HackerLangs
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

stevage

6,573 karmajoined 14 lat temu

Submissions

Lichess and Take Take Take Sign Cooperation Agreement

lichess.org
195 points·by stevage·3 miesiące temu·60 comments

[untitled]

1 points·by stevage·3 miesiące temu·0 comments

StackOverflow's questions per day have fallen 99%

meta.stackoverflow.com
37 points·by stevage·4 miesiące temu·21 comments

Ask HN: Freelancers, are you being out-competed by AI?

2 points·by stevage·6 miesięcy temu·1 comments

Ask HN: Where did the tech people on Twitter go?

12 points·by stevage·8 miesięcy temu·23 comments

Beware of MuseScore.com's Deceptive Practices: How to Get Refund

old.reddit.com
3 points·by stevage·8 miesięcy temu·0 comments

A 'Death Train' Is Haunting South Florida

theatlantic.com
2 points·by stevage·9 miesięcy temu·2 comments

Cough sound artifact on Musesounds Alto Sax Staccato concert E4 note

github.com
3 points·by stevage·10 miesięcy temu·0 comments

comments

stevage
·5 godzin temu·discuss
>It can see WiFi through walls

I don't understand what this is trying to say. Everyone who has ever used wi-fi knows that it works through walls. You try to connect to a wi-fi in an apartment, and there are dozens of other networks showing up.

So this headline just seems...meaningless?
stevage
·4 dni temu·discuss
> Good map data is kinda useless if it can't be retrieved, and trying to work around it by panning around and manually saving a hundred or so favorites really kinda sucks.

There are different ways of using maps. A lot of the stuff I do with mapping apps I really do just pan and zoom, and that works for me.
stevage
·4 dni temu·discuss
True, although I do also have a lot of problems with Google Maps. Particularly, when I search for a small town 100km away, and instead it brings up a medium sized down in the USA. Or even more ridiculous cases, like I slightly got the name of a business wrong, so it went with a different business in the USA.

Yeah, it really loves to suggest US options.
stevage
·4 dni temu·discuss
> Our business today is not healthy. We are operating at margins that are 3-10x lower than comparable platform and publishing businesses. We

Oof. We're making money, but we want to make more. So we're firing people.
stevage
·5 dni temu·discuss
Interesting post. I was a bit confused why they were seeking to build rapport with their users. These people pay a few bucks a month. What's the upside to a close, cosy relationship?

The answer might often be to understand the users' needs better in order to design for it. But OP seems to have a clear idea of how the app should work already. So...unclear.
stevage
·5 dni temu·discuss
Oh, good, glad that's solved then.
stevage
·5 dni temu·discuss
You literally just explained the value.
stevage
·5 dni temu·discuss
It's slightly funny that the post says firmly that they aren't doing any form of real time engagement with the community anymore, then ends by announcing an AMA date and time.
stevage
·6 dni temu·discuss
> And in all cases, if you produce the fuel using renewables then the CO2 output is trivially brought near zero.

But...they don't.
stevage
·7 dni temu·discuss
These are the weirdest criticisms. It seems totally normal to me for engineers to be bad at explaining their project to a lay audience. Whereas that's the kind of thing that LLMs are great at.
stevage
·7 dni temu·discuss
How do they know Starlink isn't going to jack the prices up?
stevage
·8 dni temu·discuss
Somehow this almost inspired me to write some fiction just for the sole purpose of including some real howlers of this kind, that the average reader wouldn't notice. I wonder how many you could squeeze into one scene.
stevage
·10 dni temu·discuss
>The modem sang its negotiation out loud, and that shriek was two machines arguing about how to speak to each other, and after enough times you could hear when the argument was going south and the call was about to drop. You set little jumpers on drives with your fingernail. You knew which interrupt your sound card answered to, because if you guessed wrong it answered to nothing. The machine was made of edges and you cut yourself on them, and that is how you found out where they were.

Wow. I had literally all of these experiences. I remember how you used to have to remember the Sound Blaster interrupt settings and pass them to any game that used it. And I'd completely forgotten about IDE jumpers, but yep - how fiddly it was when you wanted to put 4 hard drives in the same computer, figure out which were slaves and masters, etc etc.
stevage
·11 dni temu·discuss
> Homo sapiens have been around for 200,000 years. Until the industrial revolution, we lived outside. How did we get through the Neolithic Era without sunscreen? Actually, perfectly well. What’s counterintuitive is that dermatologists run around saying, ‘Don’t go outside, you might die.’”

At least in Australia a big difference is that there is a hole in the ozone layer that stone age people did not have. Sun exposure is much more harmful now.
stevage
·12 dni temu·discuss
"bonus words" are often obscure or embarrassing in some way, so you're not required to find them to win
stevage
·14 dni temu·discuss
Interesting that they don't seem to have had much cultural impact. I've never heard of these, never seen them in war films. You don't hear songs wistfully using a wartime ocarina or referring to them.
stevage
·15 dni temu·discuss
That's a big change!
stevage
·16 dni temu·discuss
Yeah they've been around for ages and surprisingly effective at what they do. Good on 'em.
stevage
·17 dni temu·discuss
Good point. "CLI for Google Workspace" would be less ambiguous.
stevage
·17 dni temu·discuss
Google could definitely be harmed by an unofficial product release that gets lots of users but doesn't have any kind of official support behind it, and hence could make those users pissed off in the future.