The Fed says this is a cube of $1M. They're off by half a million
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More on Apple's Trust-Eroding 'F1 the Movie' Wallet Ad
The article discusses Apple's controversial decision to allow the F1: The Movie Wallet ad, which some users found misleading and a breach of trust. It explores the implications of this move and the potential impact on Apple's reputation for privacy and user trust.
Nvidia won, we all lost
This article criticizes Nvidia's business practices, alleging that the company makes misleading claims about its products and engages in anti-competitive behavior. The author argues that Nvidia's actions harm consumers and the tech industry as a whole.
The new skill in AI is not prompting, it's context engineering
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My open source project was relicensed by a YC company [license updated]
Introducing tmux-rs
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Local-first software (2019)
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Writing Code Was Never the Bottleneck
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Being too ambitious is a clever form of self-sabotage
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I made my VM think it has a CPU fan
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Proton joins suit against Apple for practices that harm developers and consumers
Proton, the company behind the encrypted email service ProtonMail, has filed a lawsuit against Apple, alleging anti-competitive practices related to the App Store and in-app purchase requirements. The lawsuit claims that Apple's policies unfairly restrict Proton's ability to offer its services and compete effectively on iOS devices.
Xfinity using WiFi signals in your house to detect motion
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Are we the baddies?
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The Rise of Whatever
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Bitchat – A decentralized messaging app that works over Bluetooth mesh networks
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Websites hosting major US climate reports taken down
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Exploiting the IKKO Activebuds “AI powered” earbuds (2024)
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Cloudflare to introduce pay-per-crawl for AI bots
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Hidden interface controls that affect usability
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Don’t use “click here” as link text (2001)
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ICEBlock, an app for anonymously reporting ICE sightings, goes viral
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Figma files for proposed IPO
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1579878/000162828025...
Private sector lost 33k jobs, badly missing expectations of 100k increase
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I extracted the safety filters from Apple Intelligence models
I managed to reverse engineer the encryption (refered to as “Obfuscation” in the framework) responsible for managing the safety filters of Apple Intelligence models. I have extracted them into a repository. I encourage you to take a look around.
Nobody has a personality anymore: we are products with labels
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There are no new ideas in AI, only new datasets
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Jane Street barred from Indian markets as regulator freezes $566M
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Major reversal in ocean circulation detected in the Southern Ocean
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YouTube No Translation
The 'YouTube No Translation' addon for Firefox allows users to disable automatic translation of YouTube video titles and descriptions, providing a more accurate and intended viewing experience.
Show HN: I wrote a "web OS" based on the Apple Lisa's UI, with 1-bit graphics
https://lisagui.com/info.html
This is a web OS I wrote in vanilla JS that looks like the Apple Lisa Office System (1983-85), with other contemporaneous influences and additional improvements and features. It's currently in alpha and isn't remotely bug free. I had been holding off on posting this here until it was somewhat presentable and useful. Please note; the Lisa conforms more literally to the desktop metaphor than most modern GUIs - some of the important differences are mentioned in the readme.
This is a complete recreation of the UI in JS; it all renders to a single canvas element. It's not a CSS theme, and not an emulator ported to JS. None of the code is written by Apple. I'll be happy to elaborate more in the comments, but the short version is the entire UI is defined outside the DOM using JS objects. Thus, every interface element - menus, windows, controls, and even typefaces - was recreated from scratch. There are no font files - I wrote my own typesetting system, which supports combining multiple text styles and generates new glyph variants on the fly.
Many of the technical decisions I made were motivated by a desire to have this look the same in every browser. That's harder to do with the DOM and CSS, and why I moved as much logic as I could to JS. Also, the only part of the project outside of vanilla JS and standard web APIs is the Gulp toolkit, which I'm using as a minification/build tool. No vibe coding was used to make this!
This is based on a UI from the 80s, and won't work well on your phone. If you insist on running it that way, turn on trackpad mode in the touchscreen settings panel of the preferences app. For best results, install it as a PWA (add it to your home screen). Also there are some odd Android bugs; the native touchscreen keyboard is currently broken, and there's an issue with the cursor when dragging windows.
I realize there's not a whole lot to do within LisaGUI right now; I've got a big list of additional features and apps I'll be adding in the future. I've been working on this project for a while, and I'm eager to hear people's feedback and answer questions about it.