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11,502,865 | null | comment | sirn | 1,460,707,302 | I think the OP means in all other apps, cutting means removing the selection and put it in the clipboard until it is pasted somewhere. Windows Explorer override this behavior by turning cut into move, which break the semantic and may create confusion that the file might go away if user didn't choose to paste it, if user have used cut in other program but not Explorer. | null | 11,502,375 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,868 | null | comment | pygy_ | 1,460,707,401 | But you won't be able to use good chargers interchangeably. If you travel with two phones of different brands, you'll need to bring both chargers as well. | null | 11,502,690 | null | [
11502996
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,866 | null | story | flychecker | 1,460,707,310 | null | true | null | null | null | http://www.flychecker.com/en-GB/flights/shared/itinerary?destinationCityCode=CORF&utm_campaign=itinerary_share&arrivalDate=Wed+21+Sep&arrivalTime=10%3A00&itinerary=615HV53111045HV5312-1731742218&originplace=AMST&destinationplace=CFU&outbounddate=2016-09-21&inbounddate=2016-09-28&cabinclass=Economy&adults=1&children=0&infants=0&price=%E2%82%AC+151&destinationText=Corfu#.VxCf5ddmvwM.hackernews | 1 | I found flights to Corfu on flychecker at € 151 | null | null |
11,502,869 | null | comment | spdionis | 1,460,707,413 | I assumed usual browser. Sorry. | null | 11,502,710 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,874 | null | comment | dsfuoi | 1,460,707,541 | I don't see how that would work. Casting -1 to an unsigned type is independent of representation and will always give the max unsigned value.<p>C has _Static_assert. | null | 11,502,454 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,870 | null | story | hccampos | 1,460,707,458 | null | null | null | null | null | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pw8fpzYeQMY | 4 | Could this the new flappy bird? | null | 0 |
11,502,873 | null | comment | _0w8t | 1,460,707,535 | One of the point in the article is that despite scheduler's importance and complexity there were no tools that allowed to evaluate the performance. This work contributed such tools and those immediately allowed to identify quite a few bugs. Fixing those improves performance on NUMA systems rather substantially across various loads. | null | 11,502,653 | null | [
11506425,
11503524
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,875 | null | story | skerty | 1,460,707,550 | null | null | null | null | null | https://www.producthunt.com/r/9a491e2bf273b5/57508?1 | 1 | A coffetivity killer (productivity sounds) | null | 0 |
11,502,876 | null | story | cannshammy | 1,460,707,556 | null | null | null | null | [
11503317
] | http://www.mikecann.co.uk/misc/why-i-probably-wont-be-making-another-mobile-game-ever-again/ | 2 | Why I probably won’t be making another mobile game ever again | null | 1 |
11,502,878 | null | story | healthynomads | 1,460,707,590 | null | true | null | null | null | http://www.healthynomads.com/travel/2-days-in-jordan/ | 1 | 2 days in Jordan- what to do? | null | null |
11,502,877 | null | comment | ryporter | 1,460,707,577 | I know you've been around aviation and have studied relevant fields, but what have you actually built? Nothing personal, of course, but personal flight is the sort of domain which attracts many people who lack the knowledge or ability to design and build a product that respects the laws of physics. :) It would help your pitch if you could describe something flight-related that you have designed and built yourself, or if you told us that you have a prospective co-founder who has done so. | null | 11,501,823 | null | [
11504366
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,882 | null | comment | Confusion | 1,460,707,632 | Infrastructure always changes. You need to have something in place to detect failure of important features of your apps, that get checked every day, every hour or even every minute, depending on how costly an outage is for you. There are always doublechecks possible. | null | 11,501,768 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,881 | null | story | lucekk | 1,460,707,620 | null | null | null | null | null | https://survicate.com/blog/5-ways-to-add-context-and-make-heatmap-analysis-meaningful/ | 3 | How to Make Heatmaps Analysis More Meaningful | null | 0 |
11,502,887 | null | story | edvinasbartkus | 1,460,707,659 | null | null | null | null | null | http://www.nola.com/dining/index.ssf/2016/04/dinner_lab_closes.html | 2 | Failure to land investment dooms Dinner Lab, 35 lose jobs in New Orleans | null | 0 |
11,502,884 | null | story | eSignly | 1,460,707,651 | null | null | null | null | null | https://www.esignly.com/industries/Esignature-for-government-sector | 1 | Electronic Signature for Government Organisations at ESignly | null | 0 |
11,502,888 | null | comment | karussell | 1,460,707,693 | Thanks for pointing me to this! I knew there was an easier way :)
I was using a simple bash script instead of the (too complex) release plugin | null | 11,502,808 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,889 | null | story | gnkchintu | 1,460,707,703 | null | null | null | null | null | http://thenextweb.com/apps/2016/03/04/tinder-tests-share-button-to-turn-you-into-a-matchmaker/ | 2 | Tinder-tests-share-button-to-turn-you-into-a-matchmaker | null | 0 |
11,502,883 | null | comment | possibility | 1,460,707,650 | But before you do that, try pulling out functions. | null | 11,502,848 | null | [
11503156
