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andsoitis

28,143 karmajoined 4 anni fa
be the change you want to see

remember that you could be wrong

Submissions

Chrome rolling out WebGPU support for Linux

developer.chrome.com
1 points·by andsoitis·46 minuti fa·0 comments

A no-brainer for protecting your brain

economist.com
2 points·by andsoitis·6 ore fa·0 comments

Rise of the Gen-Z Luddite

economist.com
2 points·by andsoitis·14 ore fa·0 comments

China may struggle to fund Xi Jinping's tech dreams

economist.com
2 points·by andsoitis·14 ore fa·0 comments

China's provinces asked to bail out risk-fraught regional banks

chinabankingnews.com
2 points·by andsoitis·22 ore fa·0 comments

Lisp as the Maxwell's Equations of Software

michaelnielsen.org
65 points·by andsoitis·22 ore fa·5 comments

The most, and least, liveable cities in 2026

economist.com
3 points·by andsoitis·24 ore fa·1 comments

The OS/2 Operating System Didn't Die. It Went Underground (2019)

hackaday.com
3 points·by andsoitis·ieri·0 comments

A man who would change Russia

economist.com
2 points·by andsoitis·ieri·2 comments

Verbalizable Representations Form a Global Workspace in Language Models

transformer-circuits.pub
2 points·by andsoitis·l’altro ieri·0 comments

Global Cancer Observatory – interactive visualization and data explore

2 points·by andsoitis·l’altro ieri·1 comments

I am Scott Hansen, I make music as Tycho and visual work as ISO50 (2013)

2 points·by andsoitis·l’altro ieri·1 comments

Looksmaxxing influencer who fled police found dead

thetab.com
2 points·by andsoitis·l’altro ieri·1 comments

The future of chipmaking looks more like Manhattan than Silicon Valley

economist.com
5 points·by andsoitis·l’altro ieri·0 comments

Implication as Obligation: Cybernetics in Transition Design

2 points·by andsoitis·l’altro ieri·0 comments

Waymo starts driverless rides in four more U.S. markets as expansion accelerates

cnbc.com
2 points·by andsoitis·3 giorni fa·1 comments

San Francisco homes sell for $1M above asking price amid AI boom

theguardian.com
3 points·by andsoitis·3 giorni fa·1 comments

The AI boom is coming for the bond market

economist.com
4 points·by andsoitis·3 giorni fa·0 comments

Europe's economy is a mess. Its stock markets are a steal

economist.com
3 points·by andsoitis·3 giorni fa·1 comments

Praying Mantis

treehugger.com
1 points·by andsoitis·3 giorni fa·0 comments

comments

andsoitis
·46 minuti fa·discuss
Good news! The Chrome team is rolling out WebGPU for Linux, starting with support for Intel Gen12+ GPUs but with a tentative plan to expand it to more devices (AMD, NVIDIA).

https://developer.chrome.com/blog/new-in-webgpu-144
andsoitis
·2 ore fa·discuss
That’s a wonderful way express that idea. Thanks for that!
andsoitis
·8 ore fa·discuss
There's also the ill-fated Swatch Internet Time, which was a decimal system that divided the day into 1,000 beats and no time zones. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swatch_Internet_Time

They even sold physical watches with this design.
andsoitis
·14 ore fa·discuss
where do you watch video entertainment, if at all?
andsoitis
·22 ore fa·discuss
> why so many people have kids

Biology / evolution. The drive to reproduce is baked in by natural selection. Organisms that didn’t want offspring didn’t pass on genes.
andsoitis
·24 ore fa·discuss
China scores amongst the lowest countries on the Economist's Global Democracy Index.

It isn't even a contest.

https://www.economist.com/interactive/democracy-index-2025
andsoitis
·ieri·discuss
I don’t consider these politicians typical employees.

Do you think CEOs take vacation where they cannot be reached? If it does happen, it is a very rare exception.
andsoitis
·ieri·discuss
[flagged]
andsoitis
·l’altro ieri·discuss
Original source, non-paywalled: https://www.who.int/news/item/08-07-2026-who-calls-for-urgen...
andsoitis
·l’altro ieri·discuss
I think it is undeniable that that would fuck you up. Imagine, that's what you see, normalized...
andsoitis
·3 giorni fa·discuss
> It advised users to uninstall the software or update to its latest version

So: old version has security vulnerabilities that latest version does not. Whoopeedoo.
andsoitis
·3 giorni fa·discuss
OpenAI and Anthropic, both headquartered in San Francisco, have filed to go public on the US stock market at valuations approaching $1tn. Their debuts promise to mint a new class of multimillionaires in San Francisco, which is already home to the highest concentration of billionaires per capita in the world.
andsoitis
·3 giorni fa·discuss
> US pensioners will have paid trillions to train all these AI models

What do you mean? Can you explain the flow of money from pensioners to the AI labs?
andsoitis
·3 giorni fa·discuss
What’s ann equivalent example that you think The Ecobomist has done?
andsoitis
·3 giorni fa·discuss
> In any sane world, you'd support a literal corpse over a guy who does not want there to be free and fair elections.

No, you’d be serious about picking the best candidate you’ve got to stand up against the formidable foe. If all you’ve got is a corpse you might as well not bother.
andsoitis
·3 giorni fa·discuss
> It lets you treat your employees as a replaceable commodity that can be scaled up and down as it makes monetary sense rather than a cohesive team of skilled artisans.

Movies are made by a temporary team of skilled artisans who are masters of their craft. After the project, they move one. Games seem to fit within the same creative category as movies. So I wouldn't expect a company with a fixed set of artisans.
andsoitis
·3 giorni fa·discuss
The Economist has this to say about their ownership structure and editorial independence:

The Economist is part of The Economist Group, a private company with a special ownership structure designed to preserve editorial independence. Its shareholders date back more than a century, and include great names in British business, such as the Sainsburys, Cadburys and Schroders. Other shareholders today include funds owned by the Agnelli and Rothschild families. Many staff of The Economist Group also own shares, which are privately traded twice a year.

The company’s constitution does not permit any individual or group to gain a majority shareholding, and no shareholder can exercise more than 20% of voting rights. The editor is appointed by trustees, who are independent of commercial, political and proprietorial influences. This structure ensures that The Economist can take an independent view of the world—free to challenge conventional thinking and concentrations of power. Its role is to inform, not to serve vested interests.


https://myaccount.economist.com/s/article/Who-owns-The-Econo...
andsoitis
·3 giorni fa·discuss
Prior discussion 70+ comments (2 days ago): https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48791799
andsoitis
·4 giorni fa·discuss
> The finger-pointing by the US about lack of aircon in europe is just a stupid republican talking point.

I think the truth is somewhere inbetween the extremes. My understanding is that while air conditioning is not legally banned in Europe, its usage and installation are heavily restricted. Strict building codes, energy-saving laws, and local aesthetic regulations in historic districts often make acquiring or running an AC unit highly complicated.

So the talking point is about red tape.
andsoitis
·4 giorni fa·discuss
That's not a truthful translation of the article's headline, BTW.

More correct would be "First international scientists to the Netherlands via the Tulip Fund", which is a far cry from the title as submitted.