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aag commented on Dyson, techno-centric design and social consumption   2earth.github.io/website/... · Posted by u/2earth
ubercow13 · 2 months ago
>Dyson hand dryers are very fast, but as a result, they fling water everywhere

Isn't that the whole point of them? Instead of imparting enough heat energy to evaporate all of the water on your hands, they just push it off which is much faster and more energy efficient. How would they work better than regular dryers without doing that?

aag · 2 months ago
I have never found a hand dryer that works better than the Dyson ones. They actually dry my hands quickly, and they don't deafen me in the process unlike some of their competitors.
aag commented on Mid-sized cities outperform major metros at turning economic growth into patents   governance.fyi/p/booms-no... · Posted by u/guardianbob
bell-cot · 2 months ago
Between patent trolls, and a few friends who had patents - I have extreme doubts about using patents as a metric for judging the success of Federal R&D spending policies.
aag · 2 months ago
Hear, hear! Especially in software, patents are an indication of stagnation, resistance to innovation, and rent-seeking, monopolistic behavior. Using their number as a proxy for innovation is backwards.
aag commented on Why SSL was renamed to TLS in late 90s (2014)   tim.dierks.org/2014/05/se... · Posted by u/Bogdanp
aag · 2 months ago
I seem to remember that Microsoft's initial implementation used a field in the protocol in an incompatible way to encode that it was a different implementation. I remember people being annoyed at them for deliberately screwing up future compatibility. Does anyone remember the details of this?
aag commented on The Many Sides of Erik Satie   thereader.mitpress.mit.ed... · Posted by u/anarbadalov
aag · 3 months ago
His music appears in the soundtrack for the beautiful comedy movie Being There, with Peter Sellers, along with some lovely matching pieces by Stephen Edwards.
aag commented on Root shell on a credit card terminal   stefan-gloor.ch/yomani-ha... · Posted by u/stgl
absurdo · 3 months ago
For the young players: this is what hacker in “Hacker News” stands for. This is 101 and it’s very simply explained which makes it a great step by step example of a typical journey. Hack-a-day is full of these if you want more.

The author is clearly curious and leads in knowing a lot to begin with.

The work-behind-the-work is looking up data sheets for the chips involved, desoldering them without damaging them, in the case of memory resoldering with hookup wire and hopefully its access is slow enough that it can work fine over the length of the wire, following hunches, trying things, and knowing (for next time) the possibility of using a pinhole camera or something of the sort when drilling shallow holes and looking through for tamper traces to avoid in further drills, if so desired be.

As others have mentioned, it would be interesting if the author stuck in and got past the tamper checks to see if it would work as normal. Oh well!

aag · 3 months ago
The term "hacker," even in the computer field, originally had a larger scope than computer security. It had a more philosophical definition, too. I host a copy of the Jargon File[1], compiled by Guy Steele et al., on my web site. It defined "hacker" as[2]:

  HACKER [originally, someone who makes furniture with an
  axe] n. 1. A person who enjoys learning the details of
  programming systems and how to stretch their capabilities,
  as opposed to most users who prefer to learn only the
  minimum necessary. 2. One who programs enthusiastically,
  or who enjoys programming rather than just theorizing
  about programming. 3. A person capable of appreciating
  hack value (q.v.). 4. A person who is good at programming
  quickly. Not everything a hacker produces is a hack. 5. An
  expert at a particular program, or one who frequently does
  work using it or on it; example: "A SAIL
  hacker". (Definitions 1 to 5 are correlated, and people
  who fit them congregate.) 6. A malicious or inquisitive
  meddler who tries to discover information by poking
  around.  Hence "password hacker", "network hacker".
I'm guessing that PG had this broader definition in mind when Hacker News was started.

No history of the term "hacker," however brief, would be complete with a reference to The UNIX-HATERS Handbook[3].

