
11503041
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,737 | null | comment | viraptor | 1,460,704,667 | Their status page is broken. You can see the actual issue on the history page instead, or specifically <a href="https://letsencrypt.status.io/pages/incident/55957a99e800baa4470002da/570fe5aafe92599160001098" rel="nofollow">https://letsencrypt.status.io/pages/incident/55957a99e800baa...</a><p><pre><code> April 14, 2016 12:47PM MDT
April 14, 2016 6:47PM UTC
[Investigating] We have noticed an increased number of errors. We are investigating now.
April 14, 2016 1:21PM MDT
April 14, 2016 7:21PM UTC
[Resolved] Systems have fully recovered and all services appear to be operating nominally. Cause seems to have been a transient hardware failure and further investigation is under way.
</code></pre>
Or at least the most recent issue... they both marked it as resolved and "further investigation is under way". Should be "investigating/monitoring" instead? | null | 11,502,654 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,732 | null | comment | cheriot | 1,460,704,571 | Thanks, assuming that doesn't require an extra permission, I'm going to use it this week! | null | 11,502,313 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,725 | null | comment | beefsack | 1,460,704,350 | It looks like a big improvement, but I notice visual mode doesn't work with cursor keys, and I'm also not seeing an ex-mode (eg. :w). Would love to see these implemented :) | null | 11,501,359 | null | [
11503077
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,727 | null | comment | ma2rten | 1,460,704,431 | <i>even outside of America some folks prefer decimetres over centimetres!</i><p>But the US uses feet and inches. | null | 11,501,706 | null | [
11503966
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,728 | null | comment | mofle | 1,460,704,444 | There are many ways you can safeguard [0] `rm`, but in the end, it's better to just use a tool that move files to the trash [1] instead.<p>[0]: <a href="https://github.com/sindresorhus/guides/blob/master/how-not-to-rm-yourself.md#safeguard-rm" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/sindresorhus/guides/blob/master/how-not-t...</a><p>[1]: <a href="https://github.com/sindresorhus/trash-cli" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/sindresorhus/trash-cli</a> | null | 11,496,947 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,738 | null | comment | datenwolf | 1,460,704,675 | Which didn't surprise seasoned OpenGL developers at all, because it happens to us all the time, that we see old memory contents in uninitialized buffer objects. | null | 11,467,517 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,729 | null | comment | threesixandnine | 1,460,704,475 | This "speak up" argument you use can go both ways? Why didn't Kyle "speak up" and connect with Jeremy to sort this out. I am sure he didn't forget about his YC application where he wrote 50/50. No, he instead buried his head and hoped it will just go away. It's deceptive. | null | 11,502,234 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,726 | null | comment | jbrooksuk | 1,460,704,375 | You're aware that you can change them right? | null | 11,502,521 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,742 | null | comment | melchebo | 1,460,704,727 | The scheduler looking at an idle core decides wether to steal work from an overloaded neighbor. It will only compare over the interconnects in the figure (between domains).<p>E.g. the the two cores in the dark grey box can steal work from each other. But they will only see load averages of the neighbouring domain. In certain cases the current scheduler calculates the load figures sort of odd, so the idle core decides that a neighboring overloaded 'scheduling domain' is not overloaded. | null | 11,502,058 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,730 | null | comment | 4ad | 1,460,704,527 | It's illumos, not Illuminos. | null | 11,497,967 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,736 | null | comment | thegenius2000 | 1,460,704,632 | > How are generics related to OOP or tool chains? Generics have a strong grounding in type theory and are used equally successfully in both OO and functional languages.<p>Once again, I <i>never</i> said there was anything wrong with generics! And I agree that Go should have them, I just don't think they are nearly necessary enough a feature to justify overlooking the numerous qualities the language has to offer. Please look at my initial comment: I never said anything negative about generics.<p>> More rhetoric. Please tell me how? Is there something that makes this better?