http://visibot.com
tlb@ycombinator.com
- tlbFixed, thanks
- It works somewhat better at the national level than the company level. By encouraging companies to move fast, some will fail but the employees will have gained experience that gets carried into other companies in the industry. At the company level billions were wasted, but at the national level billions were invested in practical on-the-job training.
- The people who show up to town council meetings lean heavily to the side of security over liberty. The most obvious reason is that it's mostly retired homeowners with busybody personality types.
Privacy and liberty advocates are unlikely to win in council meetings by sheer numbers. They get some leverage with campaign donations, especially recently that Bitcoin made a lot of such people rich.
- It's probably good for young people to learn to do arithmetic by hand. I think you'd lose some important cognitive ability if you never learned arithmetic other than to punch things into a calculator. Not so much because of arithmetic itself, but because you learn how to do careful step-by-step operations, surely an important general cognitive ability.
Once you can do it by hand, by all means use a calculator for speed and accuracy.
- Are there proposed reasons for increased blood flow to brain regions other than neural activity? Are neurons flushing waste products or something when less active?
- One conclusion is that they should start having more children or their economy will keep on dropping.
An inverted population pyramid in a high-entitlement society will lead to economic collapse.
- Just because something is hard to enforce doesn't mean it's absurd.
Embargoes aren't impossible to enforce against the foreign importer. If a foreign entity is found to have placed orders with false documents, they can be sanctioned, which can be enforced against any of their international operations. It makes it hard for them to do future business in global markets. I would not recommend violating US sanctions no matter where you are.
- setHTML needs to support just about every element if it's going to be the standard way of rendering dynamic content. Certainly <svg> has to work or the API isn't useful.
SanitizeHTML functions in JS have had big security holes before, around edge cases like null bytes in values, or what counts as a space in Unicode. Browsers decided to be lenient in what they accept, so that means any serialize-parse chain creates some risk.
- There's no way to plan a city so most people can walk to a Costco. Warehouse stores are an inherently car-based phenomenon.
- Of course that's .049 cubic inches (~ 0.82 cc), huge compared to the one in the article.
- I already had a VPN, because I live in the UK and do business in the US, and the easiest way to get websites to show local prices & shipping is a VPN. I think anyone that is involved with multiple countries needs one.
Localization was supposed to be a browser thing, using headers like Accept-Language, but alas.
- Yes, they transfer money from poorly informed people to well-informed people. That's the point. That's how they reward well-informed people for the service of making good predictions so everyone can be slightly better informed.
The fact that outcomes are lopsided are evidence that it's not gambling. In pure gambling, everyone gets the same expectation of gains. In a test of any particular skill, you expect a Pareto distribution of outcomes.
- The change to non-skeuomorphic style at least made it faster. Liquid Glass makes it simultaneously harder to read and slower.
- Laptops are pretty rugged, but with more sensitive stuff like prototypes or test equipment, the easy solution is to put it in a plastic ziploc bag while it's warming up.
- Some bean counter at Xfiniti is reading this and moaning about how this one customer is using a disproportionate share of tech support time.
- Inductors (the L of LC) are large and expensive except at very high frequencies. So audio circuits are normally designed with just resistors and capacitors.
And you always need an active component like a transistor. A pure LC can oscillate for hundreds of cycles but not indefinitely.
- I'm trying to imagine a conversation with a Bell engineer in the 80s explaining that, in the future, a 4-year old phone won't be expected to call 911 any more.
- The account-owning thread has to accept messages for every atomic action you need it to do.
There are lots of standard shared queues you can pick from that have been fully regression tested. That's almost always better than mixing concurrency in with your business logic.
- Aha, that's just what I wanted!
- It's not necessarily shared. You could assign a single thread to own the account balances, reading requests from a message queue. That probably scales better than locking. A single thread can do several million transactions per second, more than the entire global financial system.