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

Yes they are going to support it because there are modern libraries that do.


I did after reading about it. I immediately moved my personal site to it and got rid of the crap JS site I had.


That’s because they didn’t want you to know about it. Hence letting it languish for 20 years and 2 major versions. The players doing this have been intentionally doing it for a few decades.


That’s fine. Write it out yourself and then ask an AI how it could be improved with a diff. Now you’ve given it double human review (once in creation then again reviewing the diff) and single AI review.


That's one review with several steps and some AI assistance. Checking your work twice is not equivalent to it having it reviewed by two people, part of reviewing your work (or the work of others) is checking multiple times and taking advantage of whatever tools are at your disposal.


The point was to bookend your human review around automated. Not stamp out a blueprint.


Also the logo seems to imply a plant has taken over this person and the content was made by some sort of body-snatched pod person.


It’s cordyceps :-D


There is that web still but Google either doesn’t implement or kills off any tech it doesn’t like.

XSLT, XML, Gopher, Js-free web, etc. are all different parts of the multivaried web.

As soon as you make a case for more technologies. Google or the React team or someone tied to the Business Web will tell you it’s not a good idea because security or lack of support or some side stepping reason.


That number probably increments as you deliberate.


I don't understand the proposed solution about data portability? Everyone is going to buy a Steam machine and run it from their home? My municipality is going to open up a datacenter for me to store my data?

What happens when data is shared between Meta + Google? Now it doesn't matter if my data is portable, every player has a copy. There is a need to first establish a data pool (not one but a whole city of people's with private data pools) first before big companies will come asking you for it. How do we get there if all of our apps are designed for us to dump data into their mega pool?


Your Steam games aren't really portable though.


Agreed, DRM aside they can be portable enough via external storage drive.

My point about the Steam Machines is that they are essentially NFS boxes with a graphics card and Steam OS. That type of setup would enable personal data pools.


This stood out to me because I have been involved in a small claims court case over a small amount of money (less than $2k). No one will give me advice other than "take them to small claims", because the take is too small for them to take interest and often small claims issues are really stupid disagreements between two parties where one party is not taking responsibility for some finances.

Depending on where you live, small claims can have many routes (this is good), the default is to have your case heard by a judge while you are unrepresented by a lawyer (most likely). However due to the large amount of cases and the fact that your case has very low value, the courts may push you to other routes. One route is mediation, I have been to two-forced mediation sessions and each time the opposing side states at the top they have no intent of make a deal. The second mediation the lawyer was still hostile from the start and threatened to have me pay their legal fees. This rattled me and made me reconsider my actual case. I needed clarification. I found a lawyer referral service provided by the state with a 30 minute consultation, that was affordable ($35) and even though I wasn't looking for representation it offered me a chance to have someone give me advice on the latest updates. A lawyer helped me out but not before immediately rejecting me after seeing the small amount and the small claims case information. I had to reach out again and explain that I didn't really need their representation but to weigh the threat of legal fee retaliation (though honestly what judge would allow that to happen?).

I ultimately think if we had better civics education people wouldn't feel so helpless. This entire small claims process has revealed how difficult it can be to find legal advice and how often that uphill battle can be once you're up against an opponent. It is always easier to walk away than make arguments legally you don't really know or have to get assistance. We need to start teaching civics in schools at a young age or people will feel more and more trapped by the technology they use and less empowered by the rights they have.


Anecdotally, I tried using Amazon Q when trying to generate configs and get questions answered for Aws ses configs. However even though: the icon was on my screen and fully functioning and I could enter a question, I could not send the question or use it because my admin had not granted my dev profile access to use Amazon Q.

And my guess is that people have that same experience and give up. Because the admin permissions are probably stored in a yaml config somewhere and it will require a meeting with a devops admin and ultimately be a huge waste of time for answering 1-2 questions.


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

Search: