Although they don't explicitly mention it much I it doesn't seem like they missed out on socializing.
> barring one final class I took online the following summer while I was couch-surfing in San Francisco with random internet friends.
> I soon moved to Cambridge in a group house I started with some friends from the Bay
Some people do seem to have the capacity to take on class loads like this person described while still managing a social life. The university I went to essentially requires engineering students to take more than 5 classes a semester and some of them were incredibly social.
While I agree this person frames it like they've hacked the system by doing something they're not the first to do it's definitely uncommon to have a masters degree by 21.
Do SimpleLogin's aliases use your custom domain and/or does it use sub-addressing (plus addressing)? I wonder how much longer they'll offer that price given Proton's plan for those features is $10/mo, limited to 15 email addresses and the unlimited aliases are randomly generated.
They can use whatever custom domain you want & either have them generated randomly, or you can have them be unique as well. I hope they offer that price indefinitely. Good thing it is open source as well.
> This may surprise you as a HN user, since overly hateful content is indeed often flagged and not immediately visible in HN top-level comment sections. While this is true, there is a major flaw in the HN moderation mechanism that enables abuse to continue unabated. This is the fact that, when a comment is flagged and killed, its child subthread is not. Once the high-level comment is no longer visible in the top-level comment section by default, this significantly reduces moderation activity in the subthread, as users are less likely to click to expand it. The deeper you go, the less likely it is for content to be moderated.
Seems like a reasonable explanation why you might feel that way. I similarly haven't noticed that kind of rhetoric but I also haven't delved down into subthreads much
The solution is simply not to engage. The expectation of the author appears to be that everybody must change into using a social behavior they expect. I'd ask, why don't they change themselves instead? ;)
if the comment is flagged then it should be visible only if you have "showdead" on on your account, so I don't see how it can be crawlable, same for the comment thread under the flagged comment.
Something cool that I can't remember if it was posted on HN at one point or I stumbled across when looking for alternatives to yup but this repo has been compiling a bunch of different benchmarks for runtime validation of ts validation libraries. Obviously to some degree the performance is arbitrary when you're reaching millions of operations per second but on the flipside their benchmarks are against rather data. Would be interested to see comparison of either more nested data or otherwise complex. Maybe something to look at in my spare time.
Pretty much symbolic at this point. Doesn't mean NDP will vote against Liberals in a confidence vote in the future. Feels like it would even be self sabotaging to do it now since some of the legislation around dental, pharma and others that they pushed for are still being rolled out. Plus with the way polls are looking I doubt they would force an election to likely bring in a more conservative government.
I think they are afraid of going down with the Liberal ship, and the longer Trudeau stays as leader of the Liberals, the worse the coalition looks and the more the Conservatives win. I think failing to vote no-confidence to replace Trudeau would be a major mistake for the NDP. Symbolism won’t be rewarded in the next election (I think one of Trudeau’s major mistakes is how focused he’s been on symbolism at a time when the average Joe just wants tangible action to get his life back on track).
Not sure that multiple repos is a good comparison for local development at least. If you go the polyrepo route with NPM/Yarn (for example) you'll probably still be using linking or a filepath in the package.json dependencies. I don't think monorepo vs polyrepo eliminates the problems that come with this like making sure changes from a library are hot reloaded into another which is something that still seems to require lots of configuration.