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jasode

34,527 karmajoined 12 yıl önce

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jasode
·evvelsi gün·discuss
>While focused on him individually I don't think they are very personal

As an example, the following fragment is extremely personal:

>For example, he could have easily achieved a solid living via crowdfunding, even for San Francisco standards. But having graduated from the Thiel Fellowship school of thought rather than university, he was essentially groomed from a young age into uncritically embracing the Silicon Valley mindset, and he took venture capital.

For readers who are genuinely oblivious as to why the above comes across as criticism of the person instead of the Zig/Rust code:

- it's condescending because it portrays Andrew Kelly as the wise enlightened one who didn't take VC money while Jarred was the unenlightened one "groomed" into the SV VC world.

- those sentences explain more about Andrew's opinion of Jarred, rather than dissecting actual code fragments of Zig/Rust.

It's ok to personally agree that Thiel/VC/Jarred/capitalism are all wrong but you still should be able to recognize when a paragraph is making criticisms of a person. Aligning with Andrew's values shouldn't make one blind to it.
jasode
·23 gün önce·discuss
The online version is only for filing one return.

Desktop installed version can file multiple returns so the overall cost is lower.

https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/...
jasode
·23 gün önce·discuss
The gp you replied to mentioned "realtors" because this thread's article domain is: realtor.com
jasode
·25 gün önce·discuss
>I don't understand why HN seems so concerned about nailing down its "value proposition".

You're getting sidetracked because of the particular phrase "value proposition" but a lot of people just use it as a stock meme to simply understand something even without any commercial product perspective.

You can read through this entire thread where people are having a hard time wrapping their head around what _it_ _is_ because the blog article doesn't explain it well.

The following various stock phrases use different words but are basically asking the same thing:

- "This is the solution to what problem?"

- "How's this different from Tailscale/Wireguard/QUIC/etc?"

- "What is the raison d'être ?"

- "ELI5?"

- "What's the value proposition?"

- "Why should I care about this?"

- "What's the use case for this?"

- "What's the motivation / rationale for this?"

- "What does this do?"


And then different commenters try different explanations and hopefully one will finally click for readers.
jasode
·26 gün önce·discuss
>Running Windows 10 Enterprise IoT LTSC [...] have yet to encounter any issues.

It depends on the type of software a user runs. I installed Windows 10 LTSC on a friend's computer last year thinking she could run it for at least 5 more years and just ignore the newer Windows 11/12/whatever.

But she needed Intuit TurboTax 2025 and it requires Windows 11 and it's a hard requirement. The installer aborts on Windows 10. It's not a soft requirement like Adobe where they only support Windows 11 but their installer still runs on Windows 10. Autodesk Fusion 360 is another example that requires Windows 11.

I'm guessing if there's a future Windows 12, Intuit TurboTax will be aggressive about making it a requirement that forces the issue even though nobody wants to upgrade to it.
jasode
·27 gün önce·discuss
>pg is or was the owner of a very influential venture capital fund, that created projects such as Uber

Uber was not a YCombinator company. For some unexplained reason, many mistakenly think it was a YC startup but it's not correct.

(The gp's comment is an example of how chatbots hallucinate because they train on the text of people unintentionally hallucinating.)
jasode
·29 gün önce·discuss
The gp isn't talking about spam using "secure message" as bait to open unwanted email.

Instead, legitimate companies like banks, healthcare, etc tell users to click on a url link to their "Secure Message Center" to read or submit some critical information. It's often the only way to get the info the users need.

E.g. if I open a payment dispute with the bank, the workflow they use is the Secure Message area. I can't just use my normal email client and upload some pdf attachments. Instead, I have to log into my bank website, navigate to their Secure Message area, and then upload the docs there to submit the claim. They also don't send followup status or final resolution in an email. Instead, you log back into the Secure Message area to read the case resolution. Similar for insurance claims.