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,879 | null | comment | Shengbo | 1,460,707,602 | >I can remember a time (1980's and earlier) when the modern version of the coffee shop didn't exist.<p>Are you talking about the US here? I'm pretty sure they've been around in Europe and the Middle East for centuries. | null | 11,502,176 | null | [
11503014,
11503831
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,867 | null | comment | gambiting | 1,460,707,357 | The problem is that there are other countries out there apart from UK, US, Germany and other rich western ones. Where I'm from(Poland) the minimum wage is about $2.60/hour at the moment. And it's not like Apple/Samsung/Sony/any other big manufacturer sell chargers cheaper just because we earn less. Original Apple USB charger costs about $30 here - that's more than a day of work for a lot of people. Those people are going to look for cheap USB chargers, even if they are sub standard quality - and the market will fill that niche one way or the other. | null | 11,502,849 | null | [
11502934,
11503408,
11502896
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,880 | null | comment | liotier | 1,460,707,619 | > Let's make quotes for strings optional as well.<p>This will end in tears. | null | 11,497,826 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,863 | null | comment | pritambarhate | 1,460,707,265 | Yes, Mandrill should have kept the free quota after DKIM and SPF verification. Now, I will be trying out the competitors (Sendgrid and Mailgun) and if I find them at par with Mandrill then for paid projects, I might use them rather than Mandrill. | null | 11,502,811 | null | [
11503187
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,871 | null | comment | svetliod | 1,460,707,485 | Viblast (viblast.com/pdn/enterprise) and Streamroot do the same! | null | 11,488,195 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,894 | null | comment | masklinn | 1,460,707,881 | > Trailing commas and JSON comments are are already supported in the newer browsers (try the Chrome console for instance).<p>Version 49.0.2623.112 (64-bit)<p><pre><code> > JSON.parse('{"foo": "bar",}')
> VM124:1 Uncaught SyntaxError: Unexpected token }
</code></pre>
Javascript object literals != JSON. JSON is a <i>restricted subset</i> of JS object literals (and not actually a <i>strict</i> subset: a JSON string can contain unescaped U+2028 "LINE SEPARATOR" and U+2029 "PARAGRAPH SEPARATOR" codepoints, a Javascript string can not) | null | 11,502,754 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,872 | null | comment | wfunction | 1,460,707,499 | Is it common to give out paychecks twice a week though? I feel like common sense could rule out one of those cases... | null | 11,501,471 | null | [
11503167
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,896 | null | comment | saiya-jin | 1,460,707,931 | buying overpriced equipment (apple) while complaining that with low wage you really feel the difference of price for a freakin' charger doesn't make much sense. | null | 11,502,867 | null | [
11502992,
11502909,
11502919
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,892 | null | comment | scotty79 | 1,460,707,814 | Yes. It would be way easier if large companies like Google could just build new residential housing next to their offices. | null | 11,492,162 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,864 | null | comment | viraptor | 1,460,707,292 | Even if it's implemented, charging from laptops, etc. is very unlikely to be removed. And that means there will be software-only solution to authenticate. Which means the right code will be dumped... Just give it time. | null | 11,502,712 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,893 | null | comment | zdam | 1,460,707,871 | Today I used VSCode to write a slack bot in NodeJS.<p>The editor experience was smooth and fast, with fast intellisense.<p>I had NodeJS debugging working after 5 minutes reading a VSCode NodeJS page on the VSCode site and clicking a couple of buttons in the editor.<p>I had a very good initial experience and will use again. | null | 11,498,000 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,885 | null | comment | spacecowboy_lon | 1,460,707,652 | Um because its corruption and in the USA's case Organized crime was involved | null | 11,502,610 | null | [
11503188
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,901 | null | comment | nkurz | 1,460,707,994 | Not quite $50 for a gallon, but just about there with free shipping:<p><pre><code> Dr. Bronner's Fair Trade & Organic Castile Liquid Soap
(Peppermint, 1 Gallon) $57.59 Prime
</code></pre>
<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Dr-Bronners-Organic-Castile-Liquid/dp/B00028O80I" rel="nofollow">http://www.amazon.com/Dr-Bronners-Organic-Castile-Liquid/dp/...</a><p>If you like the soap, you might also enjoy the documentary:
<a href="http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/dr_bronners_magic_soapbox/" rel="nofollow">http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/dr_bronners_magic_soapbox/</a> | null | 11,502,647 | null | [
11510069
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,898 | null | comment | embik | 1,460,707,978 | My god, that's the solution to my problem. Thank you very much. I did not realize that url was available. | null | 11,500,734 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,886 | null | story | fka | 1,460,707,656 | null | null | null | null | null | https://github.com/ademilter/bricklayer/blob/master/README.md | 5 | Bricklayer.js – Lightweight Cascading Grid Layouts | null | 0 |
