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>Freight brokers now control ≈⅓ of all loads and often award them to the lowest bidder, pushing spot rates below the cost of legal operation ... routinely run 14–20-hour days using tampered ELDs.

Is the sort of "innovation" you often hear here about when people say "EU can't innovate because of regulations"?


Regulations are only as good as the will of the enforcers. It would be trivial and cheap to use all the technology available today (GPS, broadband mobile networks, high definition cameras, image recognition) to enforce the laws, but the overwhelming political priority is keeping goods cheaper, at the expense of a few more collisions and casualties.

Tough timing for a condescending "why can't everyone's regulatory regimes just be like the EU" comment: https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2025/12/after-years-controvers...

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and way more high-profile individual ones across politics and finance

Yeah the third worlders are less capable of attaining those positions.

That's one of opening points of Dodge in Hell by Neil Stephenson.


Also https://nodeweekly.com.

Checked my emails, turns out I've been subscribed to ES News from the first issue in 2016.


Anyone have any recommendations that aren't run by Cooper? All of the suggestions so far are run by the same person and while I don't have anything against them personally, a bit of diversity wouldn't hurt :)



I like bytes.dev

https://bytes.dev/


This also gave me an "invalid request" response.


Moved away from ST to VSCode a couple of years ago for similar reasons too.

Sublime Merge, though - I tried a couple of alternative solutions, but none of those felt like an improvement, so I still rely on it, but it has all the same drawbacks as ST, the most severe being glacial pace of changes (or total lack thereof). It's as if the dev team lacks capacity to deal with basic UX issues, year over year.


Same here, you can also use the same function in switch cases in Angular templates for the same purpose. Had no idea you could achieve similar with `satisfies`, cool trick.



This misses the overview. It has lots and lots of technologies all at the same size. And no way to zoom out.


It's not ideal, but you can look at the bottom bar and get a sense of density of innovation over a certain time period.


>acutely feeling the pain of having no big tech companies

That's good, there should be no big tech companies like FAANG at all. These monstrosities wield to much power and need to be brought in line.


Related: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45667866

Personally, I find this a move in the wrong direction where hostile behavior by websites is normalized and hidden. Cookie banners show web site true colors. When someone asks me to share data with a thousand of "partners", I leave.


> Personally, I find this a move in the wrong direction where hostile behavior by websites is normalized and hidden. Cookie banners show web site true colors. When someone asks me to share data with a thousand of "partners", I leave.

I kind of agree, but at the same time basically all websites are using some kind of tracking to know what kind of users visit, and I'm tired of clicking "allow all" just to read an article. Many websites don't even work if you refuse non-essential trackers, because their tag manager is configured incorrectly, or because by law if there's even a single textbox where users can put their email or name, they need to have the consent to show that and allow input on it.

Having a browser default of "nope" with the option to whitelist a broken website would save a ton of time for people and machines the same, and also reduce website latency a lot. There's a nice website that "tracks" this cost: https://cookiecost.eu/


> all websites are using some kind of tracking to know what kind of users visit

Server side analytics exists, its the ad optimization and feeding data brokers which is the reason. You can disable cookies for google analytics (storage none).


I agree. I think it's one of those things that people complain about because other people complain about. You have to click a button. Wow. What an ordeal. The title of this thread used the term "nightmare". I would be thankful that my life is so wonderful that clicking a button is considered a "nightmare". It's transparent and if you don't like it, don't go to that site.


It's a nightmare because it is everywhere you turn, not because of the difficulty in dismissing the banner (although not all banners are made equally). But I'm pretty sure you're smart enough to realize you're intentionally making a strawman argument. It's the purpose of the argument I'm not sure.


It's on websites, not everywhere I turn. And it's very very very simple to deal with. At least it is for me.


ugh. of course I didn't mean at your local 7-11 or grocery market and quite clearly meant everywhere you turn online. pedantry is so boring


I think I agree, at least until it's clear how exactly this should be implemented.

Fingerprints can be shared with third parties without cookies, and while I know that the so-called "cookie law" is not really just about cookies, this is where the deception begins.

For some reason, I think it's easier to force websites to list everyone they share data with, than to force them to comply with an invisible preference that says "don't share data".

It even sounds as if this could be a trojan horse to dismantle parts of the GDPR altogether (see the DNT references in this thread...), and I happen to think that by and large, GDPR is good.


Not OP, but I've been using FreeCAD for hobby projects for 8 years and even though I usually do achieve the results I want, the "monitor punching UX issues" are absolutely real. I'd love for FreeCAD to succeed the way Blender did, but the project either lacks people with UX expertise or funds to sponsor such people.


How do you configure Firefox to show date-time picker in 24h format?


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