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cal85

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Russia 'intercepts Europe's key satellites'

news.satnews.com
64 points·by cal85·5 bulan yang lalu·28 comments

Color Palette Pro

colorpalette.pro
1 points·by cal85·8 bulan yang lalu·1 comments

comments

cal85
·5 bulan yang lalu·discuss
How do you know this? Not disagreeing, just curious.
cal85
·7 bulan yang lalu·discuss
The problem is FUD. Some guy at a company gets told he has to wait for legal to approve some open source project or initiative that happens to use JS in the name, because his boss heard there’s a trademark issue, and the enthusiasm fades and the idea gets sidelined. There’s probably been thousands of tiny little instances of FUD like that, which we’d never hear about, and which have led to good things not happening.

One clear instance of FUD we do know about is the spec itself is not titled with the name of the language it specifies, which is then its own source of confusion for newcomers trying to learn the web platform, and makes it harder for old timers to explain things, and is generally annoying. Complexity. Confusion. Doubt. Inaction.

Removing legal FUD from the world is a good cause. I don’t mind if it also works as a good marketing play for Deno.
cal85
·7 bulan yang lalu·discuss
They thought of that and called the spec ECMAScript instead.
cal85
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Because it’s written in vanilla JS.
cal85
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Camouflage in what sense?
cal85
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Had same issue until I disconnected from Tailscale, in case that helps anyone.
cal85
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
They seem to be actively working on vertical tabs for Chromium right now: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/q/message:+vertical...
cal85
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
> I think there really are people who can visualize that apple.

Based on what evidence?
cal85
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
True. But it feels like a fairer comparison would be with a huge healthcare company that failed to vet one of its therapists properly, so a crazy pro-suicide therapist slipped through the net. Would we petition to shut down the whole company for this rare event? I suppose it would depend on whether the company could demonstrate what it is doing to ensure it doesn’t happen again.
cal85
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
It's not an em-dash, it's an en-dash, which is rare in LLM output. Also just stop being insufferable.
cal85
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Or, when you do go looking, it doesn’t feel the same. Why?
cal85
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
The last sentence can’t be true. If you go looking for them, they’re easy to find. The problem is you don’t.
cal85
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
> That needs to be solved. Seems like an easy solve. Just don't do it.

I don’t do it, but I’m not sure how that solves the problem of other people doing it.
cal85
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
The post says why.
cal85
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
The difference is that social media now exists. The fear of an embarrassing or compromising moment causing social embarrassment at an unlimited scale or affecting future employment prospects indefinitely is not based on nothing - we have all seen examples of this. Even an unlikely scenario is worth considering if the stakes are that high.

This situation compounded very gradually. In the late 90s, it was extremely common for young people to make each other laugh by doing dumb things in public (sometimes knowingly on camera) that they’d never expect to be seen by a wide audience. Then in the early 00s, the experience of going a little viral (just within your college Facebook community, before the word ‘viral’ was a thing) was actually pretty common and this started to make people just a little more guarded about being photographed. So those who got filmed doing something drunk/dumb would be more likely to go more viral, as it was now a rarer sight. And so on. It’s a recursive effect that made us all duller and more image-conscious and anxious in public. This process took a couple of decades to end up where we are now. It’s not just some new modern prissiness.
cal85
·10 bulan yang lalu·discuss
7 gigabytes? With a “G”? That must take 10s of seconds, minutes even. And for what, a ‘good experience’? Humans make no sense to me either.
cal85
·10 bulan yang lalu·discuss
> I'm not saying it's wrong but people are reacting to this as if the Times university guide is some objective truth.

I can’t see a single example of anyone reacting to it that way.
cal85
·10 bulan yang lalu·discuss
The equivalent tailwind is to just put h-8 (or whatever it is) on whichever form elements and buttons you want to be that height. Tailwind recommends you never use `@apply` - it’s basically an escape hatch for weird, niche interop requirements if you’re not all-in on Tailwind.

What is it about your example that the tailwind approach (h-8) doesn’t achieve?
cal85
·10 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Billions of people willingly use banks, fast food chains etc. all the time.
cal85
·10 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I’d like to see an example!