11,502,899 | null | comment | striking | 1,460,707,983 | That means we'll get to see low or slow (or no!) rates of adoption, like with Thunderbolt.<p>Instead of getting cool, inexpensive eGPU or other external PCIe tech, we have to pay upwards of $200 just to connect our existing PCIe cards. And take note of the cost difference between external hard drives that incorporate Thunderbolt rather than USB3.0: they're way more expensive.<p>What's more convenient for consumers? USB3.0, not Thunderbolt. Even though Thunderbolt is way more interesting and has way more promise (it's the entire PCIe bus, exposed!), it was nearly stillborn because of its inane licensing. | null | 11,502,784 | null | [
11502981
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,895 | null | comment | egjerlow | 1,460,707,906 | The mention of the availability heuristic reminds me of the book 'Thinking, fast and slow' by Daniel Kahneman. Read it just a month ago and it was a real eye-opener. It's a book whose points I would like to have condensed into a bullet list so I can review it every now and again to remind me of the lessons that I should remember. | null | 11,502,643 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,890 | null | story | olalonde | 1,460,707,739 | null | null | null | null | null | http://devops.com/2016/04/12/14-tools-raise-web-app-performance/?utm_source=webopsweekly&utm_medium=email | 1 | 14 Tools That Raise Web and App Performance – DevOps.com | null | 0 |
11,502,897 | null | comment | giancarlostoro | 1,460,707,969 | Lots of hackers are well known for their vast knowledge of the tech scene including vague startups that nobody has heard of. I know I make 'hackers' sound like hipsters but labels are usually poorly representations of a generic set of traits, people just turn todays newer labels and magnify the worst of the worst. Coincidentally I never liked labels, but hacker and geek are things that gave me a piece of mind after scraping out of high school (mostly geek). | null | 11,502,298 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,891 | null | story | moviuro | 1,460,707,766 | null | null | null | null | null | http://www.orange.com/en/Press-and-medias/press-releases-2016/Orange-completes-acquisition-of-Lexsi-a-European-cybersecurity-leader-specialised-in-Threat-Intelligence-Services | 2 | Orange completes acquisition of Lexsi | null | 0 |
11,502,900 | null | comment | bpchaps | 1,460,707,990 | My only concern with that, from personal experience, is that groups like HIPAA tend to be about as dismissive, but often significantly more. But you're right. If I don't get a decent response by tomorrow mid-afternoon, I'll raise the issue higher and follow through. My lawyer is very good with these sorts of issues, so I can go to him if needed, too.<p>Oh, the rabbit holes...<p>Edit: also, for what it's worth, I wasn't polite at the end - far from it. | null | 11,502,697 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,902 | null | comment | AnthonyMouse | 1,460,708,002 | > ... 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.<p>Isn't this what trademark law is all about? Buy from a reputable manufacturer.<p>I also seem to remember something about consumer protection laws, so maybe the people who make the things that catch on fire should be bankrupt or in jail.<p>It's not like this is the first time anything like this has ever happened. | null | 11,502,690 | null | [
11503001,
11502972
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,903 | null | comment | mpweiher | 1,460,708,013 | No, the premises <i>always</i> need to be examined, not accepted at face value.<p>If the author is using a wrong definition as a starting point, the rest of the argument is largely pointless...or must be explicitly marked as a hypothetical/counterfactual.<p>"I define the earth as being an infinite flat plane, from this it follows [for the real world] that..."<p>Well, no, the earth is not an infinite plane, even if it kinda looks that way, was long believed to be that (maybe minus the infinite) and apparently there still are people who believe that. | null | 11,481,437 | null | [
11556677
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,904 | null | comment | laumars | 1,460,708,030 | RAID parity drives also protect against a drive failing but they're not backups either. | null | 11,498,360 | null | [
11503240
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,905 | null | comment | atemerev | 1,460,708,037 | The year is 2016.<p>Software engineers are still obsessed with squeezing every last drop of performance from a single core, adding multicore or distributed load support as an afterthought.<p>Sorry, it doesn't work this way anymore. There will be no more single core performance increases — laws of physics forbid it. Instead, we will see more and more cores in common CPUs (64, then 256, then 1024 — then it will be merged with GPGPUs and FPGAs with their stream processing approach).<p>Learn distributed programming or perish. | null | 11,501,493 | null | [
11503234,
11502914,
11505294,
11502937
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,906 | null | story | viebel | 1,460,708,059 | null | null | null | null | null | http://blog.klipse.tech/clojurescript/2016/04/13/static-fns.html | 2 | Deep into ClojureScript function call mechanisms: static vs. dynamic dispatch | null | 0 |
11,502,907 | null | story | MashaKaran | 1,460,708,141 | null | true | null | null | null | http://www.alphagamma.eu/entrepreneurship/lisbon-investment-summit-2016/ | 1 | Join Lisbon Investment Summit 2016 | null | null |
