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initramfs

431 karmajoined 5 lat temu

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Our New American Kei Truck

youtube.com
3 points·by initramfs·6 dni temu·2 comments

Google used its Android phone network's accelerometers as mini-seismometers

substack.com
2 points·by initramfs·8 dni temu·3 comments

Delivery Optimization for Browser and Software Updates to Minimize Bandwidth

inavoyage.blogspot.com
1 points·by initramfs·9 dni temu·0 comments

Where Wizards Stay Up Late – A Book Review (2024)

neilobrien.co.uk
3 points·by initramfs·27 dni temu·0 comments

1KB is all u need

j0e.uk
17 points·by initramfs·30 dni temu·2 comments

Steve Jobs in Exile is a fine profile of Jobs' years at NeXT

arstechnica.com
8 points·by initramfs·30 dni temu·4 comments

I'm building a parallel internet, and it's called The Thinnernet

inavoyage.blogspot.com
115 points·by initramfs·w zeszłym miesiącu·137 comments

Things to lighten dependency on web apps

inavoyage.blogspot.com
1 points·by initramfs·w zeszłym miesiącu·0 comments

The Sierpiński triangle ideal of Internet bandwidth for applications

inavoyage.blogspot.com
3 points·by initramfs·w zeszłym miesiącu·0 comments

Sil Val was built on public money-now it's fighting California's billionaire tax

morningstar.com
3 points·by initramfs·w zeszłym miesiącu·0 comments

How about new Java based phone apps?

inavoyage.blogspot.com
5 points·by initramfs·w zeszłym miesiącu·0 comments

Electric Motorcycles Don't Have to Be Security Nightmares, but This One Was

hackaday.com
3 points·by initramfs·4 miesiące temu·1 comments

UK Cryptography Developer claims IP to protect UK National Security was stolen

lists.libre-soc.org
8 points·by initramfs·4 miesiące temu·3 comments

[untitled]

1 points·by initramfs·5 miesięcy temu·0 comments

Upbeat moves from sensor tech to MCU to 'secret weapon' compute-in-memory

fiercesensors.com
1 points·by initramfs·8 miesięcy temu·0 comments

The Next Big Thing

semiengineering.com
3 points·by initramfs·8 miesięcy temu·1 comments

DSL in as little RAM as possible (with GUI) [video]

youtube.com
3 points·by initramfs·9 miesięcy temu·0 comments

comments

initramfs
·6 dni temu·discuss
Open Source Hardware Truck with CERN license, made in Detroit.

https://github.com/ThatDetroitAndy/mutiny

https://mutiny.fm
initramfs
·8 dni temu·discuss
Haha, initially I didn't realize it was a reference, but I remember that scene.

In theory for something like this, the earthquake alert data could be collected without anyone even reviewing it, thus this would be anonymized data and since the alert would go out quickly, a person reviewing it wouldn't necessarily be useful.

That said, it's very possible that personalized data could be reviewed later on (but much of the phone is designed to do that too- like how Amazon was able to recover deleted or unused Ring Camera video from people who were not even subscribed to it.
initramfs
·8 dni temu·discuss
Yeah, I used the E51 and E63
initramfs
·8 dni temu·discuss
Interesting. It hadn't occurred to me that The Matrix would become more ubiquitous, but it seems there are plenty of mechanisms from avoiding that. People read novels 200 years ago, and i imagine that was a bit of blue pilling.
initramfs
·8 dni temu·discuss
Hard to say. In 2007-2011, during the time of that study, I was using Nokia Symbian phones.
initramfs
·8 dni temu·discuss
The funny thing is that there was a study or an article suggesting Apple users got more sex than non Apple users.
initramfs
·8 dni temu·discuss
Yeah, I actually use a cell phone mount for navigation since my car doesn't have one. It's far from ideal, and I think more cars should have an easier and more secure way to attach/clamp a phone/tablet rather than require the driver to use their infotainment system, Although that can sometimes be fine. Having a flimsy car mount can be worse/more dangerous than a limited or poorly updated in-car navigation system. https://github.com/hatonthecat/Open-Source-Car/blob/main/ssr...
initramfs
·8 dni temu·discuss
see my response to danielheath.
initramfs
·8 dni temu·discuss
A slow one? Me too.
initramfs
·8 dni temu·discuss
Often times the children of such migrants adapt pretty well. I think the term is more euphemistic and neutral than derogatory. It's more like a category that's existed for centuries (but gets more stigma now) because some the older generations who have been in the U.S. for a few decades now look down on those "fresh off the boat," the same way those before them did to them. Irish fled the Potato Famine in the 1850s- they were economic migrants too.

I never really thought of it as a subset of immigrants who move to get rich but not adapt. Lisa Su, Satya Nadella, Sundar Pichai and Jensen Huang are also economic migrants. Just because they adapted/assimilated more than others doesn't make them _not_ economic migrants.
initramfs
·8 dni temu·discuss
I've noticed a similar thing when buying products online. Overseas sellers from Asia will package their product as "Designed in Germany" or include a red cross to indicate Swiss design, but may not actually be designed or manufactured in Switzerland. Nice packaging though :)
initramfs
·8 dni temu·discuss
I'm guessing you saw this SNL sketch? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V5DeDLI8_IM
initramfs
·8 dni temu·discuss
The fact that some in Switzerland wanted to cap population at 10 million says a lot about their free market. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/jun/14/switzerland-re...

Fortunately, the referendum failed. I mean, sure it's nice to have a small population, but I think it's also important to try to improve economic migration everywhere.

I actually live in a rural area in the U.S, and was surprised to see that I now have a 2-3 fiber offerings. A few years ago there was just one fiber company, but a utility company helped roll it out and I currently use it on a 100Mbps symmetrical plan (for what I use, it's more than enough).
initramfs
·8 dni temu·discuss
Why would Switzerland want Starlink when they can get 25Gbps fiber?
initramfs
·8 dni temu·discuss
"You can read Wassym’s full answer at the episode link, but here’s the part that stuck out to me:

The challenge with screen mirroring solutions is that they take over every single pixel in the car, and that’s not the way we see ourselves interacting with our users."

I kept reading past this part thinking I didn't misread the title, because as he explained, a mirroring solution that takes up every pixel could potentially be addictive, and it made sense that he didn't want the UX to fundamentally change when people drive Rivian's cars. And for that, kudos.

But now I realize your case is that CarPlay is additive. Ok, great! I do wish I could use Android on my car, which is newer than your 2017 one but only features Bluetooth, music and Phone, pairing, rather than a full OS mirror.

Do I wish it had more? Yes. But am I less distracted on the road? Yes. So I would buy a Rivian.
initramfs
·8 dni temu·discuss
https://www.meilisearch.com/docs/resources/internals/storage
initramfs
·12 dni temu·discuss
Very interesting. I am guessing the company didn't offer refunds if the receiving computer wasn't able to process the results, unless the issue was on the service...
initramfs
·12 dni temu·discuss
"The Carnival in Venice was first documented in 1296, with a proclamation by the Venetian Senate announcing a public festival the day before the start of Lent. Unquestionably one of the most well-known Carnival festivities in the world, the Carnival of Venice is rife with mystery, adventure, and conspiracy. The day served to break down barriers between people of different economic standings and religious beliefs. During the Renaissance, masked comic performers performed in Venice's piazzas."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnival_in_Italy#Venice

"The tradition of wearing masks seems to stem from the 13th century. During the ages the Venetians disguised themselves with mask whenever they thought necessary. It allowed them to escape from the rigid rules of the class hierarchy. All classes could mingle, men could be women, women could be men. It also led to unwanted behaviour, from throwing eggs filled with ink to all imaginable kinds of vulgarities. Masks made people unrecognisable, so they could not be prosecuted.

Near the end of the Republic, the right to wear masks in daily life was severely restricted. By the 18th century, it was limited to three months starting at December 26 and ending on the last day of Carnival, Shrove Tuesday. Masks were also used in ceremonies, eg. when ambassadors arrived and at the five ritual grand banquets offered each year to Venetian dignitaries by the doge. This resembles the Masquerade Balls during Carnival nowadays. Venetian noblemen and noblewomen wore a costume called a bautta consisting of a white mask (volto), a tricorn hat (tricorno), a hood worn under the hat (zendale) and a tabarro, a loose-fitting cloak. There were subtle differences between noble and non-noble (cittadini or popolani), and the popolani were known to wear more colorful, fun masks to festivities like the bull runs."

https://www.carnival-in-venice.eu/venetian-carnival-masks.ht...
initramfs
·12 dni temu·discuss
Except no one was buying 1 Trillion $ for a GB of RAM in 1960. Even Professor Frink would agree:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ykxMqtuM6Ko
initramfs
·13 dni temu·discuss
I get that, but let me give you a typical example. Your tax software as a box where it asks you to enter your income. It automatically estimates how much your tax refund as soon as you type in one field, even though it is just the first page. It updates automatically, and changes often whenever you add more deductible things (and non-deductible things).

If they are curious, they can type in three different incomes, even if they aren't planning on submitting the tax form with the wrong amounts. So if their income is $59,000 and their tax bracket is say, 15% for that, instead of say, 24% for 60,000-the next end of that bracket- e.g. $75k or $95k) they might get a much smaller tax return if they type $60,000. But then if they earned a little more, like $61,000, they could type in that and see what their return is, along with the rate.

If it is a gradient with smooth progression for each dollar increase, then they can immediately see how much more they are paying in taxes from 15% to 20%. But in reality, in a smooth/gradient-based progressive tax increase, those amounts would be centered in the middle of those brackets (like 15% would right in the the center between $35,000 and $59,999, or $48,500, and the $59,000 income would be closer to 19.9% and the $61,000 income might be $20.1%.

It wouldn't be considered fraud if they are just determining what they would pay if they earned a little bit more. In fact, if they just discovered an invoice check they received from self-employment, and forgot to report it, they might have to type in different amounts, if they didn't report the right amount the first time. Everyone would pay the same tax rates at each income level (with $1000 intervals, or even $1 intervals.

The system could still be transparent because it can show a chart of the tax rates for each $1,000 increase, even if the tax brackets only provides an estimate for each bracket. I do agree some people can't read charts very well, but if they included 100 thin bars for taxable rates under $100,000, people would be able to see the estimated percentage that they would be paying. It might be 15%, 15.5%, 16%, 16.5%, or 17%, and so on for $48,500. $49,000, $49500, $50,000, and so on, respectively.

The idea with this is that it would disincentivize people from misreporting because if they report earning $500 less, they aren't saving much more money (not to mention illegally)- their tax rate might be 0.1% less, and on a $49500 income that might only be $250 less in taxes over reporting $50000. The risk of getting caught is not to going worth it if this method is in place. (Actually not in any case, but at least they can see it's not going to be a huge decrease in taxable income by reporting a little less, so the only way they can attempt to pay less is by reporting a lot less, and the penalties for that would be larger)