Similar situation for asking a medical imaging center for some mammograms. They will not send those as PDF or JPG attachments directly to your email address. Instead, you log into a secure message area on a healthcare website and download it from there.
jasode
·geçen ay·discuss
>With all the hate Ticketmaster has gotten [...], I'm surprised Ticketmaster still has a hold of pretty much the entire market. How are they doing this?

This question is a common mystery because you're using the perspective of the fans. E.g. "I hate Tickemaster ridiculous fees because it's price gouging, etc"

But the mystery of Ticketmaster being dominant is solved once you understand it from the perspective of the venues, promoters, and the artists. They are the true customers of Ticketaster. Ticketmaster's various "convenience fees, surcharges, etc" are just creative financial tricks to funnel more money back to venues+promoters+artists but still keep the ticket's face price artificially lower.

The alternative arrangement would be the ticket's face price being much higher to reflect the "true market price" but that means the artists would be the ones perceived as price gouging. Instead, just charge the higher price via convenience fees and let Ticketmaster take the public relations hit. The psychological manipulation of fans is working exactly as designed.

When the fans wish that there was another true competitor to Ticketmaster, what they're saying is they want "a service that charges less money". But that idea conflicts with the venues/promoters/artists that want to charge more money.

Therefore, if you really want to disrupt Ticketmaster, you need to charge even higher fees and more expensive ticket prices so that the greedy venues & artists will get more money from you and thus choose your service over Ticketmaster. I don't think that's the type of competitive disruption fans have in mind.

And the common cited reasons of vertical integration of LiveNation and owning the venues doesn't explain Ticketmaster's advantage. They were already dominant in the 1980s and 1990s before LiveNation acquired venues. Taylor Swift's tour promotor was AEG (not LiveNation) and she played at many stadiums owned by the cities (not owned by LiveNation) and she still chose Ticketmaster to be the selling agent for those locations. One of the reasons is she negotiated 110% of ticket's face price from Ticketmaster. How is extracting that type of money even mathematically even possible?!? The add-on "convenience fees".

Also see: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drip_pricing
jasode
·geçen ay·discuss
>We need to establish measures of accountability for data holders. Not securing customer data appropriately needs to be persecutable, and the affected parties need to be given a right for compensation.

The ultimate entity that could hold businesses accountable is the government but the government itself is careless with citizens' private data.

I underwent a government required background check to get a security clearance and my data was stolen: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2015_Office_of_Personnel_Manag...

My "compensation" for my data being leaked was 1 year of free credit monitoring. But obviously, criminals interested in identity theft will continue their attacks after 1 year.

As far as persecution/prosecution, I suppose Katherine Archuleta, the director of OPM, and the CIO, Donna Seymour ... could have been put in prison as punishment instead of just resigning. I don't think that would change anything. There will still be future scenarios where governments want more collection of private data. Flock cameras, TSA airport scans, internet access age-verification face scans, etc.
jasode
·geçen ay·discuss
>, SQL teaches you [...] Without any wrapper masking low-level logic.

I understand the point you're trying to make, and yes, it does seem like SQL is "low-level" from the perspective a wrapper like ORMs or a GUI db browser tool with menus for filtering data.

But it's also worth remembering that SQL itself is a high-level wrapper that hides the lower-level C/C++ code of the db engine that has the loops that iterate through b-trees, 8k data pages, memory blocks of the buffer cache, etc.

And C/C++ itself is a high-level wrapper that hides the logic in lower-level Linux o/s system calls that manages RAM and disk i/o.

And Linux itself is a high-level wrapper that hides low-level device drivers like SATA/SSD memory-mapped IO ... and so on and so on.

Depending on the type of app, you can ignore all the lower levels and just work at the abstraction level of higher-level wrappers.
jasode
·geçen ay·discuss
Raymond Chen of Microsoft explained why they go through the effort of coding a lot of special-case compatibility shims for other's misbehaving apps. It's to remove obstacles that prevent customers from upgrading Windows.

(The urls from microsoft.com load very slowly for some reason so may have to use Wayback Machine instead.)

https://devblogs.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/20050824-11/?p=34...

https://devblogs.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/20031224-00/?p=41...

https://web.archive.org/web/20190315130516/https://devblogs....

https://web.archive.org/web/20190315121601/https://devblogs....
jasode
·geçen ay·discuss
The pension plans for many government employees still exist. CalPERS (California Public Employees' Retirement System), Illinois Teachers Pension, etc. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_largest_pension_scheme...)

It's the corporate businesses that have gotten rid of pensions in favor of 401k plans.
jasode
·2 ay önce·discuss
>3rd party is dumb and should never ever have been a thing. Before two parties had the secret (or something related to it) and now three parties have it and that's objectively worse

There seems to be a misunderstanding of how typical cloud password vaults work. The 3rd parties like Bitwarden, 1Password, Apple iCloud Keychain, etc don't have access to the users' passwords. The scheme is based on Zero-Knowledge End-2-End-Encryption. The 3rd-party cloud is just a mechanism to store an encrypted blob and sync them to various devices. The client devices (users' desktop, users' smartphone) are the only ones that can decrypt the passwords. There are still only 2 parties with knowledge of the actual passwords.

In contrast, the type of 3rd parties that do have knowledge/access to unencrypted plain text passwords would be Amazon storing users' wi-fi passwords, and Plaid storing users' bank account credentials & passwords. Gmail and MS Outlook.com would also be a 3rd party having a copy of users' passwords when they act as web clients to fetch email from other IMAP servers.

>, my dad and his printed out sheet of password next to his desk is still beating every company out there.

That doesn't work for users when they're not sitting at their desk and need passwords. Printing out a hardcopy sheet of passwords and carrying it the wallet or purse is a massive security risk.
jasode
·2 ay önce·discuss
The Veritasium video is good but their "newscast" style with constant back-and-forth cuts to talking heads can make the presentation a bit disjointed.

The more straightforward video of ASML EUV is from Branch Education: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B2482h_TNwg

Because that vid gives an overview of the whole machine, it gives context to what each scientist is talking about in the Veritasium interviews.
jasode
·3 ay önce·discuss
macOS/iOS Safari and Brave browsers have "Reader mode" . Chrome has a "Reading mode" but it's more cumbersome to use because it's buried in a side menu.

For desktop browsers, I also have a bookmarklet on the bookmarks bar with the following Javascript:

  javascript: document.querySelectorAll('p, td, tr, ul, ol').forEach(elem =>  {elem.style.color = '#000'})
It doesn't darken the text on every webpage but it does work on this thread's article. (The Javascript code can probably be enhanced with more HTML heuristics to work on more webpages.)
jasode
·3 ay önce·discuss
>"democratization" doesn't mean more people have access to it.

> I just don't like it and think it is relatively new usage and a change in the older meaning of the word.

People have been using "democratize" to describe "more accessible to the masses" for a long time. Here's an example from 106 years ago in 1920 :

https://www.google.com/books/edition/Soviet_Russia/qflaAAAAM...

And 40 years ago a 1986 article of "microchip democratizing computing" : https://www.google.com/books/edition/Procom_s_1986_1987_Dent...

The additional meanings of democratize to describe "more accessible" are also documented in Oxford and Merriam-Webster dictionaries:

https://www.encyclopedia.com/humanities/dictionaries-thesaur...

https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/democratic#:~:tex...
jasode
·3 ay önce·discuss
>Just use the Ask button on YouTube videos to summarize,

For anyone confused because they don't see the "Ask" button between the Share and Bookmark buttons...

It looks like you have to be signed-in to Youtube to see it. I always browse Youtube in incognito mode so I never saw the Ask button.

Another source of confusion is that some channels may not have it or some other unexplained reason: https://old.reddit.com/r/youtube/comments/1qaudqd/youtube_as...
jasode
·3 ay önce·discuss
>The rule is: If the bank, or paypal, or your landlord, or anyone else really emails you that you have to complete some information to your account or pay the latest bill or whatever, you GO TO THEIR WEBSITE and login normally.

