yamtaddle
No user record in our sample, but yamtaddle has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
No user record in our sample, but yamtaddle has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
Ah. I wasn't able to figure that out from the homepage, the first docs page, or the "getting started" link in the docs. Homepage has nothing, and the first two docs pages I looked at made it seem like some MVP…
Looked at the homepage. Looked at the docs (only way to find out more about WTF I'm looking at, without signing up?). Doesn't... look meaningfully different from AWS lambdas or CF workers or other things along those…
Exam's used in American English, plenty. It tends to connote something a bit more serious or formal than a test, but I don't think you'd get much of a difference in reaction just using the two interchangeably, in most…
> The "trick" is that it's frontend-only in the same sense that Serverless has no servers. Looks like it's some kind of authorization proxy.
The average "technology professional" in the US made about $104,566 in 2021. Certainly not bad, but not "save half your money" good, if you have... like, a life, and a family. Maybe if you're single and don't do much,…
Hooks are half of an object/class system (implemented on top of a language that already had a whole one—arguably, two, from a DX perspective, though they're one under-the-hood) with non-standard and hard-to-read…
No. Lawyers sometimes call out that they are not offering legal advice and/or that the reader is not to consider themselves the lawyer's client, out of what is, in most contexts (I'm pretty sure) excessive caution to…
> They also don't have to cater to special education students (although some private non-profit schools do, for sure), and they don't have to subsidize special education funding with normal student funding. Yep,…
Yes, of course, they benefit hugely from the ability to select students. They're also less answerable to parents or the public than public schools, in many way, which can free them up to ignore stupid demands from…
If it were happening a bunch, there might be a good case to be made for changing permission-granting UI. Maybe not kernel-level, but OS-level, at least. In fact, lots of distros now warn when a user attempts certain…
I've seen $15k up to ~$50k /yr (non-boarding—I've seen boarding as high as $70k) The ~$15k ones tend to be Catholic or otherwise religious, and quality varies from "worse than the local public schools, actually" up to…
React development has had multiple major changes over that time span, as far as what's culturally allowed & encountered in the wild (if not what's technically possible). Just-functions, classes-and-functions mixed as…
I dunno... when you're building a hierarchical tree of nameable components and several, ahem, instances of each nameable component might exist, and these need to respond to signals, that seems like a case when it's…
To quote myself: > without extensive human adjustment and editing Current AI tools are a bit helpful if you're using them for "good". They're immensely helpful if you're using them for "ill" (spamming, scamming,…
Human output may merit some benefit-of-the-doubt if we don't initially understand it. Someone took time out of their life to create it, and presumably were attempting to convey some actual meaning. AI (at present)…
I've been writing code for pay for more than 20 years and will forget basic syntax and keywords for a language I wrote hundreds of lines in yesterday without other code to crib off of, IDE assistance, and/or reference…
The existence of some amount of risk, and the conclusion "is safe", aren't necessarily at odds.
The pyramids at Giza are really, really old. Cleopatra was part of the Macedonian/Greek dynasty in Egypt, which comes basically at the tail end of what one might consider "ancient Egypt". The time span we lump together…
Every time I open Firefox it presents me with some message instead of content I want. Usually in the form of a new tab. Sometimes, it's a pop-under new window (I think this is some weird interaction with its restoration…
> Does that help you understand better what people are thinking? And who they are blaming? It... definitely helps me understand what I'm seeing on here better, yes.
Japan, Singapore, and Italy all appear to be a worse off than the US (a lot worse off, in the case of Japan), as far as government-debt-to-GDP ratio. They already lack the benefit the US gets from its "petro-dollar…
That was my recollection, but I thought maybe I'd gotten it wrong. Gotta say, the "takes" I've read on HN while this has been going on have been illuminating. If quite a few people believe this is a "both sides" thing…
I was aware of YouTube Shorts, but didn't know Stories existed until this headline. (Hopefully, Shorts will go next)
1) There's automation for the "deleting it" part. 2) Viewers understand that the video is only temporarily available, without your having to tell them.
> Both parties do it and always compromise just fine in the end. When have the Democrats refused to raise the debt ceiling without conditions? Maybe they have and I've just missed it.