<p>The "options" I'm referring to are Java/C++/C# and Python/Perl/Ruby/PHP. The former languages are too verbose, and cluttered, and Java requires the overhead of the JVM, C# is essentially Windows-only. The scripting languages lack typing and efficiency. Go is able to combine the performance and control advantages of low-level languages (to a high degree) with the simplicity of higher-level languages like Python. I'm not saying it's perfect, and I'm definitely not crazy enough to put it up against the functional languages (Haskell etc.). But when it comes to web applications, it looks like Go will soon be the one of the most practical choices available. | null | 11,497,067 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,743 | null | story | stukalov | 1,460,704,732 | null | true | null | null | null | https://www.cuba-platform.com/blog/2016-04-14/542 | 1 | CUBA Platform Is Going Open Source | null | null |
11,502,733 | null | comment | mtgx | 1,460,704,594 | That's kind of how I understood it. In their press release they talked about "compliance to the standard", which I don't think is the same with "smartphone vendor-only". And I think the user can modify this control somehow from the devices themselves.<p><a href="http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20160412005983/en/USB-3.0-Promoter-Group-Defines-Authentication-Protocol" rel="nofollow">http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20160412005983/en/USB-...</a> | null | 11,502,714 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,735 | null | comment | carlob | 1,460,704,620 | Why is it strange and concerning? Given the tragic history of race and the way it still informs the way people think about race, it's really unsurprising it's still a delicate matter. Think about how the 'one-drop rule' still applies to whom considers themselves black.<p>If that weren't enough there is a large body of scientific evidence that supports the fact that race makes little biological sense and is mostly a social construct. Take the example of the Basque you picked: it turns out the Basque are much different from the rest of people in Europe due to their being (mostly linguistically, but also genetically) the only descendants of hunter-gatherer societies in Europe.<p>I suggest you read Genes, Peoples, and Languages on the subject: it's really fascinating.<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Genes-Peoples-Languages-Luigi-Cavalli-Sforza/dp/0520228731" rel="nofollow">http://www.amazon.com/Genes-Peoples-Languages-Luigi-Cavalli-...</a> | null | 11,502,437 | null | [
11506045
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,741 | null | story | briandear | 1,460,704,712 | null | null | null | null | null | http://www.financialpost.com/m/wp/blog.html?b=business.financialpost.com/news/transportation/montreal-professors-feud-with-united-airlines-heads-to-court-over-complaint-website | 1 | Professor's feud with United Airlines heads to court | null | 0 |
11,502,734 | null | story | paddylock | 1,460,704,605 | null | true | null | null | null | http://www.briefingwire.com/pr/eduonix-introduces-a-beginner-course-for-angular-2#.VxCVVdIJt8Y.hackernews | 1 | Eduonix introduces a beginner course for Angular 2 | null | null |
11,502,740 | null | comment | Kristine1975 | 1,460,704,692 | So is being a git whore a good thing or a bad thing? | null | 11,502,673 | null | [
11502777,
11502767
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,745 | null | story | sheilalayter | 1,460,704,757 | null | true | null | null | null | http://www.beat100.com/watch-video/sheila-layter---angeland39s-song-official-video_10128875/#.VxCV8vRhHPs.hackernews | 1 | Sheila Layter – Angel's Song (Official Video) – Pop Music Video – BEAT100 | null | null |
11,502,746 | null | comment | isoos | 1,460,704,768 | I fear that this spec may be a way to circumvent the EU charger rules, e.g. the rules only specify the physical properties, but don't have a say whether the device may deny the charging.<p>Bad business practice anyway, and I will probably use it only to cross out devices from the purchase lists. | null | 11,502,664 | null | [
11502787
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,751 | null | comment | daledavies | 1,460,704,891 | I live in a dorma bungalow and it only showed me pictures of houses (which generally cost a little more), may be worthwhile asking a few more questions about the type of property than just how many bedrooms? | null | 11,486,730 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,744 | null | comment | agumonkey | 1,460,704,739 | I recently put back an old P3 box (laptops don't have Floppy Disk ports) to access an HP Colorado Backup Tape. 400MB only but some interesting stuff like Word HTML page, some old games, the much nicer than I remember QBASIC.EXE[1] and most impressively TURBO.EXE (Turbo Pascal 7 IDE) which clocks at a whopping 600KB.<p>[1] that thing had pseudo modules, a visual tracer, live indent and lint (limited but still). | null | 11,502,271 | null | [
