felxh's comments

felxh | 3 years ago | on: I disabled WiFi on the new Samsung fridge

As many have mentioned, microwaves are the ones I get the least. What is the urgency for opening the damn thing when it is done!?

For dishwashers, we now have one that just opens by itself when it is done (to dry) - no beeping or anything. Maybe a bit hyperbolic, but it was quite a life changer!

felxh | 6 years ago | on: Developers don't understand CORS

I think the advise in the article and various comments here won't work, for the simple reason that Safari does not allow ajax requests from non localhost origins to localhost. I suspect this is the real reason they used an image request.

felxh | 6 years ago | on: Libra, 2 Weeks In

You can link any of your bank cards to any of your accounts using the mobile app (change is instant AFAIK) You can even configure different pin codes per card, where each pin code corresponds to a different account

felxh | 6 years ago | on: HTML is the Web

That would mean that anything that responds to click events is a button. From your experience of using UIs, you can probably think of many more UI elements that respond to clicks and are not buttons

felxh | 6 years ago | on: EU must adopt ‘EU English’ as its official working language after Brexit (2017)

It is a bit paradoxical of course, since, as you pointed out, the British empire is the reason that the US speaks english. However, I would still argue that the US is really the reason English became widely spoken in Europe.

The British Empire dominated large parts of the world, but it never dominated continental Europe. English was not widely spoken or taught in Europe until the end of WW2, when American culture became highly influential (although the UK did have its part through pop music).

The final push for English came with the internet and thus again from the US, I think. In many European countries there is a big divide in terms of English proficiency between people who grew up in pre or post internet era.

felxh | 8 years ago | on: Life Exists in the Driest Desert on Earth. It Could Exist on Mars, Too

Aside from the point others have made that carbon based chemistry is a likely candidate for life, there is another factor I think:

We already know that carbon based can exist and we know what it looks like. Since our means for searching for life in the rest of the universe are still very limited, it is best to focus on what we know, instead of searching for a different form of life of which we

* don't know what it looks like

* don't know whether it can exist in the first place

felxh | 9 years ago | on: Engineering is the bottleneck in deep learning research

Anecdotally, my master thesis on natural language processing was supposed to consist of first reproducing the results of an influential paper (back then) and then hopefully improving upon it by extending the model used.

The paper made it seem like they had been using a standard PCFG parser (which circulated in the research community at the time) to achieve their results. It turned out they hadn't and instead had written a custom one and in fact their results were not reproducible using the standard parser.

What was meant to be a timesaver in terms of engineering (using a standard parser instead of writing your own) turned out to be a massive time sink. It also turned out that by using a custom parser they had unintentionally diverted from a vanilla PCFG (probabilistic context free grammar), or in other words, some implementation details had led to a departure from the assumed underlying theoretical model.

felxh | 9 years ago | on: Sierra PDF Problems Get Worse in 10.12.2

They must have changed their CMYC to RGB conversion algorithm as well. CMYC colors now look different in Preview compared to when rendered in Acrobat Reader or using Ghostscript

felxh | 11 years ago | on: Ask HN: Do you hate iTunes?

I find it works really well for listening to music in album format and getting more albums from the iTunes store. The store integration is well done and I love the (newish) UI that reacts to the colors of the album artwork. For listening to music that is not in album format and/or which you didn't purchase via iTunes and for any other tasks they have bolted on, such as device management, I find it not so great.

felxh | 11 years ago | on: The Irregular Verbs (2000)

Your comment seems irrelevant - the article never claimed that english has the most (or even a lot of) irregular verbs. If you have some linguistic insights regarding irregular verbs in Polish I would be curious to hear them (I really mean it)

felxh | 11 years ago | on: After 7 years of blogging in German, I am switching to English. Here is why

I think you are correct that english grammar simplified because of the intermix with different languages. For example during the viking conquest, many viking words were very similar to english except or their grammatical endings, so people dropped them.

On the other hand, I think the irregular spelling has more to do with English never undergoing a mayor spelling reform: many times, the spelling reflects an old pronunciation. From what I know, England always had a relatively lax and pluralistic approach compared to other European countries when it came to managing its language. For example in France you have the Académie française, which essentially has authority over the French language. There is no comparable thing for English, which is probably why such reforms never took place.

Also, correct me if I am wrong, but you seem to incorrectly assume that English (or at least English grammar) stems from Latin.

felxh | 11 years ago | on: The Case for Slow Programming

Zug does mean train but it comes from ziehen (to pull) as others mentioned. So I am not sure whether zügig comes from the original meaning or from 'train'. The english cognate for Zug/ziehen is tug btw (follows the common t -> z shift in german)
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