Electric cars: New vehicles in the EU to emit noise to aid safety
7 by open-source-ux | 1 comments on Hacker News.
Sunday, June 30, 2019
New top story on Hacker News: Tell HN: Social media strike proposed for July 4-5 by Wikipedia co-founder
Tell HN: Social media strike proposed for July 4-5 by Wikipedia co-founder
13 by lsanger | 4 comments on Hacker News.
"Humanity has been contemptuously used by vast digital empires," says my new "Declaration of Digital Independence" (https://ift.tt/2xklq1V), which you can sign. So I'm calling a massive social media strike (https://ift.tt/2LumTuM) for July 4-5 to raise awareness of the possibility of decentralizing social media, which in my experience is wildly popular whenever proposed. Read the FAQ (https://ift.tt/2XBUFoj) and use some collected resources (https://ift.tt/300KV4v) to learn and spread the word far and wide. Look for lots of news about this soon. And get ready! Maybe we can make a long-held geek dream finally come true.
13 by lsanger | 4 comments on Hacker News.
"Humanity has been contemptuously used by vast digital empires," says my new "Declaration of Digital Independence" (https://ift.tt/2xklq1V), which you can sign. So I'm calling a massive social media strike (https://ift.tt/2LumTuM) for July 4-5 to raise awareness of the possibility of decentralizing social media, which in my experience is wildly popular whenever proposed. Read the FAQ (https://ift.tt/2XBUFoj) and use some collected resources (https://ift.tt/300KV4v) to learn and spread the word far and wide. Look for lots of news about this soon. And get ready! Maybe we can make a long-held geek dream finally come true.
Saturday, June 29, 2019
Friday, June 28, 2019
Thursday, June 27, 2019
Wednesday, June 26, 2019
New top story on Hacker News: Ask HN: Can we create a new internet where search engines are irrelevant?
Ask HN: Can we create a new internet where search engines are irrelevant?
2 by subhrm | 3 comments on Hacker News.
If we were to design a brand new internet for today's world, can we develop it such a way that: 1- Finding information is trivial 2- You don't need services indexing billions of pages to find any relevant document In our current internet, we need a big brother like Google or Bing to effectively find any relevant information in exchange for sharing with them our search history, browsing habits etc. Can we design a hypothetical alternate internet where search engines are not required?
2 by subhrm | 3 comments on Hacker News.
If we were to design a brand new internet for today's world, can we develop it such a way that: 1- Finding information is trivial 2- You don't need services indexing billions of pages to find any relevant document In our current internet, we need a big brother like Google or Bing to effectively find any relevant information in exchange for sharing with them our search history, browsing habits etc. Can we design a hypothetical alternate internet where search engines are not required?
Tuesday, June 25, 2019
New top story on Hacker News: How e-commerce sites manipulate people into buying things
How e-commerce sites manipulate people into buying things
14 by hellllllllooo | 1 comments on Hacker News.
14 by hellllllllooo | 1 comments on Hacker News.
New top story on Hacker News: Ask HN: US government funds a lot of tech research, why don't startups use it?
Ask HN: US government funds a lot of tech research, why don't startups use it?
10 by notkid | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Some people know about SBIRs (small business innovative research grants), through which federal government gives away more than $1B of R&D funding to small businesses. There are many more opportunities open for small businesses. For example, AirForce recently opened a $100M solicitation looking for machine learning technologies. I know government grant process can be very cumbersome but so is trying to raise VC money (especially outside of SV). And government money is non-dilutive. I am noticing more startups (e.g. Palantir, Anduril) starting off of government opportunities, but they seem very rare. Why isn't gov funding a more common way of starting a startup? Is it mostly because people don't know about these and/or don't know how to navigate the process?
10 by notkid | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Some people know about SBIRs (small business innovative research grants), through which federal government gives away more than $1B of R&D funding to small businesses. There are many more opportunities open for small businesses. For example, AirForce recently opened a $100M solicitation looking for machine learning technologies. I know government grant process can be very cumbersome but so is trying to raise VC money (especially outside of SV). And government money is non-dilutive. I am noticing more startups (e.g. Palantir, Anduril) starting off of government opportunities, but they seem very rare. Why isn't gov funding a more common way of starting a startup? Is it mostly because people don't know about these and/or don't know how to navigate the process?
Monday, June 24, 2019
Sunday, June 23, 2019
New top story on Hacker News: Ask HN: Resources for getting started with bare-metal coding?
Ask HN: Resources for getting started with bare-metal coding?
8 by DATACOMMANDER | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Several years ago I bought a used copy of the original x86 manual and wrote a proof-of-concept OS. I’m interested in getting back into it, but with more of a focus on HPC and utilizing the more advanced features of modern architectures. Where should I start? Even back when I wrote my toy OS, the contemporary Intel manual was 10x the size of the original that I worked with. Does anyone even work with assembly anymore? (If not, how is software keeping up with hardware advances? Do newer low-level languages like Rust and Go really utilize the massive advances that have taken place?) My history: I’m a devops guy with about four years of experience in IT and about a year of experience writing Python at a professional level. My degree is in general mathematics, though I did best in the prob/stat courses (and enjoyed them more than the others). Side note: I wonder if I “33 bits”’d myself above...
8 by DATACOMMANDER | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Several years ago I bought a used copy of the original x86 manual and wrote a proof-of-concept OS. I’m interested in getting back into it, but with more of a focus on HPC and utilizing the more advanced features of modern architectures. Where should I start? Even back when I wrote my toy OS, the contemporary Intel manual was 10x the size of the original that I worked with. Does anyone even work with assembly anymore? (If not, how is software keeping up with hardware advances? Do newer low-level languages like Rust and Go really utilize the massive advances that have taken place?) My history: I’m a devops guy with about four years of experience in IT and about a year of experience writing Python at a professional level. My degree is in general mathematics, though I did best in the prob/stat courses (and enjoyed them more than the others). Side note: I wonder if I “33 bits”’d myself above...