[1] https://speechcode.com/jargon/

[2] https://speechcode.com/jargon/jargon.info.Hacker.html

[3] https://web.mit.edu/~simsong/www/ugh.pdf

aag commented on Ask HN: What are you working on? (May 2025)    · Posted by u/david927
aag · 3 months ago
I got tired of using Markdown and Org mode for writing web pages last year. They're so limited, and so full of odd gotchas and limitations. Instead, I started writing raw HTML, but with a post-processing step to add titles, headers, footers, and CSS, and to do macro-like things, e.g. insert pull quotes and YouTube viewers. But raw HTML is not great, either. I'm now working on an editor that lets me use Emacs-style commands and key bindings (e.g. character, paragraph, sentence, and word motion, deletion, and transposition; Emacs-style undo/redo; incremental search; and case conversions) to edit HTML in a WYSIWYG view. The new editor does it all in a Webkit-based HTML view built with Tauri. Editing this way is so much more pleasant and more powerful. I plan to publish it under an MIT license once it's good enough.
aag commented on Malicious compliance by booking an available meeting room   clientserver.dev/p/malici... · Posted by u/jakevoytko
aag · 3 months ago
I once kicked Larry Page himself out of a meeting room because he had run over. I admired him for not making a special case for himself.
aag commented on Why can't Ivies cope with losing a few hundred million?   economist.com/briefing/20... · Posted by u/sneakerblack
Kapura · 4 months ago
This framing conveniently ignores the question of whether the president should have the authority to single-handedly withhold funding for universities, broadly considered to be one of the foundational pillars of America's strength in the 20th century. While I think it's interesting and answers the specific question it raises, it's wild that the economist has just accepted that the president has dictatorial powers.
aag · 4 months ago
The Economist has articles on that subject already. They do their homework. Here's just one:

https://www.economist.com/united-states/2025/04/24/who-will-...

aag commented on The Vatican's Latinist (2017)   newcriterion.com/article/... · Posted by u/bookofjoe
spudlyo · 5 months ago
If you find this article fascinating, and are intrigued by the possibility of learning to speak a dead language like Latin, I'm here to tell you that it's probably a lot easier than you think.

To start off, there is a textbook that I think really resonates with hackers. It's called "Lingua Latina Per Se Illustrata" (The Latin Language Illustrated through itself) and it teaches Latin in a fun and mind-altering way. The entire book is in Latin, but it starts of with very simple sentences that anyone who speaks English or a Romance language can intuit with a bit of effort. There are very clever marginal illustrations that help drive the meaning home. It builds an understanding in Latin brick by brick, and eventually you find yourself understanding complex sentences and ideas. Furthermore the book is just fun and often funny, it tells a story of a Roman family and strikes an excellent balance between teaching and entertaining. Contrast this approach with dense Latin texts that have a heavy focus on grammar and translation.

So that's one way to learn the language, but what about speaking it? Well, that's where the Legentibus app comes in. It's a Latin language podcast application which has wealth of well recorded stories in classical Latin at a bunch of different difficulty levels. It also has has the Latin language text of the stories that are highlighted as the audio is read, with optional interlinear English translations. I find these really help at first to help me understand the content. I turn them off later once I get the gist of what is being said, or just listen without reading. You can also do dictionary lookups of individual words without turning on the translation.

Here are the reasons why I think this is one of the most enjoyable and useful things I do as a newbie Latin language learner:

1) The stories themselves are engaging. Some of my favorites are from "Gesta Romanorum" (Deeds of the Romans) which is a 13th or 14th century collection of stories often with a moral allegorical themes. These were rewritten in a beginner friendly style, but use classical Latin idioms, some of which are explicitly pointed out in the text as clickable footnotes.

2) Daniel (the co-founder of the app and Latin scholar) does an excellent job as a reader. I listen to a lot of audio books, and I especially like it when the reader consistently does memorable character voices. Be it an extortionist dog slyly claiming "Omnēs canēs amant" (everyone loves dogs) or Pluto, King of the Underworld, commanding "Eurydicē accēde hūc!" in a booming voice, Daniel nails it.

3) You can listen to these while folding laundry, cooking dinner, or doing whatever. I manage to squeeze in 40 minutes a day or so of these stories, and I'm always happy to do it.

4) Often times when I learn a new bit of grammar or learn the precise meaning of a word, my mind often will replay in my head a phrase (in Daniel's voice) from one of the stories that uses that word or grammatical concept. This happens more than you might expect.

Finally, there is a pretty vibrant online community of Latin language learners out there, from the /r/Latin subreddit, to the LLPSI (Lingua Latina per se Illustrata) Discord (https://discord.gg/uXSwq9r4) to the Latin & Ancient Greek) Discord (https://discord.gg/latin) and others.

It's never been easier to pick up Latin.

aag · 5 months ago
Thank you very much for recommending the Legentibus app. I've just installed it, and I'm already enjoying it. It looks nice, has just the right amount of introductory material, and runs smoothly, which already puts it head and shoulders above most apps. I'm looking forward to diving in.

I had four years of Latin in junior high school and high school, and have been trying to revive my skills using Duolingo for five minutes a day for a few years. It will be fun to try something new.

aag commented on French police free kidnapped Ledger executive   moneycheck.com/french-pol... · Posted by u/ilamont
rurban · 7 months ago
I lived there
aag · 7 months ago
I've lived in the US all my life, and I've never heard anything remotely like someone needing to bribe the police to help in a situation like that. In fact, I have a friend who is a retired police officer and who commanded the SWAT team in a major US city. His team was dispatched more often than not to help people at the very bottom of the socioeconomic ladder.

u/aag

KarmaCake day275October 21, 2015View Original