- brodouevencode parentThe early mantras of OSS included "free as in speech" and "free as in beer".
- The FUD surrounding retatrutide is insane. It's tirzepatide with glucagon, both of which are sourced very easily and legally.
- Neither should we have trusted Ancel Keys, but here we are
- But it will always prefer glucose stores over fat.
- It's not given the ratios
OP should have said for calorie-adjusted intake sugar is more fattening.
- > you should also get at least 0.5g fat to 1g protein as a baseline
And hormonal health
- The bro science would tell you the protein target is still too low too :)
- The new dietary guidelines are much more sensible IMO, compared to the food pyramid or MyPlate.
- Why is this post flagged?
- All the beanie baby investors are upset with you now too :D
- There's no doubt that moving more is nothing but beneficial.
This is just ragebait.
- >First, why would you ever add methods to a public interface?
In the go world, it's a little more acceptable to do that versus something like Java because you're really not going to break anything
- As with everything, the real answer as to whether or not the cloud is cheaper is "it depends". These simplistic one-sided tirades (intentionally?) leave out a lot of detail, use simple rage-bait titles, and are generally not very thoughtful or coherent.
- Reminds me of the Sony Wega televisions.
- 3 points
- This seems to happen with increasing frequency on HN these days.
- Has the definition of vibe coding changed since Karpathy coined it?
- If MMT is real and government expenditure doesn't matter then it should be cut out of GDP calculation.
- Seriously - I'd love to have my kids walk but we are 22 miles away (in a rural area).
- How much time do you spend reviewing the code it produces? Is this for a commercial product, internal stuff, or side project?
- I did realize something interesting when there and it speaks to my previous point: most of the abuse was amongst the workers themselves. A lot of times a farmer/producer will hire "a guy" to do a job, one that acts as a contractor. Almost all the time they were migrants. Most times they were legal, but sometimes not. It was up to them to do the actual resourcing - the farmer/producer has no time for that. It would be that contracted resource doing most of the maltreatment/underpaying/mismanagement, and they would almost always treat the entire group badly. I was lucky in that I was there as a family member to the farmer just trying to make summer cash.
You're never going to not have some population of people with influence and resources attempt to take advantage of people without those things - that is a story that's as old as time. But statistically these that you have listed are all one-offs - that doesn't mean that we shouldn't care - but it does mean that the tone of your first post is very much over-stated.
- > Many of the immigrant workers used on farms are treated like slaves, locked up when they aren't in the fields or kept in overcrowded housing without basic utilities.
While conditions aren't what most people consider comfortable, this is at best a major exaggeration. No, there aren't portable toilets out there (some farms do have them) - we'd go off to the side of the field, do our business, and get back to work. No one actively relieved themselves on any product. Most of us kept a damp towel around our necks for cleaning and heat relief, so that's what we would use. Every farm I worked on that supplied to grocers or sold independently had a washing/sanitizing system as part of the operation. So while it's not operating room clean, it's pretty damn clean by the time it got to the consumer. Also, all the mistreatment of migrant workers I experienced was only ever by other migrant workers.
- My takeaway is that since users seemingly have more confidence they are able to set their lives on courses more appropriate for them. For instance,
> She hasn’t wanted to have sex for at least five years
Zepbound just uncovered an underlying problem and now she has more confidence to say this out loud. It's bringing the real problem to the surface.
- > Monoliths remain pretty good
> Micro-services require justification (they've increasingly just become assumed)
I say the opposite is true. Monoliths have a negative value return with the expansion of an application.
- I started to downvote this comment but when you finished with
> There is no longer any cultural center to even deviate from when everyone lives in a personalized media landscape.
I realized you hit the nail no the head. Everyone needs to feel special in their own little world. As far as I can tell this is not turning out to be a good thing. Humans are social creatures: we must learn to cohabitate without denigrating one another. The personalized media landscape has done nothing but lead to fracturing.
- Kubota tractors. I've used them for years. Tough as nails, tons of implements, great service experiences.
- Everyone else paying attention predicted the same things. A sub-industry was created when companies realized their engineers didn't have the expertise to manage their resources effectively and when cloud providers did not provide good paths for migration (remember lift and shift?). It's largely under control in the places that want it under control.
- Cost explorer will help you dig into the usage type and resources used.
- Good luck to the author. Having a tractor around just to move things (mulch, etc.) is very useful.
You can generate a significant amount of output in a relatively small space. Two years ago (last year was weird) we netted ~7 gallons of blueberries, 60+ lbs of tomatoes, 25-ish lbs of okra, 20+ lbs of bell pepper, 45+ lbs squash and 10-ish lbs of corn (a storm destroyed 2/3 of it before any popped up). We did all of this on approximately 1/5 of an acre, with plenty of room between rows. It was all for personal consumption - froze and canned everything. We plan to do more this year with some expansion. However we do till, but make heavy use of mulch for weed control. Pest control is handled with neem oil and biological controls (marigolds and yarrow).