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Analemma_ commented on The Average Founder Ages 6 Months Each Year   tomtunguz.com/founder-age... · Posted by u/2bluesc
acessoproibido · 2 days ago
Title is very misleading - founders are older every year they dont age faster...
Analemma_ · 2 days ago
I think it's possible to have a little fun with your titles without them being "misleading". And in this case there's a reading that's straightforwardly correct: there's an abstract "Average Founder", and each year that hypothetical person is six months older than the prior year's Average Founder.
Analemma_ commented on Security issues with electronic invoices   invoice.secvuln.info/... · Posted by u/todsacerdoti
moffkalast · 2 days ago
How can there be security issues with a public document? Can't you just sign it with a cert like any other piece of data that needs a proven source?

But also let me get this straight, there is an actual EU standard for invoices? Why the does nobody follow this and I have to keep asking people to put the fucking VAT ID onto it like I'm a broken record?

Analemma_ · 2 days ago
The concern is that a malicious vendor could send you an evil invoice where the XML either references external entities that get downloaded and allow potential RCE, or where the document contains references to the local execution environment which allow data exfiltration (or both). In theory a properly-secured XML parser shouldn't allow this, but history has shown that's harder than you might think.
Analemma_ commented on Framework Raises DDR5 Memory Prices by 50% for DIY Laptops   phoronix.com/news/Framewo... · Posted by u/mikece
derektank · 2 days ago
We’re contemplating jailing people for buying manufactured goods at the market price now?
Analemma_ · 2 days ago
Yes, and I actually think it's a symptom of advanced societal decay that you think this is somehow an unreasonable proposition.

What OpenAI is doing will drive up prices for years, shredding consumer welfare, limiting competition and forcing marginally-profitable products off the market, and they're not even going to use the RAM. They're wrecking supply chains simply because they no longer have any technical advantage now that Google and Anthropic have caught up and passed them, and have to resort to dirty tricks like this and digital heroin Sora to try and justify their valuation. No functioning society would or should allow you to get away with that.

Frankly, much worse things than jail should happen to Altman for this kind of torching of the commons, and jail is the watered-down compromise position.

Analemma_ commented on NYC congestion pricing cuts air pollution by a fifth in six months   airqualitynews.com/cars-f... · Posted by u/pseudolus
Invictus0 · 4 days ago
You may not realize this, but there are numerous rail systems around the world that are not subsidized and are in fact profitable. See Japan, for instance
Analemma_ · 4 days ago
This is not true: Japan's rail systems are profitable on a cash-accounting basis (e.g. fares add up to more than day-to-day operating costs), but not if you include the immense cost of building the rail itself. When Japan privatized its rail, part of the privatization agreement included the government assuming most of the debts from construction, so the private entities wouldn't have them on their books. If you were to include these costs, Japan's private rails wouldn't even be close to profitable.
Analemma_ commented on AWS Trainium3 Deep Dive – A Potential Challenger Approaching   newsletter.semianalysis.c... · Posted by u/Symmetry
t1234s · 5 days ago
What does this mean for a company like Coreweave?
Analemma_ · 5 days ago
CoreWeave already had to issue more convertible debt earlier this week after a big dip in their share price. It seems like the market suspects the end is near.
Analemma_ commented on 10 Years of Let's Encrypt   letsencrypt.org/2025/12/0... · Posted by u/SGran
jjice · 5 days ago
Let's Encrypt was _huge_ in making it's absurd to not have TLS and now we (I, at least) take it for granted because it's just the baseline for any website I build. Incredible, free service that helped make the web a more secure place. What a wonderful service - thank you to the entire team.

The CEO at my last company (2022) refused to use Let's Encrypt because "it looked cheap to customers". That is absurd to me because 1), it's (and was at the time) the largest certificate authority in the world, and 2) I've never seen someone care about who issued your cert on a sales call. It coming from GoDaddy is not a selling point...

So my question: has anyone actually commented to you in a negative way about using Let's Encrypt? I couldn't imagine, but curious on others' experiences.

Analemma_ · 5 days ago
I've seen people complain that Let's Encrypt is so easy that it's enabling the forced phaseout of long-lived certificates and unencrypted HTTP.

I sort of understand this, although it does feel like going "bcrypt is so easy to use it's enabling standards agencies to force me to use something newer than MD5". Like, yeah, once the secure way is sufficiently easy to use, we can then push everyone off the insecure way; that's how it's supposed to work.

Analemma_ commented on Ask HN: Should "I asked $AI, and it said" replies be forbidden in HN guidelines?    · Posted by u/embedding-shape
michaelcampbell · 5 days ago
Related: Comments saying "this feels like AI". It's this generation's "Looks shopped" and of zero value, IMO.
Analemma_ · 5 days ago
Strong disagree: these comments (if they lay out their case persuasively) allow me to skip the content completely, and save me a lot of time. They provide lots of value, and in fact there should be social rewards for the work of wading through value-free slop to save others from having to do so.
Analemma_ commented on Removing juries: 'A move towards an authoritarian state'   theguardian.com/law/2025/... · Posted by u/binning
johanneskanybal · 6 days ago
When I see juries in American movies it always seems like a bit of an joke and manipulating them is a common plot theme. Just very random, the opposite of what I expect from an justice system. Many non-authoritarian states don't use them. Most of Europe and India for instance.
Analemma_ · 6 days ago
It’s a silly bit of theater and American exceptionalism.

Infamously, “grand juries” are supposed to be a check against bringing frivolous charges, but they’ve never done this: there’s a famous quote about a prosecutor being able to get a grand jury to indict a ham sandwich. They’re also used to kill trials which are politically inconvenient but which the government doesn’t want to take the blame for burying, usually for killer cops: just tell the grand jury not to indict and then say “welp, nothing we could do.”

All the romantic stories about jury nullification being a check against government overreach are also crap. Historically the most common use in practice, by far, was when juries would exonerate people who’d been caught dead-to-rights lynching black men.

Analemma_ commented on Frank Gehry has died   bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c... · Posted by u/ksajadi
ternus · 9 days ago
Anecdotally, the professors I talked to in the building hated it. Non-rectilinear walls and oddly-shaped offices made it difficult to put up bookcases and desks. The windows were all custom, meaning if one broke, it was difficult to replace. And, of course, the aforementioned leaks.

I was in the Radio Society and had access to the Green Building (50) roof. The Stata Center actually looks coherent from that angle, and you can tell that was the angle the designers and approvers had been seeing it from (in model form) the whole time.

Analemma_ · 9 days ago
I toured at MIT when I was applying to colleges, and the student narrating the walking tour trash-talked the Stata Center pretty brutally as we went by it, mentioning the leaks, the lawsuit, how nobody liked it, etc.

I never knew if those were her actual feelings or if this was part of a script approved by the admissions office, or even which of those possibilities would be crazier.

u/Analemma_

KarmaCake day17855July 31, 2015
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Yet Another Pseudonymous Coder. Not willing to relocate to San Francisco.

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