- geoffpadoWhoops. Not sure how I did that.
- > We often hear that "people leave managers, not jobs." But sometimes, people leave jobs despite loving their managers.
These two aren’t really mutually exclusive. Your manager may be extremely friendly and accommodating to you personally (as it seems like the author’s manager was), but part of a manager’s job is growing and supporting their reports with their career goals. If you’ve spent years majorly underleveled like it seems this person did, your manager is failing you. No matter how much of a nice person they might be, they’re not doing their job well if you’re attempting to grow at the company and aren’t succeeding.
So yes, I do think that this person still left a manager. He left a manager who wasn’t meeting the needs he had to stay at the company.
- MacBook Air, though the $379 price does seem to be a Black Friday deal: https://www.walmart.com/ip/Restored-Apple-MacBook-Air-13-Lap...
- Seattle, at least, already has Waymo cars in the "human-driven data gathering" mode that this article is announcing.
- For those unfamiliar with Apple’s new version-numbering system, this is the version that will be released in 2027, presumably around September or October of that year.
- Between this and The Browser Company of New York (Arc, Dia) it seems like having a generic name is the way to get acquired these days.
- I think you might have posted this to the wrong comments thread.
- > we also estimate that factorising at least two-digit numbers should be within most dogs’ capabilities, assuming the neighbours don’t start complaining first
- If I’m remembering correctly, the original script he found had different emoji in the two lines (red X vs. green checkmark), but since HN comments strip emoji, pasting it here made them equivalent.
- In a world where Vine is as successful as TikTok ended up being, who’s to say they get to a point where selling to Musk even happens?
- I suspect most of GitHub's usage (by repo count, at least) is for closed-source software. It's just in private repositories.
- Yeah, I was thinking "wow, this is well outside the HN title guidelines" but this feels like a case where humor might win the day.
- > Starting from a white background
Possibly an incorrect assumption. As several of the screenshots in the article show, the default background color of the web back then was gray, not white.
- If you go back far enough, they just don't have the issue at all! Running your "detect using cornerMask" script from another comment in this post, I have an app (https://www.haikuanimator.com/) that shows up green… because it's using Electron 2.0.8!
- The way I read it, the first dialog showed up the first time you launched the app, and never had the Purchase button. The idea was that 15 days later, you’d see the second dialog (after 15 minutes of recording). Due to the bug, however, the second dialog showed up after 15 minutes of recording from day 1.
The second dialog was always shown (and presumably always had the purchase button), but the difference was between whether users got 15 full free days first or not.
- Epic has done it: https://www.dexerto.com/fortnite/fortnite-cheater-forced-to-...
- Typo/autocorrect of “porn”, presumably.
- …for now.
- Due to existing laws such as COPPA, Meta already has in its terms of service that kids under 13 aren't allowed to use Meta AI:
> Without limiting the Meta Terms of Service or any other applicable terms or policies, you cannot access AIs if you are under the age of 13 (or such greater age required in your country or territory)
The problem with this is enforcement. How does Meta actually prevent an 8-year old, such as in the case Hawley is referring to, from using Meta AI against the ToS? The "obvious" answer is requiring some kind of age verification, but that gets into (adult) privacy issues incredibly quickly. It's not surprising that laws that require you to send even more private information such as your government ID to Meta (or questionable third-party verifiers) aren't exactly popular.