11,502,908 | null | comment | austinjp | 1,460,708,172 | I don't think it's a binary either-or. People obviously want safety and opportunity. They also tend to want to preserve the micro-culture of their neighbourhood. "Globalisation" (whatever that is) feels homogenous and corporate. Some people don't want that, they don't want to live in a place that could be anywhere else. They want to own the land and property, not be priced out.<p>I'm quite surprised at people here suggesting that it's okay to displace the poor. It's not. Change, process and improvement are most effective when they take everyone along for the ride. Everyone's seen Gataca, right?<p>I'm sure there are plenty of alternatives to the current gentrification model. Plenty of low-cost housing, for one. Sensitivity from local councils who take a long-term view and try to protect local business, for another. A complex discussion, I don't have all the answers. | null | 11,502,317 | null | [
11503075
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,910 | null | comment | Corrado | 1,460,708,257 | For some reason I can't stand the fact that VS Code drops .vscode files all over my directories. I feel like I'm working with CVS again. I haven't played with it much and not at all lately, but the last time I tried editing anything in VS Code it generated these hidden files all over the place and drop me up a wall. That may be configurable and it may have changed with 1.0, I'm not sure.<p>It's also, just very slightly, too slow. By too slow I mean that everything I do just lags a tiny bit; I can type characters faster than it can put them on the screen, clicking in the file browser is not instantaneous, etc. It's a small thing but it really bugs me. I guess I'm just spoiled by ST3. :/ | null | 11,498,000 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,911 | null | comment | varjag | 1,460,708,298 | I met one on a commuter train in Belarus in early 1990s. A pale shell of a human being, crumbling from cancer. Wish I could tell you he still had spirits high despite imminent death but he didn't. Pretty sure he's not even counted on Wikipedia in the accident death toll. | null | 11,502,048 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,912 | null | comment | jonathankoren | 1,460,708,314 | No I read it. It's irrelevant. If anything, it argues they should have been broken up earlier. Monopolies are market failures. | null | 11,497,451 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,913 | null | comment | coroutines | 1,460,708,320 | It's just really hard for me to view an interviewer as a friend usually. A couple weeks ago I had a really amazing interview experience with a company called Volantio because the first screening was a 'get to know you' sort of thing. Dude made it easy saying he wasn't yet interested in my qualifications/education and just wanted to talk about my interests.<p>We must have talked for over an hour about how great we think Coffeescript is.. (I'm a zealot).<p>Anyway, I wish I could make more interviews like that. I've actually started putting it in my cover letters that I'd appreciate going for lunch or something just to hang out and talk about frameworks.<p>It's great when I can detach myself from 'needing a job'. | null | 11,501,502 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,914 | null | comment | jeffhuys | 1,460,708,361 | I don't think this is a good way to look at it. In my opinion, having a "perfect" single core is much more valuable than an octo-core CPU. Take a look at the iPhone 6s. Two cores, and it runs faster than some octo-core Androids. I may be a bit of a noob in this area, but something tells me that is significant. | null | 11,502,905 | null | [
11502939,
11502946
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,915 | null | comment | AnthonyMouse | 1,460,708,361 | > If exporting jobs is inefficient, let people try to do it and fail - of course they will get outcompeted by the people who aren't exporting jobs, right?<p>Not if China manipulates currency to overcome the effect. | null | 11,493,093 | null | [
11507161
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,917 | null | comment | unicornporn | 1,460,708,382 | I ordered one of these $2 USB 3 Type-C to USB 3 Type-A cables from eBay so I could transfer files from my Nexus 5X to my MacBook. Since these stories started popping up I just placed it in a drawer.<p>It has no wall socket adapter and I wonder if it's safe to use for the phone if I just connect it to the computer. Seems the computer USB port shouldn't be able to feed enough power to hurt the phone. True? | null | 11,502,690 | null | [
11502985,
11503112,
11503088
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,909 | null | comment | striking | 1,460,708,179 | In this case, the Apple charger is the only one you'll be able to get, because USB3.1 is restricting the group of people that can make chargers.<p>That or the licensing will make it prohibitively expensive no matter what. Pick your poison, I suppose.<p>Seriously, the tech situation in Poland is really sad. We don't need USB3.1 making it worse. (I'm a citizen) | null | 11,502,896 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,918 | null | comment | Shengbo | 1,460,708,389 | Yes, as far as I know the very first cafés in Europe opened in the 17th century in Vienna, Paris and London and then spread to Italy and the rest of the Austro-Hungarian empire over the following two centuries. | null | 11,502,597 | null | [
11502947
