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


First hand knowledge: ERGO and MunichRE both have a lot of cobol still doing the core business. You will most likely never run into the system because they just run batch jobs - sometimes configured via a “nice” web UI… you configure your job, submit and the next morning you have your report… that’s why you never actually see COBOL.



And to be even more fair:

It is strictly regulated how much money Morgan and Morgan can get out of someone who they represent.


I’ve never heard of a regulation governing attorney’s fees. Which regulations might you be referring to?


For example, Florida Bar Rule 4-1.5(a) prohibits "clearly excessive" attorney's fees, while 4-1.5(f)(4)(B) sets several criteria for contingency fees (typically the sort of fees a plaintiff's firm would charge) that, if not met, renders a fee presumptively "clearly excessive".


Most Florida contingency fees will be about 1/3 of collectible settlement/awards.


...after expenses which can be considerable.


Presumably talking about damages.


The pictures in the article are very nice and well done but I could not stop noticing the dirty yellow cable they used in some shots…


Didn't see that, but they do tend to look that way after some real-world usage.


Yeah its just a shame – the photos look so professional and clean otherwise.



Most big tech companies maintain their own NPM registry that only includes approved packages. If you need a new package available in that registry you have to request it. A security team will then review that package and its deps and add it to the list of approved packages…

I would love to have something like that "in the open"…


A debian version of NPM? I've seen a lot of hates on Reddit and other places about Debian because the team focuses on stability. When you look at the project, it's almost always based on Rust or Python.


I once had to go through a SWIFT certification and it was a nightmare… They make you jump through so many rings… They make you buy hardware from them (for their certification runs), their documentation is awful. Their test environment is awful (no logs, no clear error messages, etc). Sadest time of my life.


The Sovereign Tech Agency (German federal government) donated about 200k€ to the project. Not a brand though. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sovereign_Tech_Agency


There was an attempt/experiment to develop SQLite 4: https://sqlite.org/src4/doc/trunk/www/index.wiki


The focus of that experiment was to find out of LSM-based storage[^1] would prove to be faster. It turned out that LSM, for SQLite's workloads, did not provide enough benefit to justify the upheaval.

[^1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Log-structured_merge-tree


Consider applying for YC's Winter 2026 batch! Applications are open till Nov 10

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

Search: