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lazyjeff

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Submissions

NIH plans to slash support for indirect research costs

statnews.com
13 points·by lazyjeff·w zeszłym roku·3 comments

The AirGradient DIY Air Quality Sensor

airgradient.com
2 points·by lazyjeff·2 lata temu·0 comments

US District Court dismiss lawsuit against OpenAI for removing copyright notices [pdf]

storage.courtlistener.com
6 points·by lazyjeff·2 lata temu·0 comments

Oura Ring 4

ouraring.com
53 points·by lazyjeff·2 lata temu·79 comments

The Rate of Return on Everything, 1870–2015 (2019)

academic.oup.com
190 points·by lazyjeff·2 lata temu·148 comments

How Should We Critique Research? (2019)

gwern.net
51 points·by lazyjeff·2 lata temu·10 comments

The Battle for Wesnoth 1.18: Draconic Invasions Update

wesnoth.org
33 points·by lazyjeff·2 lata temu·3 comments

Paint.net

getpaint.net
221 points·by lazyjeff·2 lata temu·107 comments

The Battle for Wesnoth 1.18: Draconic Invasions Update

wesnoth.org
3 points·by lazyjeff·2 lata temu·0 comments

Unmasking a Predator: Predatoryreports.org

blog.cabells.com
2 points·by lazyjeff·2 lata temu·0 comments

[untitled]

1 points·by lazyjeff·3 lata temu·0 comments

Behind the scenes: the struggle for each paper (2021)

jeffhuang.com
147 points·by lazyjeff·3 lata temu·44 comments

Best paper awards in computer science over the past 28 years (1996-2023)

jeffhuang.com
14 points·by lazyjeff·3 lata temu·4 comments

Best paper awards in computer science over the past 28 years (1996-2023)

jeffhuang.com
3 points·by lazyjeff·3 lata temu·2 comments

Programming Is Forgetting: Toward a New Hacker Ethic

opentranscripts.org
3 points·by lazyjeff·3 lata temu·0 comments

Programming Is Forgetting: Toward a New Hacker Ethic

opentranscripts.org
1 points·by lazyjeff·3 lata temu·0 comments

The disastrous voyage of the world's first cryptocurrency cruise ship (2021)

theguardian.com
2 points·by lazyjeff·3 lata temu·0 comments

The WVU Budget Crisis

wvufacts.wordpress.com
4 points·by lazyjeff·3 lata temu·1 comments

comments

lazyjeff
·3 lata temu·discuss
This is a listing of best paper awards across 32 computer science conferences, for papers chosen in that year to be the "best" by committees in those conferences meant to be the broadest conferences in each subfield.
lazyjeff
·3 lata temu·discuss
I use a single never-ending text file for this, because I'm tired of dealing with remembering formats or apps. I've written about it here: https://jeffhuang.com/productivity_text_file/
lazyjeff
·3 lata temu·discuss
I've already made such a tool, and it works for any browser on Windows, and all the data is local -- yours. https://irchiver.com/
lazyjeff
·3 lata temu·discuss
So I was thinking about how the web is not as permanent as it used to be. Between walled gardens, and dynamic content, it's hard to find things you saw. So I wanted a way to have a screenshot-based "archive.org" but for yourself, so that it works with non-public content too like a Facebook post or if it disappears like all the stuff on Google+.

Philosophically, I think almost everything we see and think about is in a web browser these days. Even private conversations with my friends, I often look up a few things about them. So I've been using irchiver myself to dogfood it, for almost 2 years now. And found it to be super useful already. For example, I've recovered important technical posts that someone deleted, paragraphs on text I lost when submitting a form that didn't save, or found a comic strip that I had at the tip of my tongue but got lost in google search.

And I think it's now possible because of strong+efficient screenshot compression and good OCR. There's an undocumented Win32 hack that lets you capture window content in a fast way (moreso that a typical BitBlt) so I used that to grab the images. And made a standard inverted index search engine for the content. Anyways, the webpage I put up for the project explains it as best as I can to a general audience [https://irchiver.com/].

In many ways, it's like the Rewind startup here. Except it just happens I did it for Windows, and they did it for MacOS and iPhone. And I care a lot about local storage of the original screenshots and text. Would love to hear others' thoughts.
lazyjeff
·3 lata temu·discuss
I've been working on a similar system for a while called irchiver [https://irchiver.com/] but what I wanted from the start is for everything to be local and plain formatted, i.e. stored as .txt and .webp to be most accessible.

Coincidentally, I've only been building for Windows, so different from the platforms supported by Rewind. If anyone wants to collaborate, I'd be very open to it.
lazyjeff
·3 lata temu·discuss
There's an open source project I was briefly involved in called SSVG [1] that renders the SVG as Canvas to speed it up drastically, especially on Chrome. It works as a simple one-line js drop in for many common visualization examples [2].

[1] https://ssvg.io/ [2] https://ssvg.io/examples
lazyjeff
·3 lata temu·discuss
Before Rewind.ai launched, I had made a counterpart for Windows, but just for web browsers: https://irchiver.com/

Completely local, no network traffic at all.
lazyjeff
·4 lata temu·discuss
I've had my ups and downs with peer review. I'm trying to collect stories of papers from ideation to publication, while also describing the struggle for my own papers.

I've written the backstories for 30 of my papers here: https://jeffhuang.com/struggle_for_each_paper/

Looking at my past experiences for all my papers, I can only conclude that the process is more nuanced than can be described in a tagline like "peer review is broken" or "publishing is random", so I'm interested in hearing everyone else's experiences too.