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,919 | null | comment | StavrosK | 1,460,708,414 | It doesn't make sense to complain that an accessory you can buy for $5 will now cost $30 because your phone is expensive? How does that line of reasoning even follow?<p>This is literally the same as saying "I won't be able to afford higher cigarette prices" "well don't get an expensive phone then". | null | 11,502,896 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,916 | null | comment | DanielBMarkham | 1,460,708,375 | I love history, so I had to like this. Lots of great references. Good work by the author.<p>Having said that, there was a certain amount of smugness and hand-waving I have to call out. The thesis appeared to be "ISIS? Nothing new here." which I would mostly agree with. Where we run into problems is when the author tries to address criticisms of the thesis.<p>Was the U.S. on some mission to install democracy? I know Bush said so. But many folks simply wanted people in other lands the opportunity to vote before deciding to initiate overwhelming destructive force on their society, because that was where events were headed. Point being, there are many ways to look at Gulf 1 and 2. (This is why it's best when making historical analyses to stay away from anything in the last 20-30 years. Too many ways to spin things. Too many people invested in various narratives that are still alive -- and it's not necessary to the work of an essay like this.)<p>I was particularly troubled by the author not actually owning up to the one unique feature of ISIS: a trans-national groundswell of people with a violent nihilism. The eschatology was covered, but comparing ISIS to people believing in UFOs? Meh. Not so much.<p>In the latter part of the essay, the weaknesses in the beginning are intensified. We move from the ISIS-not-so-unusual thesis to "Your Pollyanna view of the merits of one civilization over another is what is causing a lot of the chaos". Maybe. Maybe the countries of the west have trapped themselves through the use of free trade and open markets into a situation where some types of societies just can't continue to exist. It's one thing to blame all this military intervention on those simple-minded do-gooders. It's another thing entirely to talk about how the world keeps shrinking, the power of the individual keeps growing, and the rise from poverty for billions of people mean that lots of folks who never had to integrate into a modern world are now stuck doing so.<p>All of that is to say that there is another argument. If the author had honestly acknowledged that argument, I'd rate this a 8 or 9. As it is, looks more like a 5 or 6. Still - well done. You just can't tell one side of the story if you want to do honest analysis. This was much more an opinion piece masquerading as analysis. | null | 11,502,557 | null | [
11503242
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,920 | null | comment | ham | 1,460,708,442 | It has been suggested by peers/friends - who have clinical expertise in this area - that I'm somewhere on the spectrum. I don't see it but it has been mentioned enough times to me by different people (always in a careful/courteous manner mind you) that I've let it warrant some consideration over the years.<p>No biggie. I've a partner, am employed and happy. Kinky too as far back as I can remember. It certainly made for a different kind of sexual development in my teens and early twenties. There was some sense of frustration and disappoint as I couldn't fathom how my sexual trajectory had become so misaligned to that of my peers. It was just different enough that I'd considered I might be the only one so kept quite about it. It took a while longer (post university) to realise there were plenty of others with <i>similar interests</i>.<p>On occasion I've bumped into or met/seen some professional peers (same research interest) in these settings. Slightly unsettling to say the least from a practical point of view as I could end more directly working with any of these people in the future. I've felt such incidents are difficult to put down to coincidence. | null | 11,493,852 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,924 | null | story | nielsencfm123 | 1,460,708,492 | null | null | null | null | null | https://medium.com/@ChrisNielsen123/my-first-chat-with-a-chatbot-cat-c8778c07cf18 | 2 | My first chat with a chatbot cat | null | 0 |
11,502,925 | null | comment | giancarlostoro | 1,460,708,496 | I'm glad you caught this too, I thought it was WAY too soon, I knew YouTube when it had relatively grown in popularity and quite a bit before Google's acquisition of it. | null | 11,501,575 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,923 | null | comment | alkonaut | 1,460,708,492 | Manual SIMD intrinsics is getting there, not sure how far it has come by now:
<a href="https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/27169" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/27169</a>
I'm sure LLVM does a fair bit of vectorization under the hood too of course, but not sure whether better knowledge of aliasing lets it do <i>more</i> or whether less undefined behavior sloppyness in Rust lets it do <i>less</i> of it than for C++.<p>Branch hint intrinsic: an accepted RFC but not yet implemented <a href="https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/26179" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/26179</a><p>Prefetch intrinsic: Looks like a rejected rfc <a href="https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/125" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/125</a><p>Inlining: As far as I understand the attributes are #[inline(always)] and #[inline(never)] respectively. | null | 11,502,805 | null | [
11503039
