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j45 commented on Sci-Hub has been blocked in India   sci-hub.se/sci-hub-blocke... · Posted by u/the-mitr
A_D_E_P_T · 10 hours ago
> They do not respect precedence

This is tangential, but deference to precedent has become a huge problem in US and UK Commmon Law. So much case law has built up over the centuries that you can find a precedent to support almost any position! The "legal research" battle -- like the "discovery" battle -- just adds tremendous time, expense, and complexity, and rarely or indeed almost never benefits the litigants or the court.

j45 · 10 hours ago
Precedence should be one consideration, like context, and maybe not too much interpretation or opinion.
j45 commented on The Deletion of Docker.io/Bitnami   community.broadcom.com/ta... · Posted by u/zdkaster
asmor · 11 hours ago
> However, in order to sustain and support the dedicated team of engineers who maintain and build new charts and images, a subscription will be required if an organization needs the images and charts built and hosted in an OCI registry for them.

This is such a naive take. Bitnami images were a sign of goodwill, a foot in the door at places were the hardened images were actually needed. They just couldn't compete with the better options on the market. This isn't a way to fix it, it's extortion. This is the same thing Terraform Cloud did, and I don't think that product is doing so hot.

> Essentially, Bitnami has been the Jenkins of the internet for many years, but this has become unsustainable.

It's other people's software, so it's very rich of Bitnami to accuse anyone of freeloading when their only contribution is adding config options to software that maybe corresponds to a level 2 on the OperatorFramework capability scale[1] - usually more of a 1.

[1]: https://operatorframework.io/operator-capabilities/

j45 · 10 hours ago
Maybe the community can repackage it since Bitnami is only packaging.
j45 commented on Bookmarks.txt is a concept of keeping URLs in plain text files   github.com/soulim/bookmar... · Posted by u/secwang
crossroadsguy · 15 hours ago
Bookmarks are something I have grown tired of. From the days of del.icio.us, I started collecting bookmarks and it kind of trickled along almost until Pinboard went on life support (or something else if you'd prefer to call that).

The thing is - I just saved bookmarks, I never really utilised them ever, to find something, to go back to. I can remember once or twice and either I couldn't find anything among my bookmarks or the sites were long gone. I really don't think I personally had to consult my thousands of bookmarks (which I have now dutifully migrated to Raindrop of course, because why the hell not) in any useful sense ever. I paid for a couple of archiving services as well before realising "nah, I don't really need that, nor this recurring outgoing payment in my life".

So like a lot of things on the Internet, I guess I did "bookmarking things" just for the sake of doing "bookmarking things".

That reminds me of note-taking. There was a time when I used to do "note-taking exploration and research" and never really took any notes or, hell, even needed them. When I started note-taking, while I still keep an eye out for a decent app, I just pick a decent or half-decent note-taking app and I just take notes. Oh, backup and sync tools and services. Those too - there was "explore and research" and now there's "just use something damnit". "TODOing" to, yes! I am sure this tool (or philosophy? style? bookmarking architecture?) is very nice and novel.

This is not at all reflecting on why or why not one should do such "things", I absolutely believe this is good and sometimes in fact results in tools/services massively good, I am just talking about this out loud wondering whether it's just me or this kind of fatigue really sets in for other people as well.

j45 · 10 hours ago
This resonated because I realized my relationship to bookmarks was different - I don't save bookmarks, I save or want to remember sentences and saving a bookmark wasn't the best way to do that.

I try to read little I am not looking to apply, or be conscious it's for pleasure/interest

If I bookmark something, I consider it unread. If I read something, I make sure I bookmark and annotate it and tag it to make my mind more actively work with what I'm reading (and make it easer to find.)

The result? 10-15 years of every link I've ever saved, organized and annotated by me. Chronological, sorted, I can see what I was paying attention to chronologically, or by topic, and at any time search any of my highlights and notes.

This is the nice part because it isn't an AI tool, but maybe something that can feed into an AI tool quite nice. My curation, where relevant, as input.

Best of all, it just works. It's not heavy or tedious, anything that has my attention, gets my attention.