11514387
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,748 | null | story | sconxu | 1,460,704,779 | null | null | null | null | null | https://media.fb.com/2016/04/12/introducing-the-facebook-live-api/?ref=producthunt | 5 | Introducing the Facebook Live API | null | 0 |
11,502,747 | null | story | ptweatherall | 1,460,704,770 | null | true | null | null | null | http://youtu.be/YaR-tHUxz50 | 1 | Paris I need checks | null | null |
11,502,739 | null | comment | InclinedPlane | 1,460,704,676 | There is one reliable and consistent determinant for which groups of people commit crimes, and that is the incidence of poverty, unemployment, and injustice. When people lose hope, when they see the system as not cooperating with them and helping them when but rather antagonizing them and in opposition to them. When people perceive society as unfair and taking advantage of them. Then the idea of seizing their own advantage to the detriment of others starts to seem sensible. And it isn't necessarily a matter of moral decay so much as a matter of applied game theory.<p>This has been true for every ethnic group imaginable throughout history. In America it's been true of the Irish, the Italians, the Polish, the Chinese, and so many others. So many now celebrated "model" ethnicities. The existence of [ethnic group] gangs who regularly commit certain crimes at rates much higher than others is not a sign of the uniquely fragile moral fiber of [ethnic group], it's a signifier of their continued mistreatment by society and continued ethnically biased socio-economic inequality. Only a tiny minority of any [ethnic group] are criminals, to take the actions of a minute sub-set of a very large group of people as a bad mark against the entire group is entirely unjustified, especially in light of the issues I've described above.<p>I can't believe that it's 2016 and I still have to explain this. | null | 11,501,416 | null | [
11502851
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,753 | null | comment | breakingcups | 1,460,704,932 | When will App Engine finally upgrade Go to 1.6? It's currently stuck at 1.4.<p>Also, why the long delay? Is it because of the switch from C to Go in 1.5? | null | 11,501,864 | null | [
11503434
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,756 | null | comment | mieses | 1,460,704,980 | because people adapt? | null | 11,501,603 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,755 | null | comment | melchebo | 1,460,704,961 | From what I understand from this presentation the 'scheduling domain' abstraction is reused through different layers of the hierarchy. So for example the two hyperthreads on one logical core are also modeled as 'scheduling domain'.<p><a href="https://events.linuxfoundation.org/images/stories/slides/lfcs2013_murthy.pdf?update" rel="nofollow">https://events.linuxfoundation.org/images/stories/slides/lfc...</a> | null | 11,502,209 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,752 | null | comment | James001 | 1,460,704,917 | That's just a beautiful layout on that page. Amazing typography and colour. | null | 11,500,234 | null | [
11502842,
11502804
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,757 | null | comment | ngrilly | 1,460,704,999 | So, basically, you're criticizing Go for something that even languages like Haskell, OCaml and Rust, worked on by people with academic PL backgrounds, don't do.<p>Having a well-defined core language like GHC's Core or Rust's MIR doesn't give your a proper formalisation. It just makes the formalisation easier by reducing the scope of the language. Even ECMAScript 6 "desugars" to a core language. It doesn't make the language more formalised.<p>The fact is that none of Go, Rust, OCaml and Haskell are "properly formalised", as of 2016. Nobody wins here.<p>Thanks for the link about RustBelt. | null | 11,501,592 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,754 | null | comment | aleem | 1,460,704,951 | Do checkout <a href="http://json5.org/" rel="nofollow">http://json5.org/</a> based off the original JSON author Doug Crockford's own proposed parser extensions, primarily trailing commas and comments, both of which have been a point of contention pretty much the day since the day JSON landed. It's a much simpler and saner proposal.<p>Trailing commas and JSON comments are are already supported in the newer browsers (try the Chrome console for instance).<p>Fortunately quoteless strings or optional-commas/newline-separator as proposed in Hjson will never fly. They are brittle and ambiguous. Who knows what will this get parsed as:<p><pre><code> {