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,927 | null | comment | capitalsigma | 1,460,708,526 | Not that that's a flaw in the Android platform. | null | 11,502,837 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,928 | null | comment | coroutines | 1,460,708,556 | I think if I were using Linux I'd prefer an option I can specify in modprobe.d to disable signature verification for the kernel module handling this (at my discretion).<p>Or would this be at like layer 7? :> | null | 11,502,690 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,921 | null | comment | atemerev | 1,460,708,457 | It wasn't this way a few releases ago. I remember setting up Liberia time zone when I wanted UTC. | null | 11,502,154 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,931 | null | comment | giancarlostoro | 1,460,708,667 | I'm using noscript so it looks fine to me, the site's a bit broken though but that's fine by me, if you have FireFox you could always try "Reader View" to read the article without all the glitter. | null | 11,502,842 | null | [
11503159
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,930 | null | comment | excel2flow | 1,460,708,595 | Yes, but that is denotation of inhabitants, the same way Pšonci is for Poles :) | null | 11,502,479 | null | [
11503491
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,929 | null | comment | Corrado | 1,460,708,586 | I feel the same way. I tried to like VSCode but it's just all the small things that trip me up. I've really come to depend on STs mini-map and miss it when it's not there. VSCode is just slightly slower than I feel it should be, causing me to pause and crash my train of thought. | null | 11,500,541 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,926 | null | comment | citizensixteen | 1,460,708,504 | This video is a good share for non-technical friends and family to help them better understand the mass surveillance issue. | null | 11,502,687 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,932 | null | comment | paulojreis | 1,460,708,669 | I remember 7 years ago following this one: <a href="https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=1109" rel="nofollow">https://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=1109</a> (Alarm clock produces no sound or vibration). I was an "early adopter" of Android and, as result of this bug, got late for work two or three times. :)<p>They marked it as "obsolete", but - to be honest - I still wouldn't trust an Android as my alarm for anything. | null | 11,502,638 | null | [
11503819,
11503126,
11504353
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,933 | null | comment | tn13 | 1,460,708,699 | The best example is of SSL. Over a decade and we have not even got "correctness" part right. | null | 11,501,867 | null | [
11503639,
11505591
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,935 | null | comment | krzrak | 1,460,708,718 | What a coincidence: yesterday I was doing shopping and it struck me, that on the package of sausage (kabanos [1], to be precise) of $2 value they put the same RF stickers as on $200 electronics (while they don't do it on many more expensive products). I asked a clerk about that and she told me, that thieves are really keen on this particular type of product, along with shavers and some cosmetics.<p>[1] <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kabanos" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kabanos</a> | null | 11,500,471 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,936 | null | comment | k_sze | 1,460,708,744 | Mandatory XKCD reference: <a href="https://xkcd.com/1360/" rel="nofollow">https://xkcd.com/1360/</a><p>My point is. The technical aspect of moving data around is actually not that challenging compared to the "business logic" of organizing your old files. | null | 11,502,271 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,934 | null | comment | ghshephard | 1,460,708,705 | If I'm making very little money, and I have equipment that requires a USB 3.1 charger, then it is even more important that my (expensive) equipment is not damaged - then, instead of being out an extra $7 for a charger, I've potentially lost many hundreds of dollars damaged by a out-of-spec charger/cable.<p>This is a very real problem: <a href="http://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2016/02/google-engineer-finds-usb-type-c-cable-thats-so-bad-it-fried-his-chromebook-pixel/" rel="nofollow">http://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2016/02/google-engineer-finds...</a><p>This wasn't that big of a deal in the Pre 3.1 era, because the power levels typically being supplied were less, and there was a broad understanding of the power levels that were going to be supplied.<p>You write, <i>"Those people are going to look for cheap USB chargers, even if they are sub standard quality - and the market will fill that niche one way or the other."</i> - and I totally agree with you, which is the entire reason why these certification programs are required - to ensure that only systems certified to be in-spec will be recognized.<p>My 10 Watt USB charger, that I've carried with me all over the world for 2+ years, powers up my iPhone, my iPad, and my battery-backups. I use it every single day, usually multiple times/day. I realize that an extra $7 can be a lot of money for some people, but, spread over 2 years, for something so important, it seems to be a reasonable investment.<p>It becomes an even bigger deal once you can <i>also</i> charge your laptop off the same charger. | null | 11,502,867 | null | [
11506083,
11502962,
11502965