The one thing a text only approach will not solve is that URIs while universally defined will not perpetually stay online.

Diigo, and other tools like it allow you to save your own cache, or perhaps submit to a public cache that page so once it invariably goes offline, it doesn't.

There's lots of tools out there to help with this each person's way, I liked diigo.com, but lately think tools like logseq with a few basic plugins are offering a lot of promise to directly save a bookmark, whatever snippets are relevant, and they are always and instantly searchable.

j45 commented on Bookmarks.txt is a concept of keeping URLs in plain text files   github.com/soulim/bookmar... · Posted by u/secwang
account42 · 10 hours ago
I think this is going in the wrong direction. While cool URIs don't change [0], many URLs that you'd like to bookmark are not cool. So for bookmarks to be useful long-term you need to store much more data than just the URL. At the very least you need a timestamp to be able to find the resource you wanted to bookmark on the Internet Archive in the future. But better would be to save a snapshot of the site alongside the bookmark instead. It's a shame that no browser cares to integrate that or other relatively simple usability enhancements instead of blindly copying Chrome's UI (which usually means removing features).

[0] https://www.w3.org/Provider/Style/URI

j45 · 10 hours ago
I agree, annotating bookmarks is quite valuable, including highlights, which could also be stored in text.

Logseq, etc, are tools that help facilitate this, albeit in not plain text format, but close.

j45 commented on Bookmarks.txt is a concept of keeping URLs in plain text files   github.com/soulim/bookmar... · Posted by u/secwang
j45 · 10 hours ago
Feels strange to wonder how far things have abstracted that text files feel like a concept.
j45 commented on Hacker used AI to automate an 'unprecedented' cybercrime spree, Anthropic says   nbcnews.com/tech/security... · Posted by u/gscott
general1726 · 20 hours ago
And this is why local run models are absolutely necessary. Sure Claude is better than whatever you can run locally, but to avoid being eavesdropped on every keystroke, just buy older enterprise server with enough compute for 3k USD and run similar model there.
j45 · 19 hours ago
Perhaps design with public model and then convert to a local one.
j45 commented on Hacker used AI to automate an 'unprecedented' cybercrime spree, Anthropic says   nbcnews.com/tech/security... · Posted by u/gscott
ElijahLynn · 21 hours ago
Good on Anthropic for disclosing this and leading the way ethically. I could see other companies trying to keep this buried.
j45 · 19 hours ago
Anthropic is sharing their learnings while others may not.
j45 commented on Show HN: Meetup.com and eventribe alternative to small groups   github.com/polaroi8d/cact... · Posted by u/orbanlevi
j45 · 19 hours ago
Great idea, congrats.

Upon seeing this mastodon popped in my head. If a service like this was federated it could let everyone run their own and depending on how it was managed, still be tied together?

j45 commented on Kiwi.com flight search MCP server   mcp-install-instructions.... · Posted by u/Eldodi
bonoboTP · a day ago
Booking is basically a contract. How can the AI assistant accept the terms and conditions for you? Or maybe it could pop up a scrollable window with an Accept button? Not sure if such a thing exists yet.
j45 · a day ago
Likely all the details (dates, flight plans) pulled together for you to just check out / approve.
j45 commented on Claude for Chrome   anthropic.com/news/claude... · Posted by u/davidbarker
zukzuk · 2 days ago
This is a massive problem in healthcare, at least here in Canada. Most of the common EMRs doctors and other practitioners use either don’t have APIs, or if APIs exist they are closely guarded by the EMR vendors. And EMRs are just one of the many software tools clinics have to juggle.

I’d argue that lack of interoperability is one of the biggest problems in the healthcare system here, and getting access to data through the UI intended for humans might just end up being the only feasible solution.

j45 · a day ago
I’m not sure how unique or a new problem this is first individually to me and then generally.

Automation technologies to handle things like UI automation have existed long before LLMs and work quite fine.

Having an intentionally imprecise and non deterministic software try to behave in a deterministic manner like all software we’re used to is something else.

u/j45

KarmaCake day4328September 23, 2011
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Tech founder reimagining making learning+video personal.

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