My understanding is all kids moved to Instagram / Snapchat as soon as parents started using Facebook too, and now parents are on Instagram too so I expect kids are already using something else.
Can people use or license Apple's version of DRM instead?
> Why was anti-trust pursued against Microsoft then? One example among the many things the court found they did was to tell OEMs that they wouldn't license Windows to them if they _also_ included Netscape preinstalled…
No need to rejoin the lines, as HN will combine them as you say. Only need to add a new line before each bullet point.
Who's "we"?
That, and also insensitive to builds you might have done of other versions of the source code, etc. I.e. it's not affected by "files left behind" that would require you to do a clean build and lose incrementality.
Does it produce hermetic builds?
> every link they every clicked on, on every web site. [...] No content from google was transmitted back to Bing. Just the next site the users went to. Your theory cannot explain how Bing associated that "next site"…
> the whole container-push has been essentially people trying to achieve what the JVM already gave you (isolation, cross platform, etc etc) Google did containers in Borg many years ago, and many of its servers are…
Chromium (and so Chrome too) uses lambdas in its Java parts.
Kotlin though. Everything you said, but a joy to write instead of a chore.
> using opt-in data about what Bing Toolbar users click on lol specifically, what Google search results Bing Toolbar users click on and what query they had entered in Google to get those results.
Last LG I bought came with some vanilla non-Chrome browser preinstalled. I don't know if from AOSP or from LG themselves. Has that changed in the last years? If not, how does this affect companies like LG?
Whatever is a car nanny?
No, you really don't. The following isn't true: > But in order to arbitrage this, you have to be willing to pay women and men differently. A very simple way to arbitrage it without discriminating is to set your wages…
The size of the network also increases the number of their paying consumers, so I don't think that's a good excuse for them. Two Californias side by side would have half the mean time between fires, but also twice the…
Not being able to enforce a specific aspect of copyright law led in the 80's to pretty much all countries having to reform their laws. When home VCRs became commonplace, creating an automatic copy of a broadcast was…
In over 6 years working in this industry, in projects with anywhere from dozens of users to millions of users, not a single bug I have encountered was caused by a "hidden allocation" causing the process to go OOM. Not…
It's funny that you mention Opus Dei, which in modern times was the name and conviction adopted by another Spanish congregation that's, on the political spectrum, on the opposite extreme to where most Jesuits are.
What benefit you think is underappreciated? It's a subjective point of view, but my experience is the contrary: that of Lisp-family languages being hyped to exhaustion.
> a tablet that you can't take with you What do you mean?
It's not only a matter of telling "this was a whisper", but also of actually recognizing what in the world did you say in that whisper, no?
It's a non-issue with a Google phone (a Pixel) in any case, as you have unlimited storage of photos in their original quality.
7 years with an account, and a few before just lurking. This is the first time I hear that, so they must not be many, or not very vocal.
I have yet to find a single person that doesn't believe that Apple revolutionized the smartphone industry with the iPhone.
My understanding is all kids moved to Instagram / Snapchat as soon as parents started using Facebook too, and now parents are on Instagram too so I expect kids are already using something else.
Can people use or license Apple's version of DRM instead?
> Why was anti-trust pursued against Microsoft then? One example among the many things the court found they did was to tell OEMs that they wouldn't license Windows to them if they _also_ included Netscape preinstalled…
No need to rejoin the lines, as HN will combine them as you say. Only need to add a new line before each bullet point.
Who's "we"?
That, and also insensitive to builds you might have done of other versions of the source code, etc. I.e. it's not affected by "files left behind" that would require you to do a clean build and lose incrementality.
Does it produce hermetic builds?
> every link they every clicked on, on every web site. [...] No content from google was transmitted back to Bing. Just the next site the users went to. Your theory cannot explain how Bing associated that "next site"…
> the whole container-push has been essentially people trying to achieve what the JVM already gave you (isolation, cross platform, etc etc) Google did containers in Borg many years ago, and many of its servers are…
Chromium (and so Chrome too) uses lambdas in its Java parts.
Kotlin though. Everything you said, but a joy to write instead of a chore.
> using opt-in data about what Bing Toolbar users click on lol specifically, what Google search results Bing Toolbar users click on and what query they had entered in Google to get those results.
Last LG I bought came with some vanilla non-Chrome browser preinstalled. I don't know if from AOSP or from LG themselves. Has that changed in the last years? If not, how does this affect companies like LG?
Whatever is a car nanny?
No, you really don't. The following isn't true: > But in order to arbitrage this, you have to be willing to pay women and men differently. A very simple way to arbitrage it without discriminating is to set your wages…
The size of the network also increases the number of their paying consumers, so I don't think that's a good excuse for them. Two Californias side by side would have half the mean time between fires, but also twice the…
Not being able to enforce a specific aspect of copyright law led in the 80's to pretty much all countries having to reform their laws. When home VCRs became commonplace, creating an automatic copy of a broadcast was…
In over 6 years working in this industry, in projects with anywhere from dozens of users to millions of users, not a single bug I have encountered was caused by a "hidden allocation" causing the process to go OOM. Not…
It's funny that you mention Opus Dei, which in modern times was the name and conviction adopted by another Spanish congregation that's, on the political spectrum, on the opposite extreme to where most Jesuits are.
What benefit you think is underappreciated? It's a subjective point of view, but my experience is the contrary: that of Lisp-family languages being hyped to exhaustion.
> a tablet that you can't take with you What do you mean?
It's not only a matter of telling "this was a whisper", but also of actually recognizing what in the world did you say in that whisper, no?
It's a non-issue with a Google phone (a Pixel) in any case, as you have unlimited storage of photos in their original quality.
7 years with an account, and a few before just lurking. This is the first time I hear that, so they must not be many, or not very vocal.
I have yet to find a single person that doesn't believe that Apple revolutionized the smartphone industry with the iPhone.