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,939 | null | comment | wodenokoto | 1,460,708,814 | I'm also a noob, but according to parent, the reason why the iPhone runs faster is that all optimisation is done for 1 core, which would then leave the 8 cores doing nothing, despite having much, much more raw power available than the single iPhone core.<p>Or put in another way: If we want more raw processing power, we need more cores, but we don't want more cores because software is optimised for a single core. | null | 11,502,914 | null | [
11503643
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,941 | null | comment | epalmer | 1,460,708,884 | >If we naively squish the curve, as if by pressing down with a finger, we end up with a bimodal distribution, where the task is now easy for one group of users and impossible for another. This is not an improvement.<p>This resonates with me. Sadly I think this happens more often. | null | 11,501,952 | null | [
11503164
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,947 | null | comment | DrJokepu | 1,460,709,013 | Yep, there were revolutions in Europe that started out in coffee shops. | null | 11,502,918 | null | [
11503023
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,950 | null | comment | huuu | 1,460,709,102 | <i>"Perhaps what our culture lacks, in the end, is the ability to understand itself."</i><p>Unfortunately I think this is very true.<p>I'm not sure but I think our liberal thinking became money thinking. And when a lot of decisions are based on money the human factor is lost. Then it becomes hard to understand what our culture is about.<p>A small example is the way we build. A lot of buildings are made cheap, for status, and so on. This alienates us because we as humans don't fit in. But it can be hard to tell why we got the feeling we don't fit in. The ability to understand is lost. | null | 11,502,557 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,945 | null | comment | rodgerd | 1,460,708,948 | > From the looks of it, this mainly applies if you are running a NUMA system. Which you probably are not.<p>Do you run on a server? Has it been made in the last 3 - 5 years? Then you are running a NUMA system. | null | 11,502,693 | null | [
11503477,
11504125
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,944 | null | comment | StavrosK | 1,460,708,935 | What's with everyone getting offended over "[ethnic group]"? What probably happened was that the employee said it and the GP censored it before quoting, without much thought. No need to get all worked up about it. | null | 11,501,669 | null | [
11503129
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,940 | null | comment | giancarlostoro | 1,460,708,837 | But then I can't use Anker's chargers either? Anker has done me the good that most alternatives fail to accomplish for me. Also what about those lovely portable chargers? All useless now? :) | null | 11,502,690 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,938 | null | story | goblin89 | 1,460,708,800 | null | null | null | null | null | https://vimeo.com/143728632 | 1 | The Merchant: Stock Trading Platform | null | 0 |
11,502,937 | null | comment | coroutines | 1,460,708,799 | I would fucking love to have an FGPA included with the newest Intel procs or something. :D<p>Kinda looking forward to lowRISC with minion cores, though - if we ever ditch x86 for games. | null | 11,502,905 | null | [
11503148,
11502952
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,948 | null | comment | rfrey | 1,460,709,029 | I think there's a HN cultural preference to avoid stream-of-consciousness tangents, so even clever or informative -- but off-topic -- replies to such tangents tend to suffer.<p>IMO this is the source of some people's impression that humour isn't welcome here. My experience is the opposite - on-topic (and funny) comments do well even if only a joke or quip, but off-topic humour sinks, even if clever and civil.<p>I'm quite lowbrow and really enjoy the more clever comment chains on Reddit, but I also appreciate the HN alternative, where attempts at pun chains, etc. sink to the bottom and on-topic thoughts rise. | null | 11,502,632 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,949 | null | comment | blubb-fish | 1,460,709,096 | It's known for thousands of years - but it's nice to see how school medicine is catching up with the Buddhists and the Shamans :) | null | 11,501,636 | null | [
11503775
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,943 | null | comment | bayesian_horse | 1,460,708,913 | I can actually understand the impulse to keep this quiet. Lack of trust in Aid missions or Peace Keeping missions is already hurting a lot of people. | null | 11,502,506 | null | [
11503092,
11503089,
11503047
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,951 | null | comment | LoSboccacc | 1,460,709,116 | I remember the whole debacle back then when the lkml was summarized on that website I can't remember<p>It'd be interesting to see if that branch exhibit the same behavior and issues. | null | 11,502,243 | null | [
11503202,
11503294
