jammi
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3 years ago
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on: Uxn is a virtual machine with 32 instructions
Thanks, I converted it into a Tampermonkey userscript to use on all the sites.
// ==UserScript==
// @name Underline links
// @namespace http://tampermonkey.net/
// @version 0.1
// @description Underline all the links!
// @author mdaniel
// @match https://*/*
// @match http://*/*
// @grant none
// ==/UserScript==
(() => {
document.querySelectorAll('a[href]').forEach(it => it.style.textDecoration='underline');
})();
jammi
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6 years ago
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on: Mazda is purging touchscreens from its vehicles
> Are knobs and plastic moldings that expensive though?
Yeah, the molding for any typical single component is tens of thousands of dollars per iteration. A car has a lot of those components, so the fewer the better.
jammi
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6 years ago
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on: Entropic – A Federated Package Manager for JavaScript
The main issue with it is that it's too good and successful, therefore it's too easy to publish whatever crap as your library or its dependencies.
That's not really a fault in the tool managing installation and publishing the library, its dependencies or managing the repository, providing the auditing system, script runner frontend and the other things npm does.
You could similarly argue github is hot garbage, because there are so many crappy projects hosted on it.
jammi
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6 years ago
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on: Entropic – A Federated Package Manager for JavaScript
I don't believe yet another package manager is going to fix anything, more likely it'll take years to reach maturity, will be riddled with bugs until then, and have some serious fundamental issues on its own that will be revealed down the path,
if it ever gains popularity.
Don't fix it if it aint broke should be a motto for more developers. Settling for good enough prevents second system effects and retards immaturity in the form new "trendy" products that over-promise and under-deliver solutions.
Nothing is perfect, but replacing something from scratch because of some mostly irrelevant issues that would be better handled by improving the standard solution usually just causes more issues than it solves.
jammi
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7 years ago
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on: Apple Could Be Working with Goldman Sachs on a Credit Card
Probably worth it, since he got a MacBook Pro a year earlier than everyone else. For the rest of us, the MacBook Pros (started as the short-lived Core Duo models) weren't available until spring 2006. The Core 2 Duo models didn't exist until late 2006.
jammi
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7 years ago
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on: iPhones are allergic to helium
That’s just because rubber balloons are extremely porous, especially when stretched. They don’t hold other gases well either.
jammi
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7 years ago
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on: MacOS Marzipan
I feel like it's similar to the skeumorphism of the past coming back with a revenge.
jammi
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7 years ago
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on: Why “children,” not “childs”? (2016)
So how about the plurals of some words ending with "us", like fungus-fungi, but virus-viruses-not-virii and how about dingus-dingii-or-dinguses, doofus-doofii-or-doofuses and so forth?
jammi
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7 years ago
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on: Birds had to relearn flight after meteor wiped out dinosaurs
Chickens can perform short flights, but from my limited observations it seems like the stamina is the main limiting factor for them. They've however clearly evolved from fully flight-capable birds, but the now-extinct Moa however might have been a different story:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moa
jammi
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7 years ago
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on: Ditch the Batteries: Off-Grid Compressed Air Energy Storage
Not only does materials overall matter little, but Lithium is also super cheap compared to the other materials in the batteries. There's a lot more of Nickel in a Li-Ion battery and it's much more expensive per volume and weight as well.
The batteries would be called Nickel-Carbon or something like that rather than Lithium-anything, if they were named by the amounts or costs of materials in them.
jammi
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7 years ago
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on: Winds 2.0: It’s Time to Revive RSS
I'd also say a large part of its issue is lack of internal consistency of the format itself. Firstly there are the various official RSS versions, then there are all those Atom things and probably others as well, and then there's the thing about how you're supposed to render the things correctly. XML as the content format is also pretty much antiquated.
A modern format would no doubt have to be JSON- or YAML-based and have its human-readable content in plain text or markdown, so it'd have to be pretty much readable with a plain text http client, like curl.
So, just let RSS die the slow death it's been going through for good reasons and bring something consistent and straight-forward into its place. Something that you could easily generate and parse from any modern language without specific libraries.
Bringing RSS back is like trying to bring SOAP as a RPC system back; it just won't fly anymore no matter how much hot air you try to pump into it. We know better now and have better ways to do the things.
jammi
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7 years ago
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on: Finland's cities are havens for library lovers
The copyright compensation on electronic books is different from paper based ones. The super greedy licensing deals (where even available) is one of the things that hold back electronic books; they're simply much more expensive than paper-based ones. The Finnish libraries do have e-books, but they're not as common to loan as paper ones are, and not everything is available in e-book format.
jammi
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7 years ago
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on: Finland's cities are havens for library lovers
Seems like an article from a paper romanticist, and they aren't extinct yet. Anyhow, here in Finland the libraries are not just for paper-based information storage/dispersion, but common places for all kinds of public information/technology needs, like (3D) printing, copying or digitizing material into modern formats, and free guided computing needs for poor or old people. They're also public gathering places, including their conference rooms you can lend, which is also nice for startups without their own offices and such. In any case, they'll have uses far beyond the age of paper-based media, including uses we can't fathom yet.
jammi
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7 years ago
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on: Steve Jobs at MIT Sloan School of Management (1992) [video]
Of course, never said it's not. Are people reflecting from themselves, or what is this about?
jammi
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7 years ago
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on: Steve Jobs at MIT Sloan School of Management (1992) [video]
The problem is that the average salesperson is pretty ignorant, even about the probuct he's supposed to sell and the target audience to sell to. Encountering a great salesperson is a rare occurrence in life, encountering a more or less average one is very common.
jammi
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7 years ago
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on: The case for electric scooters
Oh right, the mobile app auto-corrected EU to Eau and didn't reply to the context I clicked in. So, any iOS apps to recommend? The "Hacker News" one apparently sucks for commenting.
jammi
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7 years ago
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on: The case for electric scooters
In EU countries they should be classified as light electric vehicle or something like that, along with things like skateboards, rollerblades and “hoverboards”. Hence, allowed basically wherever pedestrians are allowed, unlike the bigger and heavier mopeds and bicycles. At least this has been the case in Finland since the newest Eau directives of the sort were ratified.
jammi
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7 years ago
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on: Seaweed in Cow Feed Reduces Methane Emissions Almost Entirely
OTOH, aren't farts just unreleased burps that passed into the intestines.
jammi
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7 years ago
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on: List of screw drives
Experience first-hand or via experts who repair them daily, the former can be done by owning the same car or brand for a longer while and spotting the pattern.
Prefer makes that have excellent rust protection and models with relatively low stress configuration engines rather than high performance models. The two latter are usually mechanically the same or mostly the same, but the latter of them receive much larger stresses in use and hence tend to fail earlier.
If you intend to modify the car, prefer older ones, because they have lower regulations, but this depends on the legislative area you are in as well. For instance cars with OBD-II are too new for engine upgrades almost anywhere.
jammi
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7 years ago
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on: List of screw drives
Happens with the better ones as well, it's just a matter of setting the torque limiter of your screwdriver/coordless drill to match the job. Sometimes takes a few mistakes, but it's safer to start with a low setting and adjust up until you have the right torque for the screw.