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drewda

3,008 karmajoined 17 tahun yang lalu

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SF startup is testing robots in Airbnbs, and trashing them, lawsuit claims

sfstandard.com
272 points·by drewda·bulan lalu·150 comments

Microsoft backs Anthropic to halt US DoD's 'supply-chain risk' designation

reuters.com
5 points·by drewda·4 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

comments

drewda
·kemarin·discuss
This is a paraphrase of https://www.thedeepview.com/articles/how-apple-s-decade-long...
drewda
·25 hari yang lalu·discuss
The total addressable market (TAM) for SpaceX is finite. There are only so many nation-states and large corporations that want to launch payloads into orbit.

And even if their internet service provider is uniquely capable for now, it only fills a strategic need for certain customers.

So instead, Musk and Co. need to find bubbling market trends that look like they will have huge gigantic TAMs to justify the potential growth of this company.
drewda
·26 hari yang lalu·discuss
As of this month, everyone has 100+ pages from Microsoft on how they trained their MAI-Thinking-1 model: https://microsoft.ai/pdf/mai-thinking-1.pdf

OpenAI and Anthropic may have gone silent on how they build their models, but other companies have different incentives.
drewda
·30 hari yang lalu·discuss
That doc is very useful and confidence inspiring in terms of being mainly about people and process, rather than about one single technical solution.

Relevant parts for those who have cool-downs at the top of mind:

> Across Homebrew’s history far more users have been protected by shipping zero-day fixes quickly than have been exposed to npm-style token-theft or crypto-mining attacks, so a global cooldown would be a net negative for most users’ security. The deeper reason Homebrew does not need a general cooldown is that, unlike language package managers, it already separates publishing from distribution: an upstream release does not reach users until it has passed human review, CI and checksum verification, which is the very review window that language-ecosystem cooldowns are trying to recreate.

[...]

> For ecosystems with a track record of fast-moving supply-side attacks, Homebrew applies a download cooldown: a freshly-published upstream version is not adopted immediately, giving the wider community time to detect and report a malicious release before Homebrew users are exposed. Cooldowns have been added for:

    Bundler
    RubyGems livecheck
    npm and pip defaults
    PyPI resource resolution
    npm and PyPI in bump
drewda
·bulan lalu·discuss
In many cases the acquiring company shares investors or board members with the acqui-hired entity.

To put it neutrally, VC partners are treating these are parts of their same portfolios, so if one team doesn't pan out on its own, it can be merged into another with somewhat similar overall goals or markets.

To put it more pointedly, it's perhaps all about who one knows and making sure that everyone gets to tell a story of successful exits.
drewda
·2 bulan yang lalu·discuss
This will not reassure you, but the reason it isn't necessarily really bad is because it's only incrementally worse than the really bad news came out last month:

Security researchers identified a series of exploitable vulnerabilities in github.com by using LLMs to review the compiled GitHub Enterprise Server binaries: https://www.wiz.io/blog/github-rce-vulnerability-cve-2026-38...
drewda
·2 bulan yang lalu·discuss
> As we focus on Claude Platform capabilities and connecting agents to APIs, we’ll be winding down all hosted Stainless products, including our SDK generator. Starting today, new signups, projects, and SDKs will not be available.

For better or worse, it's an acquihire.
drewda
·2 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Yup, technically speaking if the coordinates aren't in WGS84, it isn't GeoJSON
drewda
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
This is pretty straightforward compared to the giant universe of companies that resell Microsoft services.

The number of intermediaries that some customers, especially governmental agencies, go through to get just an Azure bill can be wild...
drewda
·4 bulan yang lalu·discuss
FWIW I've been on a OS X for many years now, but I still miss keyboard shortcuts in Windows. So much more consistent across the operating system and applications...
drewda
·4 bulan yang lalu·discuss
General Electric has a history of using that exact trick... just with jet engines and power generators and medical devices that can represent much larger amounts of revenue.
drewda
·4 bulan yang lalu·discuss
When using Claude Code, we often prompt it to draft diagrams in MermaidJS syntax.

Great for summarizing a multi-step process and quick to render with simple tools.
drewda
·4 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Have you considered seeing an allergist to test if you have some environmental allergies? If so, they may be able to recommend or prescribe meds to moderate the effects of those allergies. (disclaimer: I'm not a doctor, just someone else with sinus issues)
drewda
·4 bulan yang lalu·discuss
No. A newspaper is in the business of selling you content (or advertising alongside content)

grith.ai appears to be in the business of guiding you click a "request early access" button so they can eventually sell you software (or so they can pitch seed investors on the length of their list of prospects)

Again, I'm not criticizing. Just pointing out a pattern that's becoming pretty common on HN, especially for stories about vulnerabilities written up by companies selling cybersecurity solutions or services.
drewda
·4 bulan yang lalu·discuss
FWIW, the best way to get your website on Hacker News is to write a content-marketing blog post about someone else's work.

Don't get me wrong. This post is an interesting read. But the company publishing it appears to have nothing to do with the exploit or the people who discovered or patched it.

I tip my hat at their successfully marketing :)
drewda
·4 bulan yang lalu·discuss
While I prefer Google's productivity apps to the Microsoft world in this case Google is just catching up to the APIs and tooling that Microsoft has provided for a long time: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/powershell/microsoftgraph/...
drewda
·4 bulan yang lalu·discuss
They put their names to their position publicly. That is meaningful action.
drewda
·4 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Yes, it's officially still the Department of Defense.

If this were a news outline writing "Department of War" I would be concerned. But in the case of the Anthropic CEO's blog post, I can understand why they are picking their fights.
drewda
·4 bulan yang lalu·discuss
That's exactly why the Bay Area Air Quality Management District exists (established decades before the federal EPA):

> Charged with regulating stationary sources of air pollution emissions, the Air District drafted its first two regulations in the 1950s: Regulation 1, which banned open burning at dumps and wrecking yards, and Regulation 2, which established controls on dust, droplets, and combustion gases from certain industrial sources.

> Much research and discussion went into the shaping of Regulation 2, but there was no doubt about the need for it. During a fact-finding visit to one particular facility, Air District engineers discovered that filters were used over air in-take vents to protect the plant's machinery from its own corrosive emissions! This much-debated regulation was finally adopted in 1960.

https://www.baaqmd.gov/en/about-the-air-district/history-of-...
drewda
·5 bulan yang lalu·discuss
The reason for most of those fees for parks and schools is because Prop 13 has prevented property taxes from raising with the market on older property owners (and the LLCs that own commercial properties), so cities and school districts have to instead turn to newcomers to get some amount of revenue to cover the costs of providing public services.