Yes, that is a "best practice" and good internet hygiene is to never click on email and text message urls but the reason they like clicking on legitimate email urls is convenience and usability. A helpful email link directly lands them on the relevant website page to do whatever they need to do. That's because the email url has a long string query parameters (id, etc) that automatically navigates to the correct webpage.

On the other hand, to do it the "best practice" way, it requires clicking around a confusing website menus and drilling several layers deep to find whatever issue the email is talking about.

A helpful email url link bypasses the hassle of learning whatever flavor-of-the-month confusing UI the website designer happened to to use.

Hang around old people and watch over the shoulder how they use computers and you become sympathetic to how the make it work for them.

E.g. An order status email has a URL link of a UPS tracking number to monitor shipping status. But don't click on that! Instead, copy the 1Z... number to the buffer. Then open a web browser and type in the ups.com url. Then paste the number into the text box. Those copy&paste mechanics not too difficult on desktop (Ctrl+C Ctrl-V) but it is much more difficult on mobile phones (double taps or long press and hold).

That was a simple example. The more complicated one is email from health and medical companies with confusing websites. They'd rather just click on the email url.
jasode
·3 ay önce·discuss
>When you get an email from Apple—or, really, anyone telling you to complete a digital security measure—check the URL they’re trying to send you to. Apple Support lives on apple.com and getsupport.apple.com, nowhere else.

That advice is fine for the technically savvy but doesn't work for a lot of normal people who don't have the knowledge to mentally parse urls.

  https://getsupport.apple.com/customer?cvid=8c11bcc71f684b6ab405d4fa1e86c146
  https://getsupport.apple.com.phish.xyz/customer?cvid=8c11bcc71f684b6ab405d4fa1e86c146
People just pattern match on the substring "apple.com" because they don't understand that the DNS system works right-to-left. Therefore, the 2nd url looks just as "legitimate" as the first one.

I work with senior citizens and tried to explain how to parse the domain in the URL by looking for the first forward "/" after the "https://" and then scan backwards but they find that mental algorithm confusing and those instructions don't stick. (This is actually an area where some AI on phones/desktops could assist people decipher urls or mark them as suspicious.)

The other problem with that advice is people can't "whitelist" the legitimate domains to look for because they don't know ahead-of-time what they are. E.g.:

- An Amazon verification email will be sent from "[email protected]". It's intuitive to predict something coming from "@amazon.com" so a mental whitelist filter works in that case.

- However, State Farm Insurance legitimate login verification codes are actually sent from "[email protected]" instead of the expected "@statefarm.com"
jasode
·4 ay önce·discuss
>Why does everything have to make money? People like to built things as a hobby.

The gp asked a reasonable question. Your admonition about making money is misplaced because your assumption about it being a hobby is incorrect.

The website was developed by Flighty LLC. To answer the gp's question: Although the website itself doesn't have direct monetization, it acts as "inbound marketing" for the paid iOS app. Clicking on "Download Flighty" takes the user to the Apple App Store:

  In-App Purchases
  Week-to-Week Flighty Pro         $4.99
  Annual Savings Flighty Pro      $59.99
  Month-to-Month Flighty Pro       $9.99
  Annual Savings (Family Plan)   $119.00
  Lifetime Flighty Pro           $299.00
  Flexible Monthly (Family Plan)  $15.99
  Week-to-Week Flighty Pro         $4.99
  Week-to-Week Flighty Pro         $7.99
  Pro Family Lifetime            $449.00
  Annual Savings Flighty Pro      $59.99
The website's hyperlink url to the App Store page also has a tracking id so the company can attribute downloads/sales back to the webpage. This lets them see how well the "free website" is converting to paid customers. As a vehicle to generate sales leads, it seems to work very well. To wit... Wikipedia says the company has been in business for 7 years and it's been upvoted to the HN front page and we're discussing it. (The Flighty website is an example of the old saying, "The best advertising is free advertising.")

It's not just a $5/month VPS. Some cursory googling says Flighty gets data from the FlightAware Firehose api which costs a lot of money. The cost would exceed the financial resources of most people to make an equivalent free hobby website. (https://www.flightaware.com/commercial/firehose/documentatio...)