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libeclipse commented on Unifi Travel Router   blog.ui.com/article/trave... · Posted by u/flurdy
cromka · 8 days ago
This is brilliant, actually very innovative product by Unifi. It's interesting because it seems they do what Apple does: they can add new products and features only because all the devices work together in an ecosystem.
libeclipse · 8 days ago
Innovative how? Many travel routers already exist and support similar features
libeclipse commented on A story on home server security   raniseth.com/blog/2025-01... · Posted by u/todsacerdoti
0xCMP · a year ago
Of course, that means you need to run NixOS for that to work (which I also do everywhere) and there are networking problems with Docker/Podman in NixOS you need to address yourself. Whereas Docker "runs anywhere" these days.

Worth noting the tradeoffs, but I agree using Nix for this makes life more pleasant and easy to maintain.

libeclipse · a year ago
You don't need NixOS to use Nix as a package manager/build system
libeclipse commented on Tokyo University Used "Tiananmen Square" Keyword to Block Chinese Admissions   unseen-japan.com/tokyo-un... · Posted by u/ksec
zaik · a year ago
It is discriminatory because someone at the university acted specifically to block Chinese students from accessing the website.
libeclipse · a year ago
They didn't block anyone. They're making a mockery of Chinese censors. It's a political and satirical act.
libeclipse commented on Tokyo University Used "Tiananmen Square" Keyword to Block Chinese Admissions   unseen-japan.com/tokyo-un... · Posted by u/ksec
quink · a year ago
I’m also confused because based on that screenshot, the page has HTTPS, which would mean either the block would be client-side, or the entire domain is blocked.
libeclipse · a year ago
Chinese censors use active probing to scrape hosts and block anything with problematic content or services. It's not just DPI based.
libeclipse commented on Coq will be renamed into 'The Rocq Prover'   coq.inria.fr/... · Posted by u/mvelbaum
cdelsolar · a year ago
As a non Brit, what is the feel of the word? Is it like having a site named IdiotHub?
libeclipse · a year ago
They're exaggerating. It's a very casual insult, often used playfully
libeclipse commented on Brain overgrowth dictates autism severity, new research suggests   medicalxpress.com/news/20... · Posted by u/jdmark
usgroup · 2 years ago
They had a neurotypical control group, their effect size is massive, and clearly separates the autistic group from the control group. They reject the null hypothesis that there is no difference between the groups, and argue from literature for an alternative hypothesis. What's the problem?
libeclipse · 2 years ago
The sample size is miniscule (14)
libeclipse commented on New Foundations is consistent – a difficult mathematical proof proved using Lean   leanprover-community.gith... · Posted by u/namanyayg
skhunted · 2 years ago
What’s interesting to note is that even if a strong system could prove its own consistency then it wouldn’t tell you anything. An inconsistent system can prove its own consistency. So if a system has a proof that it is itself consistent then you still wouldn’t know if it is consistent.
libeclipse · 2 years ago
It would tell you that the system is inconsistent
libeclipse commented on Is the emergence of life an expected phase transition in the evolving universe?   arxiv.org/abs/2401.09514... · Posted by u/harscoat
HarHarVeryFunny · 2 years ago
Reading the introductory paragraph to the paper, it sounds like a rehash of Kaufmann's (very good) book "At Home in the Universe", which at this point is almost 30 years old. Not sure what this paper adds, but will read it to find out.

The thesis of Kaufmann's book is that the emergence of life, given supporting conditions (variety of source chemicals in environment, sources of energy, maybe water/mixing) is all but inevitable (hence life being "at home" in the universe) rather than being some rare event.

The reasoning is that when these preconditions are met there will be a variety of chemical chain reactions occurring where the product of one reaction is used as the input to the next, and eventually reaction chains that include products that act as catalysts for parts of the reaction chain. These types of reaction can be considered as a primitive metabolism - consuming certain environmental chemicals and producing others useful to the metabolism.

From here to proto-cells and the beginning of evolution all it takes is some sort of cell-like container which (e.g.) need be nothing more than than something like froth on the seashore, based out of whatever may be floating on the water surface. Initial "reproduction" would be based on physical agitation (e.g wave action) breaking cells and creating new ones.

Different locations would have different micro-environments with different locally occurring reaction chains and "proliferation/survival of the fittest" would be the very beginning of evolution, as those reactions better able to utilize chemical sources and support their own structure/metabolism would become more widespread.

Anyway, a good book and plausible thesis in general (one could easily adapt the specifics from seashore to deep sea thermal vents etc).

libeclipse · 2 years ago
Did you see the authors of the paper?
libeclipse commented on Statement of Jewish scientists opposing the “judicial reform” in Israel   scottaaronson.blog/?p=703... · Posted by u/nsoonhui
slavboj · 3 years ago
"Judicial review" in Israel is a unilateral and unjustified assertion of authority. It's not found in any sort of basic law and is incredibly uncommon in the kind of parliamentary supremacist unitary state (ie no tradition of institutional balance-of-power) Israel thought they were setting up ab initio. It's also obviously incestuous for a body to choose their own replacements as the Israeli supreme court does.

On face, it's far more defensible for the body with an explicit democratic mandate to reign in the body that does not, than the reverse.

libeclipse · 3 years ago
Bro thinks handing a majoritarian government unlimited, unchecked power is the solution lol

Democracy breaks when power is concentrated.

libeclipse commented on Purchasing Power Parity: Fair pricing for SaaS products   scastiel.dev/implement-pp... · Posted by u/throwaway888abc
freediver · 3 years ago
This works only if the product you are selling has near 100% margin. If there is COGS involved (cost of goods sold), if your widget costs $15 to make it does not matter what target customer purchasing power is, you have to sell it at >=$15 or you are losing money. This is why you can not go to Somalia and purchase a Tesla for $10k or rent AWS compute at 1/10 of price for others.
libeclipse · 3 years ago
The marginal cost of digital goods tends to be low

A bigger issue is that anyone with a VPN can access the discount

u/libeclipse

KarmaCake day2118January 25, 2016
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Programmer mostly working on security stuff.

:: https://spacetime.dev

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