Saturday, June 22, 2019
Friday, June 21, 2019
New top story on Hacker News: 'Living drug' offers hope to terminal blood cancer patients
'Living drug' offers hope to terminal blood cancer patients
2 by lifeisstillgood | 0 comments on Hacker News.
2 by lifeisstillgood | 0 comments on Hacker News.
New top story on Hacker News: Show HN: Instantly make any Netlify form PCI DSS compliant
Show HN: Instantly make any Netlify form PCI DSS compliant
2 by mahmoudimus | 0 comments on Hacker News.
We are big fans of Netlify [1] (it powers our website and blog!) and we wanted to scratch our own itch to comply with GDPR, as well as various upcoming data security regulations [3]. So we, Very Good Security [2], just released an add-on that lets you securely collect sensitive data (e.g. payments, PII, SSNs, identification, etc.) via web forms on Netlify. With the new add-on, Netlify customers are shielded from data liability, breach risk and the compliance issues that come with holding sensitive data. So you can inherit PCI compliance from VGS (a level 1 service provider) and can fast-track other compliances like SOC2, HIPAA, etc. You can read more about our add-on for Netlify on VGS’ blog: http://bit.ly/2WO1gvJ... . and on Netlify’s blog: http://bit.ly/2QUCNiV... . Watch a quick video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wtYzLdpSeJo Try it out and let us know what you think! We’d love your feedback. [1] https://www.netlify.com [2] http://bit.ly/2WZMWQY [3] California Consumer Privacy Act [3] Colorado Protections for Consumer Data Privacy [3] New York’s SHIELD act ( http://bit.ly/2QVQqyi )
2 by mahmoudimus | 0 comments on Hacker News.
We are big fans of Netlify [1] (it powers our website and blog!) and we wanted to scratch our own itch to comply with GDPR, as well as various upcoming data security regulations [3]. So we, Very Good Security [2], just released an add-on that lets you securely collect sensitive data (e.g. payments, PII, SSNs, identification, etc.) via web forms on Netlify. With the new add-on, Netlify customers are shielded from data liability, breach risk and the compliance issues that come with holding sensitive data. So you can inherit PCI compliance from VGS (a level 1 service provider) and can fast-track other compliances like SOC2, HIPAA, etc. You can read more about our add-on for Netlify on VGS’ blog: http://bit.ly/2WO1gvJ... . and on Netlify’s blog: http://bit.ly/2QUCNiV... . Watch a quick video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wtYzLdpSeJo Try it out and let us know what you think! We’d love your feedback. [1] https://www.netlify.com [2] http://bit.ly/2WZMWQY [3] California Consumer Privacy Act [3] Colorado Protections for Consumer Data Privacy [3] New York’s SHIELD act ( http://bit.ly/2QVQqyi )
Thursday, June 20, 2019
New top story on Hacker News: Ask HN: What are the signs that you have a great manager?
Ask HN: What are the signs that you have a great manager?
5 by rahulskn86 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Overheard that people don't leave jobs, they leave managers. I am relatively new to software engineering professional field (about 2.5 years).
5 by rahulskn86 | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Overheard that people don't leave jobs, they leave managers. I am relatively new to software engineering professional field (about 2.5 years).
Wednesday, June 19, 2019
Tuesday, June 18, 2019
New top story on Hacker News: Ask HN: Do you trust/install Docker in your personal computer?
Ask HN: Do you trust/install Docker in your personal computer?
5 by coffekaesque | 2 comments on Hacker News.
I'm no longer using a separate computer from my employer and containers' security always worried me. Using VMs is very cumbersome in my opinion. I haven't used Docker in years, do you think it's safe enough now to install in your main computer (Linux host)? It's not like I'm going to test malware inside the containers but there's a lot of 3rd-party dependencies living there. If you do trust Docker, what precautions would you take? Running without root is viable? I'm aware of https://github.com/docker/docker-bench-security
5 by coffekaesque | 2 comments on Hacker News.
I'm no longer using a separate computer from my employer and containers' security always worried me. Using VMs is very cumbersome in my opinion. I haven't used Docker in years, do you think it's safe enough now to install in your main computer (Linux host)? It's not like I'm going to test malware inside the containers but there's a lot of 3rd-party dependencies living there. If you do trust Docker, what precautions would you take? Running without root is viable? I'm aware of https://github.com/docker/docker-bench-security
Monday, June 17, 2019
Sunday, June 16, 2019
New top story on Hacker News: Ask HN: “Contact us for pricing” nonsense
Ask HN: “Contact us for pricing” nonsense
28 by gesman | 30 comments on Hacker News.
I am looking to purchase advanced communication device manufactured by specific vendor - but every single website has this "Contact us for pricing" links. This certainly is an invitation to sales dance and subsequent spam. I'd rather avoid that and buy from reseller/store that is clear and opened about their pricing. This "contact us for pricing" approach certainly doesn't help to win business (at least mine). Just wonder if this kind of policies are dictated and enforced by actual manufacturer or is that a habit of a specific industry?
28 by gesman | 30 comments on Hacker News.
I am looking to purchase advanced communication device manufactured by specific vendor - but every single website has this "Contact us for pricing" links. This certainly is an invitation to sales dance and subsequent spam. I'd rather avoid that and buy from reseller/store that is clear and opened about their pricing. This "contact us for pricing" approach certainly doesn't help to win business (at least mine). Just wonder if this kind of policies are dictated and enforced by actual manufacturer or is that a habit of a specific industry?
Saturday, June 15, 2019
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)