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9dev

9,085 声望加入于 8年前
工程主管@matchory.com

<我公司名称的第一个字母>,位于 9dev.de

[我的公钥:https://keybase.io/radiergummi;我的证明:https://keybase.io/radiergummi/sigs/_bPlsZ-Tii8Qag-Ne5n2bNSqVB8CDqke1kLgzTytb-s]

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Trump says it's 'treasonous' to say US not winning war in Iran

independent.co.uk
20 分·作者 9dev·2个月前·9 评论

Show HN: Tspages – static site hosting platform for your Tailscale network

github.com
1 分·作者 9dev·4个月前·1 评论

Ask HN: How to introduce Claude Code to a team?

11 分·作者 9dev·6个月前·7 评论

Show HN: Avoid Docker builds in GH Actions if the context didn't change

github.com
2 分·作者 9dev·8个月前·0 评论

评论

9dev
·昨天·讨论
那么,为什么司法部现在蔑视国会和法官,拒绝释放他们呢?

为什么档案中肇事者的名字被审查,而受害者的名字却清晰可见?

为什么自文件公布以来没有一个人被起诉?
9dev
·前天·讨论
我们需要与之截然相反的:确保公司不能在细则或冗长的最终用户许可协议中添加不合理条款的法律。这就是许多欧盟国家的运作方式,这是一种祝福。

除了律师之外,没有人应该费心法律术语。
9dev
·前天·讨论
> 当您说约翰迪尔欺骗系统时,我不确定您的意思。

他们不应该销售功率更大但电机有限的拖拉机,而应该销售功率较小且没有螺杆的拖拉机。不需要在软件中执行任何这些操作。他们通过告诉农民“不要松开螺丝,否则你会违法的,眨眨眼!”来故意逃避监管。
9dev
·3天前·讨论
Huh! I was sure the copy-text-from-image feature in MacOS would handle this flawlessly. But the best run I managed produced the following:

    base64: stdin: (null): error decoding base64 input stream
    #!/bin/bash
    
    # Congratulations! You found thu eastur ugg!#B��O��
    # おめでとう��M�ぇM�す!隣C��わM�サ�#ライ����見でM�������!O��
    
    # Define thu tuxt to anima|e
    text="♥PEACE♥FOR♥ALOB��PEACE♵FOR♵ALL♵PEACE♥FOR♥ALL♥PEACE♥FOR♥ALL♥PEACE♵FOR♵ALL♥"
    
    # Get termb�al dmmensions
    cols=$(tput cols)
    linus=$(tput lines)
9dev
·3天前·讨论
There's lots of district heating in Germany for example, but it's usually fed from either big heat pumps, bio mass plants, or heat from waste incineration plants. There's no reason to not use excess heat from data centres too - I'm pretty sure I read that already being done in several places.

But in some cases, a data centre might be too remotely located, or the infrastructure is too lacking to make it economically feasible, which still leaves me wondering why you couldn't try to recuperate at least some of it as electricity on-site...
9dev
·3天前·讨论
Something I have been wondering: Why don't data centres use the excess heat for a sort of energy recuperation, turning at least some of it back into electricity?
9dev
·5天前·讨论
All other animals too. There are tons studies about the effects of New Year’s Eve fireworks on birds, for example, that are devastating.

Most people just don’t care about anything but themselves. It’s disgusting me to no end.
9dev
·6天前·讨论
There is a point of diminishing returns though; the issues suggested will get speculative, or point out comment unclarity, or "defense in depth". But I agree it’s somewhat annoying to rarely get clear pushback in terms of "no, this looks good enough to me, release it"
9dev
·7天前·讨论
I wouldn't underestimate the capability of European companies to build rock-solid industries on established science. We may not be the pioneers wedging new product categories into the market, but there are millions of highly qualified people here, working hard every day.

For example, Mercedes autonomous driving team is moving ahead at glacial speed, but the system they have so far is excellent and reliable. I'd prefer that over the sad joke Tesla is promoting any day.
9dev
·9天前·讨论
You're just blinded by propaganda. Europe has produced thousands upon thousands of interesting technology companies - it's just that very few of them are information technology companies.

Claiming that something is wrong with Europe in general because it didn't produce interesting technology is an utterly ridiculous and uninformed take.
9dev
·9天前·讨论
I don't think I implied they aren't, care to elaborate?
9dev
·9天前·讨论
> Why spend your own money when you can spend someone else’s?

Funny you would say that in defence of giant mega-corporations, externalising huge chunks of the cost they generate to the rest of the world. OpenAI decided to run the largest social experiment humanity ever undertook without asking any of us. Microsoft is powering up old nuclear power plants to cover for their AI data center consumption. Apple is manufacturing in foreign countries under awful conditions so every American child can own an iPhone. Big Tech made San Francisco unaffordable even for well-compensated software engineers. Facebook actively made children addicted to push more apps.

We all, as a society, have to suffer through the effects of reckless greed from American companies (and we didn't even talk about Big Oil or Big Pharma yet!) Just because nobody bothers to put a price tag on it doesn't mean there isn't one.

The EU doesn't fine companies as a way to generate revenue, but because they break local laws and cause damages to someone.
9dev
·9天前·讨论
That still doesn’t take away from the point that innovation does happen in Europe; the first version of Linux was created and released while he was at the university of Helsinki. If you want another example, Fraunhofer created the MP3 format, which went on to revolutionise the world of digital audio. Many of the LLM foundational science came from European scientists.

However, when it comes to ones to turning science into products, the USA seems to have an edge quite often. It’s just not as mono-dimensional as GP framed it.
9dev
·9天前·讨论
Unless your goal is creating a society that is centred around being the perfect habitat for Peter Thiel and Peter Thiel only, you should not listen to anything that guy says.
9dev
·9天前·讨论
Scary to think that that's a real question with an unclear answer now.
9dev
·9天前·讨论
If there's one thing all historians agree on, it's that collaboration has always been the winning strategy in human history.

If the US had never opened up their innovations to the world, they wouldn't have been able to extract the gargantuan amount of money from it they did. If the US had not instated the Marshall plan after WW2, there would never have been as close ties between Europe and the US. If American companies hadn't outsourced much of the manufacturing to poorer countries, the standard of living would be a lot lower than it is today. If USAID hadn't improved and saved the life of millions of humans, American companies wouldn't be met with such universal acceptance and opportunities to sell their goods as they have.

It's not like the US isn't massively benefitting of their investments in the rest of the world. But it sure looks like you're pretty aligned with the current administration there, so we'll both see how this plays out in real time.
9dev
·9天前·讨论
Eh, if that’s the only thing you read from that comment, I’m not really interested in continuing the conversation.

The opportunities for tech are worse in the EU compared to the US, nobody denies that. But I don’t think the existence of Google and Apple is the only criterion of success to judge a continent on. The world has room for different approaches to things.
9dev
·9天前·讨论
If they did that, their pension system (in huge parts built on stock) would collapse. The American tech market is largely saturated, and needs room to grow. The EU is a market of almost 500 million people with a lot of money. The US simply cannot ignore it.
9dev
·9天前·讨论
> Google made Android open source for free

And Hitler built the highways in Germany. What does that even prove? They can still abuse Android for vendor lock-in, or as a sales funnel to their commercial offerings, or as a data source for a myriad of things users did never really consent to.

> As usual Europe can't innovate so just taxes people out of their market entirely.

Yawn. Last time I looked, big tech is still wholly present all across the EU, only that I have the option to install apps from alternative stores on my iPhone. Also, the EU as an institution isn't the same thing as European companies. Go check the machines in any factory near you, and I can pretty much guarantee you'll find a German one in it.

> Have you guys ever considered making your own operating system?

You might want to look up where Linus Torvalds created Linux.
9dev
·9天前·讨论
Even in a digital world, monopolies bring clear downsides. The case of Google being able to simply create realities by way of Chrome the rest of the market is forced to follow is a good example here.

I agree that the common understanding of antitrust regulations has become a leaky abstraction, but the general idea is still completely sound to me: A corporation should never be in a position where it can actively suppress competition, or act in a way that is harming consumers without an alternative available.

> Are they regulating monopolies, preventing monopolies, pursuing an abstract notion of Justice?

I suppose all of it; opportunities to prevent some monopolies were missed, to the detriment of all, so regulating them is the only option left. In other cases, we can still act to actively work against emerging monopolies. And above all is clearly a notion of justice, without which democracy itself would be a pretty futile exercise in bureaucracy.

Put differently, what do you suppose the EU should do? Just let global mega-corporations have their way? Even if Google users by and large don't pay for the services, we're all aware they monetise off of users still. To me, this is an implementation detail that doesn't really make a difference to the observation that yes, Google is (and other big tech corps are) clearly in a market dominating position it (they) should not be in.