It's the only way the news industry stays in business. Not just in the US but around the world.
Has nothing to do with monetizing or social ill. Otherwise, soda, food, gambling, movies, etc wouldn't be allowed to advertise. And we'd ban most newspapers and cable news for being toxic for the masses. The war on…
You don't know soros but you think your mind has been hijacked by 4chan, the_donald, etc? No offense, but you comment sounds like something a fan of soros would write. Considering you mentioned the_donald, you're…
> It usually ends up either me aborting because of some dependency hell trying to get all the old versions in sync, or I get the system up, take a pleasant trip down memory lane, then 10 minutes later get annoyed by the…
Logins for news sites was tried in the 2000s and it failed miserably. The only ones who could survive such a strategy are news institutions with a large subscriber base like WSJ or the NYTimes. But even they are…
It's already begun. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=15347067
> The guardian certainly has a strong editorial position, but I've never found its' reporting to be anything other than honest, well researched, and written with integrity. You got to be kidding me. If you think the…
> I put on some science video and walked away recently... came back latter and the autoplay had navigated itself deep into k00ky flat earther stuff. That's the point of youtube autoplay. You leave it running long enough…
> (I haven't made an extensive study of this, but my impression is that the American right wing is prone to conspiracies about people or events, whereas the left wing is prone to conspiracies about institutions.) No.…
> The world before complex algorithms generating clicks on the Internet was pretty biased and stupid The way the news has been ranting about social media, you'd think it was responsible for all the world's ill. The…
Don't all DB servers "JIT" and then cache query plan?
> Youtube’s ‘related videos’ algorithm has given rise to a generation of Flat Earth believers. That's nonsense. There have been flat earthers long before youtube and there will be flat earthers long after. Also, the…
locusmag is a decades old magazine dedicated to scifi. It is a far better source than the nytimes on this matter.
You forgot the elephant in the room. Money. Everyday these writers have to make up the most outlandish "story/fake news" to get you to click to sell you ads. "statistically useless, arbitrarily rated average of multiple…
> Point 2: There's no country with more money and infrastructure than the US. Except our money and infrastructure is going into other sectors. China has chosen to direct their resources into this sector. Simple as that.…
> I would argue that the EU is, generally, more progressive than the US when it comes to immigrants and trans folks. Is this is the same EU where people of turkish descent who lived in germany for 3 generations are…
> As would be expected given the size of the US population. How about california innovates more than germany or UK combined? How about massachussetts innovates more than France? Would that be better? The beauty of stats…
"While the United States is busy talking about making itself “great again” by demonizing immigrants and trans people while it continues to decline as a world power, Europe and China are expanding their forward-looking…
> Even then... Where are you going to start in reading references? A random syscall or function a day? Sure. Or browse through a bunch of them? > think it is far more useful to e.g. read the late W. Richard Stevens'…
And my point is that you are just offering simplification that has no merit. It's a cheap ploy I expect from silly journalists, not on HN. Regulation isn't why there is a biotech boom. As I stated, it's money, people…
> Instead they have an awful terminal console, an oddly verbose shell language, and a slow case-insensitive programming language. The terminal is absolutely horrible. If you are going to use powershell, try ConEmu. I…
> This is the opposite of what they should have done. Shows just how much of an echo-chamber Facebook has become. News itself is an echo chamber. Don't see how that is facebook's fault. The reason news is toxic isn't…
> Well, it seems logical that biotech would boom in a country with less regulation than the US. If that was the case, biotech would be booming from the congo to nepal. Biotech is booming in china because they have the…
> Most people new to a topic want an instructional manual or guide, not a technical reference. Man pages and tables of syscalls are decidedly the latter, and therefore primarily intended for people who are already…
> This book is not about OS dev but rather systems programming: "The Linux Programming Interface", https://nostarch.com/tlpi You can also look through the man pages for free. https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/ Or if…
It's the only way the news industry stays in business. Not just in the US but around the world.
Has nothing to do with monetizing or social ill. Otherwise, soda, food, gambling, movies, etc wouldn't be allowed to advertise. And we'd ban most newspapers and cable news for being toxic for the masses. The war on…
You don't know soros but you think your mind has been hijacked by 4chan, the_donald, etc? No offense, but you comment sounds like something a fan of soros would write. Considering you mentioned the_donald, you're…
> It usually ends up either me aborting because of some dependency hell trying to get all the old versions in sync, or I get the system up, take a pleasant trip down memory lane, then 10 minutes later get annoyed by the…
Logins for news sites was tried in the 2000s and it failed miserably. The only ones who could survive such a strategy are news institutions with a large subscriber base like WSJ or the NYTimes. But even they are…
It's already begun. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=15347067
> The guardian certainly has a strong editorial position, but I've never found its' reporting to be anything other than honest, well researched, and written with integrity. You got to be kidding me. If you think the…
> I put on some science video and walked away recently... came back latter and the autoplay had navigated itself deep into k00ky flat earther stuff. That's the point of youtube autoplay. You leave it running long enough…
> (I haven't made an extensive study of this, but my impression is that the American right wing is prone to conspiracies about people or events, whereas the left wing is prone to conspiracies about institutions.) No.…
> The world before complex algorithms generating clicks on the Internet was pretty biased and stupid The way the news has been ranting about social media, you'd think it was responsible for all the world's ill. The…
Don't all DB servers "JIT" and then cache query plan?
> Youtube’s ‘related videos’ algorithm has given rise to a generation of Flat Earth believers. That's nonsense. There have been flat earthers long before youtube and there will be flat earthers long after. Also, the…
locusmag is a decades old magazine dedicated to scifi. It is a far better source than the nytimes on this matter.
You forgot the elephant in the room. Money. Everyday these writers have to make up the most outlandish "story/fake news" to get you to click to sell you ads. "statistically useless, arbitrarily rated average of multiple…
> Point 2: There's no country with more money and infrastructure than the US. Except our money and infrastructure is going into other sectors. China has chosen to direct their resources into this sector. Simple as that.…
> I would argue that the EU is, generally, more progressive than the US when it comes to immigrants and trans folks. Is this is the same EU where people of turkish descent who lived in germany for 3 generations are…
> As would be expected given the size of the US population. How about california innovates more than germany or UK combined? How about massachussetts innovates more than France? Would that be better? The beauty of stats…
"While the United States is busy talking about making itself “great again” by demonizing immigrants and trans people while it continues to decline as a world power, Europe and China are expanding their forward-looking…
> Even then... Where are you going to start in reading references? A random syscall or function a day? Sure. Or browse through a bunch of them? > think it is far more useful to e.g. read the late W. Richard Stevens'…
And my point is that you are just offering simplification that has no merit. It's a cheap ploy I expect from silly journalists, not on HN. Regulation isn't why there is a biotech boom. As I stated, it's money, people…
> Instead they have an awful terminal console, an oddly verbose shell language, and a slow case-insensitive programming language. The terminal is absolutely horrible. If you are going to use powershell, try ConEmu. I…
> This is the opposite of what they should have done. Shows just how much of an echo-chamber Facebook has become. News itself is an echo chamber. Don't see how that is facebook's fault. The reason news is toxic isn't…
> Well, it seems logical that biotech would boom in a country with less regulation than the US. If that was the case, biotech would be booming from the congo to nepal. Biotech is booming in china because they have the…
> Most people new to a topic want an instructional manual or guide, not a technical reference. Man pages and tables of syscalls are decidedly the latter, and therefore primarily intended for people who are already…
> This book is not about OS dev but rather systems programming: "The Linux Programming Interface", https://nostarch.com/tlpi You can also look through the man pages for free. https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/ Or if…