Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | anonsivalley652's commentslogin

Does MSFT still use smartcards everywhere?


Yep. They're trying hard to phase them out through Windows Hello but you still need smart cards to at least bootstrap the Hello registration process, or for some specialized domains of trust that Hello isn't integrated into.


Nope


People can't see who's contagious in the early stages, so they're gambling with their lives by not taking proactive precautions before it's a widespread problem.

COVID-19/SARS-cov-2 is something to take seriously for several reasons:

- To reiterate an important point: "Healthy" infected people go around unwittingly spreading it for several days to a week, so you have no idea who's really sick. And you have no idea how many people in public actually have it at any one time. It's another reason this pathogen is so successful.

- It's a terrible flu for most.

- It can quickly turn life-threatening. A number of bodies were discovered in Wuhan of people trying to walk or drive themselves to the hospital, but they died before reaching it.

- FIXED: If hospitalization is needed, the average CFR is 16% (Russian roulette odds) and 49% for critical condition.

- There is no treatment.

It's going to be a full pandemic in 7-21 days (depending on the area), and last from 19-35 days. For example, someone already died from it within 40 mi / 64 km of where my mom lives in a rural/suburban area. You have to assume the number of infected is 10-30x the number of identified cases because the CDC has strict PUI criteria that are turning away patients. (Oh, and it costs $2000±1000 if you take the test and test negative.)


>To reiterate an important point: "Healthy" infected people go around unwittingly spreading it for several days to a week, so you have no idea who's really sick.

According to the newest WHO report (also posted on the frontpage of HN) this doesn't appear to be the case. There are apparently few asymptomatic cases and the disease mainly is spread by people who are symptomatic.

>You have to assume the number of infected is 10-30x the number

This sounds like pure speculation and is probably not a reasonable thing to assume.


In Seattle, the best current estimate (https://bedford.io/blog/ncov-cryptic-transmission/) is 570 infections as of March 2:

> Knowing that transmission was initiated on Jan 15 allows us to estimate the total number of infections that exist in this cluster today. Our preliminary analysis puts this at 570 with an 90% uncertainty interval of between 80 and 1500 infections.


That confidence interval is far too wide to contain any useful information.


As of Monday there were 18 confirmed cases in WA [0]. So even the lower bound of that confidence interval supports the claim that the number of actual cases is significantly higher than the number of confirmed cases (though "only" 4-5 times higher, rather than 10-30 times).

0: https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2020/03/02/coronavirus-...


What should anyone do differently if there are 18 cases vs 80?


If you're going to pick a number to plan for, it's 570, not 80. Yes, the range of possible values includes 80, but it also includes 1500.

So, what would 570 (out of King + Snohomish County population of 3 million) mean? 22% of the population is under 18, so something like 125 minors would have had it (King County has ~600 schools).

The doubling period is 7 days, so ~275 of those cases would have been in week prior to March 2 and ~570 new cases could be expected between March 3-10. If 20% of those need hospitalization[1], that would be ~100 new beds.

With 570 patients (and 275 new), contact tracing is both impossible and ineffective. Let's optimistically assume that people notice their fever immediately and self-quarantine flawlessly. Even then, we don't know who these people encountered in the few days before symptoms began and can't notify them specifically. Either we accept whatever retransmission rate occurs during that period, or do what we can to reduce it by reducing the population-wide minutes spent within 6' of other people.

[1]: https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/coronavirus-in-i... and others


> This sounds like pure speculation and is probably not a reasonable thing to assume.

It is speculation, but not pure speculation - there is some data to back it up.

Trevor Bedford [0] is a researcher at Fred Hutch in Seattle and a professor at UW, focusing on genomic sequencing of viruses.

He estimated two days ago [1] that the number of cases was in the hundreds, with a large degree of uncertainty:

> This approach leads to a similar estimate of the number of current infections at 330 with a 90% uncertainty interval of between 20 and 1500 infections.

This is solely an estimate of the infections here in the Seattle area, based on gene sequencing.

0: https://bedford.io/team/trevor-bedford/

1: https://twitter.com/trvrb/status/1234589820946534401


> If hospitalization is needed, the average fatality rate (critical CFR) is 49%

This is only true for people who are listed in “critical” condition. The fatality rate for most hospitalized people is much lower.


Haven't had a problem with VRBO yet. Had a place in Paris in the 1st arr. the last time.


Cool. Fruit cocktail trees are also awesome because they have multiple fruit varieties on a single tree via grafting. If you know how to do grafting, you can add additional fruits without planting more trees.

Now, if only I can figure out how to start an avocado pit or a pineapple top because several experiments have failed.


I don't know what you've tried but I've started several avocadoes by using toothpicks to suspend the pit halfway into a glass of water.


I've done that 3 or so times now and each time it just sits there and does nothing. Would be super cool though.

I raid the neighbors citrus trees (with permission) and also prickly pear cactus fruit to make fancier lemonade.


While I applaud your enthusiasm, this is a long term project as avocado trees take 10-15 years to mature and bear fruit.


I've done this, although in my cold climate it took months to throw out a root. Give it time.


Awesome.

Columbia says they have a lifetime warranty, but a $300 running rain jacket I bought at their flagship store sometime ago they refused to repair or replace it when all of the inner liner started flaking off and it was no longer usable. I'm never buying anything from them again.

The most durable day-bag / school backpack I have ever owned was a Trager. It was needed because I went through 9 backpacks in high-school since our school didn't have lockers. Supposedly in the 70's pipe-bombs were detonated in them and the lockers created shrapnel. Anyhow, that backpack held 4-6 books like a champ. It had/has a lifetime warranty and they even replaced the zipper on a 10 year old product for free. Sadly, they're out of business now.


Nomad is much simpler.

https://www.hashicorp.com/products/nomad

For slightly larger teams, Cloud Foundry (PaaS) is like local Heroku and it supports Docker too. If you need actual VMs irrespective of deploying apps, it's better to run something like CloudStack (IaaS) underneath. CloudStack + KVM + Cloud Foundry + Docker is a much cheaper way to run [IP]aaS on bare metal to save money on pricey, stable workloads on AWS/GCP/Azure and Heroku. For test labs, home and dev/staging, it's fine to run used enterprise servers. It may be fine for some production use-cases with proper, Googlely-style HA too.

OpenStack =~= K8s in the over-engineered, overly-complex department.


A Mac Mini expanded with two SSDs with syncthing is superior to sneakernet because it provides replication. And, if you really want to, add a 14 TiB HC520 placed in an external USB 3 case.

Add an rsync server to get backup. Forget the cloud, most solutions are overpriced and insecure. Use TarSnap if you have absolute have to backup reasonable quantities of critical data and call it a day.


Try them all and then pick one (or two):

- SpiderOak One

- Mega (very cheap)

- Syncthing (open source)


I don't particularly care about what Tesla, SolarCity or Silevo does or doesn't do. What is concerning is handing over hundreds of millions in socialist corporate welfare that goes to waste, when that money could've helped the homeless and desperately poor who get austerity instead.


I guess it's American-made propaganda with export controls because it's considered "munitions."

Try this instead: https://outline.com/BdaeZq


I suspect it's more likely overzealous GDPR paranoia. Not that that's any better.


Or more likely a simple cost-benefit analysis.


What provides the cost of allowing Europeans to see it? The server costs?


At the minimum a lawyer and a technical audit. GDPR compliance is not free and for a local news station in Buffalo it's probably just not worth it.


Ah, I see, you were disagreeing with the "overzealous/paranoid" part rather than the "GDPR" part. I get it now. Thank you.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: