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tusslewake

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Transition of Adobe eBook Platform to Wipro Engineering

helpx.adobe.com
3 points·by tusslewake·2 mesi fa·0 comments

American Airlines flight from Miami lands in Chicago with two flat tires

cbsnews.com
8 points·by tusslewake·2 mesi fa·0 comments

Spaceflight Started 100 Years Ago in a Massachusetts Cabbage Patch

nytimes.com
4 points·by tusslewake·4 mesi fa·2 comments

Smart Homes Are Terrible

theatlantic.com
5 points·by tusslewake·5 mesi fa·2 comments

Musk Foundation

muskfoundation.org
7 points·by tusslewake·8 mesi fa·1 comments

Levallois Technique

en.wikipedia.org
2 points·by tusslewake·10 mesi fa·0 comments

Heliodon

en.wikipedia.org
3 points·by tusslewake·11 mesi fa·0 comments

June 29, 1999

booksofwonder.com
1 points·by tusslewake·12 mesi fa·0 comments

Banausos

en.wikipedia.org
5 points·by tusslewake·anno scorso·0 comments

Alijah Arenas on Cybertruck crash: 'Fighting time' to escape

espn.com
3 points·by tusslewake·anno scorso·1 comments

The Man Whose Weather Forecast Saved the World

nytimes.com
2 points·by tusslewake·anno scorso·0 comments

The Twelve Orders of Soil Taxonomy

nrcs.usda.gov
2 points·by tusslewake·anno scorso·1 comments

Moscow, Third Rome

en.wikipedia.org
1 points·by tusslewake·anno scorso·0 comments

Battle of the Teutoburg Forest

en.wikipedia.org
2 points·by tusslewake·anno scorso·0 comments

Apple's AI isn't a letdown. AI is the letdown

cnn.com
6 points·by tusslewake·anno scorso·7 comments

Home Assistant 15.0

github.com
2 points·by tusslewake·anno scorso·0 comments

FreeBSD 1.0 Announcement (1993)

freebsd.org
3 points·by tusslewake·anno scorso·0 comments

Ask HN: Local (LAN) email server for homelab?

3 points·by tusslewake·anno scorso·5 comments

Knot Resolver

knot-resolver.cz
2 points·by tusslewake·anno scorso·0 comments

To identify suspect in Idaho killings, FBI used restricted consumer DNA data

nytimes.com
27 points·by tusslewake·anno scorso·1 comments

comments

tusslewake
·anno scorso·discuss
From the article:

"Arenas, whose father Gilbert played in the NBA, was involved in the single-car crash last April when he said the Cybertruck's keypad and steering wheel wouldn't respond. Arenas said he awoke to find the passenger side of the dashboard engulfed in flames and tried to use his digital key to escape, only to find the Tesla app had locked him out. I tried to open the door and the door wasn't opening," he said."
tusslewake
·anno scorso·discuss
See also this very cool poster displaying a classification scheme many people probably don't know exists: https://www.nrcs.usda.gov/sites/default/files/2022-06/orders...
tusslewake
·anno scorso·discuss
https://archive.ph/gOFTA
tusslewake
·anno scorso·discuss
https://kevinloch.com/
tusslewake
·2 anni fa·discuss
Have seen at least one other of these articles lately, on the theoretical limits of some human physical capacity. Here's another, on sprinting:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/olympics/interactive/2...

A few follow-up questions that occur to me: will an understanding of theoretical limits make the actual record breaking seem more routine and less interesting? And will many records be broken beyond the theoretical limit, making these calculations seem rather crude and short-sighted?
tusslewake
·4 anni fa·discuss
I found this aside on one of the graphics rather surprising:

> Sometime in the next 2000 years, the Sun is expected to leave a local cloud of gas and dust. After that, it may enter the G cloud. If it is denser, it would squash the protective magnetic bubble of the heliosphere, potentially exposing the Solar System to a barrage of cosmic rays.

Mostly surprised that I hadn't heard more about this. 2000 years is practically tomorrow in cosmological time!