a: hello's and hi's have
'misplaced' apostrophes
b: ball: a round # and # bouncy object
c: cakes and
candy: both have sugar
# but how do I include a hash at the start of a multiline-unquoted string?
}</code></pre> | null | 11,498,077 | null | [
11502894
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,750 | null | comment | leaveyou | 1,460,704,877 | Actually there is a causality there. I think he became performance obsessed AFTER he picked node, php and python because performance became a problem.. | null | 11,502,578 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,749 | null | story | AndrewDucker | 1,460,704,854 | null | null | null | null | null | http://mjg59.dreamwidth.org/41948.html | 4 | Mjg59 – David MacKay | null | 0 |
11,502,758 | null | comment | DKnoll | 1,460,705,002 | Basically the same arguments as the book... just condensed. Slightly more bitter if anything. Comparing ageism to sexism or racism, as he constantly does, is a complete cop-out. He was 23 once... as I am now, and I'm in a worse economy. Everyone ages... it's a shared experience; we all do one day. I should add, if he was such a toxic employee from day 1, as his own commentary suggests, he was lucky to make it two years. | null | 11,502,702 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,759 | null | story | tomp | 1,460,705,014 | null | null | null | null | null | https://www.theguardian.com/science/across-the-universe/2016/apr/14/alien-wow-signal-could-be-explained-after-almost-40-years | 2 | Alien ‘Wow’ signal could be explained after almost 40 years | null | 0 |
11,502,760 | null | comment | SixSigma | 1,460,705,044 | Dr. W. Edwards Deming said it a long time ago, even before this quote from his 1982 book Out of the Crisis (MIT)<p>"I should estimate that in my experience most troubles and most possibilities for improvement add up to the proportions something like this: 94% belongs to the system (responsibility of management), 6% special."<p>An attitude embraced by The Toyota Production System and now embedded in Lean thinking.<p><a href="http://management.curiouscatblog.net/2013/04/24/94-belongs-to-the-system/" rel="nofollow">http://management.curiouscatblog.net/2013/04/24/94-belongs-t...</a> | null | 11,502,706 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,761 | null | comment | dang | 1,460,705,082 | Actually the better part of HN's audience isn't involved in startups and a sizeable portion (dismayingly sizeable in my view) is cynical about them.<p>"Startup kids" is too dismissive. Some of the very best comments about startups come from grizzled veterans. Will ChuckMcM or Animats mind if I call them grizzled? Let's just pause to appreciate what incredible value they and others add to this community from the wealth of their experience.<p>Than again, depending on your definition of "kid" there are "kids" on HN whose experience with startups is already impressive. Experience should perhaps be measured in iterations, not years.<p>HN has many subgroups, including plenty of hackers. Plenty of purely technical stories make the front page. And the startup and hacker groups overlap.<p>We get complaints about the balance whichever way HN trends. | null | 11,502,298 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,765 | null | comment | vanderZwan | 1,460,705,233 | I'm a colourblind, left-handed and hard of hearing interaction designer. Oddly enough, this is almost a benefit in this context, because I have a much easier time noticing "intuitive" redesigns that fuck up accessibility in favour of the latest graphic design fad.<p>More generally, any UX design that does not involve user testing (ideally with both new and experienced users) inevitably leads to the designers missing things. If there's one field where co-design is crucial to decent results, it's IxD.<p><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Participatory_design" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Participatory_design</a> | null | 11,502,192 | null | [
11505087
] | null | null | null | null | null |
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