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,955 | null | comment | dnautics | 1,460,709,269 | If you don't use the whole antibody, the serum half life us capped in the knees because the body gets rid of serum proteins without glycosylation. In the case if antibodies, glycosylation is on the heavy chain FC region.<p>The first protein antibody conjugates were to couple ricin to antibodies in the late 80s. Ricin's warhead polypeptide chain conveniently has a single cysteine residue that they tried to conjugate to antibodies using disulfide exchange. Of course this was not kind to the antibodies, and the structural disruption is very likely one of the reasons this strategy failed miserably.<p>In general the challenge for ADC is that attaching your drug to an antibody is nontrivial, and the titer is tricky. How many of your molecule does it require to take down a cell? 100? 1,000,000? Can you deliver that number of molecules to each cell, that start reliably conjugated to a large molecule, after yield losses as a result of molecular decoupling? | null | 11,502,389 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,942 | null | comment | illumen | 1,460,708,912 | cd Desktop/old/old/old/old/old/old/old/old/old/ | null | 11,502,271 | null | [
11506839
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,922 | null | story | macco | 1,460,708,482 | null | null | null | null | null | https://www.kite.com/ | 2 | Kite – Programming Assistance | null | 0 |
11,502,957 | null | comment | sandGorgon | 1,460,709,280 | Linux is still flexible. I am willing to pay for an OS that just works and I will accept a fair amount of opinionated software (like systemd or Ubuntu's snappy package format) if that makes it happen.<p>I am a consumer who wants an OSX experience in the Linux world. And there are millions out there like me.<p>Am I forcing you to buy in ? not at all - the beauty of Linux is that you can use LFS, Gentoo or Arch which allows you to customize and play with your particular set of philosophies.<p>Not all opinionated software is malicious - at the end of the day, software is merely an expression of the person and their beliefs. And sometimes they just want to believe in one thing. | null | 11,500,400 | null | [
11516311
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,946 | null | comment | atemerev | 1,460,708,973 | Yes — because most applications are still written as if for single core. This is the vicious cycle I am talking about. | null | 11,502,914 | null | [
11503230
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,953 | null | comment | easytiger | 1,460,709,220 | You are thinking of Perl | null | 11,502,167 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,954 | null | comment | vixen99 | 1,460,709,244 | I suppose you might be saying that, as a matter of fact, (it happens that) their needs are not met by modern society. Or are you saying it's all our fault as usual?<p>I'm probably missing something but how has the West worked hard to make Muslims feel impotent?<p>Totally agree with your final point. There's not much sign if any that a re-framing of Islam is going to take place. Ever tried asking a Muslim if there is any bit of the Koran that should be ignored or altered?<p>"Pew Poll Finds Overwhelming Support For Executing People For Apostasy In Afghanistan and Other Muslim Nations"<p><a href="https://jonathanturley.org/2013/05/03/pew-poll-finds-overwhelming-support-for-executing-people-for-apostasy-in-afghanistan-and-other-muslim-nations/" rel="nofollow">https://jonathanturley.org/2013/05/03/pew-poll-finds-overwhe...</a> | null | 11,502,775 | null | [
11503073,
11502967
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,956 | null | comment | iopq | 1,460,709,274 | I don't use Word. I use normal text editors and plain text emails. So when I write text I often break it up into smaller parts. I write things like:<p>>argumentative essays<p>>off the cuff<p>pick one<p>if the quote is on the same line (like it is in Markdown formatting) the effect of a "choice" is lost, which is why I have to put two line breaks after it | null | 11,492,988 | null | [
11508424
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,952 | null | comment | atemerev | 1,460,709,177 | We are stuck with x86 for good. Intel is doing impossible things both in engineering and business execution, and it's really hard to compete with them for anyone.<p>Multicore ARM is still inferior to multicore x86. | null | 11,502,937 | null | [
11503008
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,962 | null | comment | nraynaud | 1,460,709,432 | If they actually cared about energy quality and equipment protection, they would check and protect on electric criteria at the plug, not add an electronic signature. | null | 11,502,934 | null | [
11502998
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,964 | null | comment | vog | 1,460,709,465 | <i>> A minor time saving feature designed to spare users the indignity of [...] now meant they were unable to browse the web at all. That’s some serious time savings!</i><p>Although this is was meant ironically, there's a lot of truth in it. | null | 11,501,952 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,963 | null | comment | pyvpx | 1,460,709,452 | no, when your house is on fire the property-tax funded fire department comes and attempts to put it out.<p>the "free tier" of municipal services is actually just a form of socialism!! eek! | null | 11,502,622 | null | [
11503248
] | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,965 | null | comment | nraynaud | 1,460,709,476 | If they actually cared about energy quality and equipment protection, they would check and protect on electric criteria at the plug, not add an electronic signature. | true | 11,502,934 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
11,502,960 | null | comment | AlexKaul | 1,460,709,322 | Thank you for letting me know! I've just published an update, the buy page now clarifies that kind of things. | null | 11,501,196 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
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