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nwj

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NatWest Bank may not be hashing customer passwords

twitter.com
6 points·by nwj·2 anni fa·0 comments

The Once Beloved Country

newcriterion.com
9 points·by nwj·2 anni fa·2 comments

YouTube's search function is atrocious now [video]

youtube.com
145 points·by nwj·2 anni fa·85 comments

Ghostty Devlog 004

mitchellh.com
3 points·by nwj·3 anni fa·0 comments

Catfishing on an Industrial Scale

wired.com
5 points·by nwj·3 anni fa·1 comments

Li Jiaqi: China Lipstick King Sparks Tiananmen Questions

bbc.com
4 points·by nwj·4 anni fa·0 comments

Statistical Imaginaries: An ode to responsible data science

zephoria.substack.com
49 points·by nwj·5 anni fa·4 comments

comments

nwj
·2 anni fa·discuss
It's really crazy how all these people overlap at Gottingen in the 1920s.

Take Oppenheimer, for instance. He transfers to Göttingen from Cambridge in 1926 (after a relatively miserable time at the Cavendish labs studying under J.J. Thompson). He earns his PhD at Göttingen quickly. By September 1927, he's back in the USA on a teaching fellowship with Caltech.

So, Oppenheimer isn't at Göttingen for very long - not even 2 years! But in that brief time, he meet Max Born, James Franck, Paul Dirac, Werner Heisenberg, John Von Neumann, Eugene Wigner who are also all there.

Wolfgang Pauli and Enrico Fermi had moved to other institutions by 1926, and Edward Teller doesn't get there until 1930 - but it's plausible that the Göttingen connection (and their relationship to Max Born) are how Oppenheimer meets them.
nwj
·4 anni fa·discuss
I think I've heard this option called a Pigovian tax before. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pigovian_tax.
nwj
·5 anni fa·discuss
My understanding is that in Japan zoning restrictions are controlled at a federal rather than local level. I've read that this helps prevent local incumbents using the zoning system to exclude new construction.

In other words, Japan lacks the regulatory environment (common in all these other countries) that depresses supply.