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andrewl

6,581 karmajoined 19 anni fa

Submissions

Debugging: Google requests permission to release 32M mosquitoes in CA and FL

theguardian.com
3 points·by andrewl·mese scorso·1 comments

MIT president: Why so many optimistic scientists are losing heart

bostonglobe.com
53 points·by andrewl·mese scorso·6 comments

[untitled]

1 points·by andrewl·2 mesi fa·0 comments

'Beauty of the Beasts' Review: The Gross and the Grimy

wsj.com
2 points·by andrewl·2 mesi fa·1 comments

Why AI Needs a Sense of Smell

noemamag.com
2 points·by andrewl·3 mesi fa·0 comments

Kicking Off the ATP Working Group at the IETF

atproto.com
1 points·by andrewl·3 mesi fa·0 comments

The Death of the Cheap Laptop Is Coming

nytimes.com
8 points·by andrewl·4 mesi fa·3 comments

David Gelernter recommends 'small good looking blonde' to satisfy Epstein

rawstory.com
5 points·by andrewl·5 mesi fa·0 comments

Operation Bluebird wants to reclaim Twitter's trademark for a new social network

theverge.com
7 points·by andrewl·7 mesi fa·1 comments

Cybercrims Arrested, Accused of Plotting 'violence-as-a-service'

theregister.com
3 points·by andrewl·7 mesi fa·0 comments

Kicking Robots – Humanoids and the Tech­ Industry Hype Machine

harpers.org
1 points·by andrewl·7 mesi fa·0 comments

The last-ever penny will be minted today in Philadelphia

cnn.com
735 points·by andrewl·8 mesi fa·938 comments

Western Executives Shaken After Visiting China

slashdot.org
13 points·by andrewl·9 mesi fa·13 comments

We Are Different from All Other Humans in History

forkingpaths.co
3 points·by andrewl·9 mesi fa·3 comments

Tumult and Sympathy – The Letters of Oliver Sacks

commonwealmagazine.org
21 points·by andrewl·10 mesi fa·3 comments

comments

andrewl
·5 ore fa·discuss
To me they look oppressive and bleak. They are interesting, to be sure. But I don’t find them beautiful. And aesthetics are subjective, of course. I can well believe others find them beautiful.
andrewl
·5 giorni fa·discuss
The linked article does not say what happened to him, but if you Google his name there are lots of hits. This one says he was fired:

https://www.nbcmiami.com/news/local/monroe-county-deputy-arr...
andrewl
·14 giorni fa·discuss
I think it's that they need humidity or else they dry out. So hot and humid is fine. Hot and arid is what they have a problem with.
andrewl
·14 giorni fa·discuss
Can you give us some more detail on the nematodes, or point us to an article?
andrewl
·14 giorni fa·discuss
It’s impressive. To admit fallibility is to be honest. It represents confidence.
andrewl
·14 giorni fa·discuss
Your link to the security page is broken because of the capital H in your URL. It should be: https://www.sqlite.org/security.html
andrewl
·14 giorni fa·discuss
The January 6, 2022 date at the bottom of the page is not the date the page was last updated. It is the date problem 8.9 (Boundary value error in the secondary journals used by nested transactions) directly above it was fixed. The date at the very bottom of the screen in the middle says the page itself was last updated on 2026-04-13.
andrewl
·2 mesi fa·discuss
“They have phones in booths now? Finally! I don’t have to lug this cell phone around.”

Hermes Conrad, Futurama Season 6, Episode 6: Lethal Inspection
andrewl
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Then there is the tromboon, created by P.D.Q. Bach, which is a real instrument but should not be.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P._D._Q._Bach#Tromboon
andrewl
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Martin Gardner’s The Annotated Alice explains the subtleties, mathematical and otherwise, of both Alice books in engaging detail. It explained things I never understood, and showed me things I missed (and then explained them). Besides the mathematics there are references to politicians and events of the era, and jokes that would be known only to people at Oxford.
andrewl
·2 mesi fa·discuss
The subhead on the article is: Animals that feed on dead matter perform an important service. Without them, we’d live in a world of putridity and pestilence.
andrewl
·2 mesi fa·discuss
That was a bizarre performance.
andrewl
·2 mesi fa·discuss
This is the first I’ve heard of straight-tusked elephants, which are almost twice the mass of modern day elephants. You’d need a lot of cooperation and coordination to kill one of them.
andrewl
·3 mesi fa·discuss
Byte was great. For years it was the highlight of my month. And I thought the cover art was amazing. The Smalltalk hot air balloon logo came from the cover of the August 1981 issue, which was devoted entirely to Smalltalk.

Robert Tinney, who painted many of the covers, died in February:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46982354
andrewl
·3 mesi fa·discuss
The population density of Italy 201/km2 is lower then population density of Germany 241/km2, so from point of view of density, Germany should have more high-speed rail than Italy.

That would be if kilometers of rail tracks scaled linearly with population density per unit area. My guess (based on no research at all) is it’s more that there’s a population density tipping point, and after reaching it rail development dramatically increases. I do also think you’re right about the influence of the German car industry.
andrewl
·3 mesi fa·discuss
The population density is probably one factor. New Zealand has 5.34 million people in 103,000 square miles. At the other extreme you have Hong Kong with 7.5 million people in 430 square miles. Each mile of track gives service to a much larger percentage of the population in Hong Kong than New Zealand. The same goes for a lot of the United States. The coastal corridors in the United States are population dense, but the interior less so.
andrewl
·3 mesi fa·discuss
Yes. You get a lot of bang for your buck as far as the number of people served. Hong Kong is less than half the area of Rhode Island, but the populations are 7.5 million for Hong Kong and 1.1 million for Rhode Island. Small area plus high population density is the situation where trains are most valuable.
andrewl
·3 mesi fa·discuss
The fact that a product has not yet been created from a given technology does not mean the technology or the research itself is useless, or will not turn out to be useful in the long term. You can also learn a lot from research or development that does not ultimately work out.
andrewl
·3 mesi fa·discuss
His article has a link to an article about Uganda called How the deceased are robbing the living. [1]

I know approximately nothing about Uganda, and I have no way of evaluating the article. Especially since I haven’t read it yet. But it does contradict Madradavid’s statement that these kind of burials are unheard of there.

[1] https://www.monitor.co.ug/uganda/magazines/life/how-the-dece...
andrewl
·3 mesi fa·discuss
Yes. And then after you throw all your tools away you should buy my software.