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sneela

243 karmajoined 3 yıl önce
https://snee.la

Submissions

A primer on cloud seeding (2024)

theclimatebrink.com
1 points·by sneela·25 gün önce·1 comments

Vinyl succumbs to Loudness War: more than just collateral damage (2025)

magicvinyldigital.net
173 points·by sneela·geçen ay·261 comments

Tractor: Translating All C to Rust

darpa.mil
2 points·by sneela·5 ay önce·1 comments

Exposure Simulator

andersenimages.com
139 points·by sneela·5 ay önce·81 comments

GTIG AI Threat Tracker: Advances in Threat Actor Usage of AI Tools

cloud.google.com
1 points·by sneela·8 ay önce·0 comments

comments

sneela
·6 gün önce·discuss
The good ol' Ohnosecond:

> An "ohnosecond" is the second after one makes a terrible mistake, such as deleting the wrong file or sending a text message to the wrong person, where the person in question can do nothing but say "oh no". The term is believed to originate from Elizabeth Powell Crowe's 1993 novel, The Electronic Traveler.

Reminds me (and probably a lot of devs) of a time when I deployed something breaking to production many years ago :), of course I didn't know it would break production beforehand. Recently, I accidentally deleted my entire shell history which caused me quite a bit of slowdown for some time. I'm quite used to modifying complicated commands with Ctrl+R and fzf; the deletion of my shell was truly horrifying.

Tom Scott, as usual, has a great video about the onosecond (sic):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X6NJkWbM1xk
sneela
·25 gün önce·discuss
Also interesting is this interactive viewer of cloud seeding live in the US: https://chemtrail.app/, although this website seems to be vibe-coded and heavily against cloud seeding: "How can I help stop cloud seeding in my area?" from the FAQs.
sneela
·geçen ay·discuss
This is actually very, very interesting... and some what genius. In the past, I've felt the urge to buy _something_ for that dopamine hit, even if I didn't really need anything.

I've impulsed bought books before (most I do not regret) and some vinyl records (none I regret). I don't impulse buy food though (as the article discusses) - I regret ordering food most of the time as I feel unhealthy afterwards.

This concept may very much be in line what I need for other impulse purchases. Imagine a dopamine-hit amazon-clone which lets you browse, compare, and order the current obsession-of-the-week - saving your bank account in the long run. I may just try making this.
sneela
·geçen ay·discuss
Also covered by Tech Radar (2025) -- You need to be careful when buying new vinyl – the digital music loudness war can mean they sound worse than second-hand records: https://www.techradar.com/audio/turntables/you-need-to-be-ca...
sneela
·3 ay önce·discuss
Here's how it works in our group. The professor gives papers to the PhD students or PostDocs, who read the paper completely. I regularly 'sub-review', as it is called, meticulously looking for issues. I have heard that there are professors who review entire papers in 2-3 hours, since they have a lot (10+) of papers per conference to review without any compensation while they have their own research, teaching, and funding to juggle.

It's not a pretty system sometimes.

Edited to add: Conference's also require declaring that there was someone who sub-reviewed the paper. The professor / PI mentions the PhD student's name in the review form of the paper. Of course, the professor also double-checks all the sub-reviews
sneela
·3 ay önce·discuss
Which is why, I believe, their logo is a duck :D
sneela
·3 ay önce·discuss
Uhhh, I don't think Ente is Norwegian? Yeah, they have an office in Norway, but I remember them starting from India --- Ente means 'mine' in Malayalam, a language spoken in Kerala, South India.

https://only-eu.eu/en/categories/foto-backup/ente-photos/

Also, their LinkedIn page shows that their HQ is Dover, Delaware, USA: https://www.linkedin.com/company/ente-com/about/

https://www.crunchbase.com/organization/ente-technologies

Which is interesting.
sneela
·5 ay önce·discuss
At a talk right now (NDSS'26), the speaker says it's been made live yesterday: https://www.ll.mit.edu/r-d/projects/translating-all-c-rust-t...
sneela
·5 ay önce·discuss
And that's what exactly confused me :)

With my mnemonic, I say low *number = blur

I should have been more specific
sneela
·5 ay önce·discuss
I recently bought a film camera (Minolta X-700) and I wasted a whole roll because I inverted the aperture (i.e, 2 = sharp, 32 = blur)...

I'm interested to see how the roll turns out - gave it for development the other day, had a good laugh with the employees though.

I now have a mnemonic for it: Blor - a (somewhat) portmanteau of Blur and low. So low aperture = blur.

Edit for clarification: I mean low number (2 vs 32) = blur
sneela
·5 ay önce·discuss
> For just over five weeks, from February 7 to March 14, visitors will be allowed to climb the towering 20-foot scaffold inside the castle’s Sala delle Asse to view conservators at work on Leonardo’s mural, after which it will be sealed off again for another 18 months, making this limited public access a rare opportunity to see it up close mid-restoration.

From the last sentence - it's a chance to see it mid-restoration. But will it be publicly accessible after 18 months?
sneela
·6 ay önce·discuss
> If you want to look at the code, it's available on github.

Why not tvc-hub :P

Jokes aside, great write up!
sneela
·6 ay önce·discuss
But also

> violating the 24h promise on their own page

Their page reports: Vulnerability reports will always be responded to as fast as possible - usually within 24 hours.

That's not a promise. I agree regarding the sentiment: "Discord moved to a private, invite-only bounty"... and "refuse to hand over my ID".
sneela
·6 ay önce·discuss
Authors article:

How to Know if Someone is Invisible on Discord (WebSocket API Leak)

https://xmrcat.org/discord-invisibility-bypass
sneela
·6 ay önce·discuss
Ah, it initially appeared that the capital I and the lowercase L have identical-looking glyphs. But scrolling down, I see the ss02 and tnum features add noticeable glyphs. Looks like a nice typeface.
sneela
·6 ay önce·discuss
As much as I appreciate the tiny serif for lowercase L and numeral 1 to differentiate l I and 1, I am not the biggest fan of the capital I glyph without the horizontal serifs. It's my biggest design gripe with most sans-serif fonts as it makes it FRUSTRATINGLY difficult to differentiate when looking at words by themselves.

Is that lota or Iota? Is that iodestone or lodestone? Both real examples where I fumbled reading them -- once in front of a class :)

This is why my favorite sans-serif typeface has been (and will always be) IBM Plex Sans [1]. It's an open font [2]. I have all my laptops and desktops set to using the IBM Plex typefaces, including browser overrides. If only there were a way to do it system-wide on my Android phone...

[1]: https://www.ibm.com/plex/

[2]: https://github.com/IBM/plex/blob/master/LICENSE.txt

Preview: https://fonts.google.com/specimen/IBM+Plex+Sans?preview.text...
sneela
·9 ay önce·discuss
I agree with other comments that this research treads a fine, unethical line. Did the authors responsibly disclose this, as is often done in the security research community? I cannot find any mention of it in the paper. The researchers seem to be involved in security-related research (first author is doing a PhD, last author holds a PhD).

At least arxiv could have run the cleaner [1] before the print of this pre-print (lol). If there was no disclosure, then I think this pre-print becomes unethical to put up.

> leading to the identification of nearly 1,200 images containing sensitive metadata. The types of data represented vary significantly. While device information (e.g., the camera used) or software details (such as the exact version of Photoshop) may already raise concerns, in over 600 cases the metadata contained GPS coordinates, potentially revealing the precise location where a photo was taken. In some instances, this could expose a researcher’s home address (when tied to a profile picture) or the location of research facilities (when images capture experimental equipment)

Oof, that's not too great.

[1] https://github.com/google-research/arxiv-latex-cleaner