A little more here:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Local_Interstellar_Cloud
tusslewake
·4 anni fa·discuss
tusslewake
·4 anni fa·discuss
Worth mentioning this great book on the subject published last year:

https://docsfordevelopers.com/
tusslewake
·4 anni fa·discuss
From article:

"There is a simple way of... [accurately ascertaining] if a novice can indeed land an airliner, according to Patrick Smith: use a professional flight simulator, the kind airlines train their pilots with.

"Stick a person in a true, full-motion airline simulator at 35,000 feet, with no help, and watch what happens," he says. "It won't be pretty."
tusslewake
·4 anni fa·discuss
Mailmate (https://freron.com/)

Have always been surprised it doesn't get more attention on this forum. It's a paid app, and it shows in the quality. Very smart and dedicated single developer (this is feasible for an email client since the protocol is stable and doesn't change very much), an active mailing list and user community. Clean with few bugs in my use. Definitely aimed at developers and people who want to peer into the internals of email.
tusslewake
·4 anni fa·discuss
Example of this 'jack-in-the-box' effect:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SgqmGdvxwEs
tusslewake
·4 anni fa·discuss
I'm thinking more of an institutional solution, like if a research library or archive wanted to preserve the above article, with all of the original interactivity, for a viewer 20+ years from now, is there any kind of consensus on how to go about that?
tusslewake
·5 anni fa·discuss
As far as I can tell through a few searches, their record of 64 days, 22 hours, and 19 minutes of continuous flying is still unbeaten:

https://disciplesofflight.com/flight-endurance/
tusslewake
·5 anni fa·discuss
Have used Octal for over two years--been mostly happy with it.

* High-quality reading experience. Appends the title and other helpful info to the message if you want to share something, and provides easy options to share the HN discussion or the original article. The UI also prioritizes reading the discussion first which, let's be honest, many of on HN are known to do. ;)

* It mostly stays in sync with the front page of HN (and you can keep scrolling down, making it easier to read stuff that has fallen off the front page but is still valuable).

* The search function finds what I want about 80% of the time.

* You can log in with your HN account and see account stats, I sometimes see issues with the account stats (recent submissions, karma, etc.) staying up-to-date, but that's not a big deal to me.
tusslewake
·5 anni fa·discuss
https://archive.md/S2V93
tusslewake
·5 anni fa·discuss
According to the Wiley website:

"E-books offered from Wiley.com are delivered on the VitalSource platform. To download and read them, users must install the VitalSource Bookshelf Software."

So no epub, you have to read it through some other third-party software.
tusslewake
·5 anni fa·discuss
Could ask the similar questions about police sirens while the car is traveling at high speeds. When I watch a police cruiser shoot down a residential street crowded with cars and pedestrians 60-70 miles per hour (or faster), running its lights and sirens at full blast, I often ask myself if the immediate risk of hitting someone is worth whatever advantage of time they achieve by arriving at the scene 2-3 minutes sooner.

A few times, I've seen police or ambulances race up to a building where they've been called, then get out and loiter while waiting for something else--immediately burning off whatever time they'd saved by speeding and running their lights.
tusslewake
·5 anni fa·discuss
https://archive.md/Gt0Iq
tusslewake
·5 anni fa·discuss
This is a wonderful podcast--thorough and incredibly well-researched by a PhD astronomer. If you care about the history of astronomy it's definitely worth your attention.
tusslewake
·5 anni fa·discuss
I read the book about 2/3 through, then felt I'd gotten the idea. I would second a lot of these criticisms of the author's specific understanding of digital ad markets.

My broader problem with the book was that it seemed to use up most of its space rooting around for a good formulation of the comparison contained in the title: that digital ad markets offer an opaque and sometimes fraudulent form of value, in much the same way as the real estate market hit by the 2008-2009 mortgage security crisis.

It was almost as if the author wasn't fully convinced of his own analogy, like he needed to keep looping back to it to add a few more points to really nail it down. All the while, what the reader cares about is why this analogy is important, not that it can be made!

The book could have been much more effective on these counts, I think, if it had been shorter and better edited.