Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | indymike's commentslogin

Another reason is their competitors didn't get it the value prop because everyone had been competing on rates, and little thought given to developer experience... early on a lot of Stripe's competition's apis used fixed field text as the format for transactions.

If you don't have pride in what you are making with AI, you will let a ton of bugs through. Likewise you will ship bad architecture.

UV is very, very good. The command line is very different than any other package manager I've used, and so it does make for some learning, often in the heat of trying to ship something.


This is the best question of all. Why are we allowing this?


Divorcing technical detail from how it is used does little good for humanity.


Why were we not doing this already?


Not really, now the social network can be immune from prosecution by checking the complies with bad regulation box.


An echo in the sounding chamber? Say it isn't so...


Byte was interesting because it editorially covered everything from home computers to high-end workstations. Byte was a favorite for me (at the time I was in high school) because it covered things that platform specific mags didn't.


> New York Times that criticizes the New York Times,

This has happened.

> the government to decide what is allowed to be banned and what isn't,

This is a civil lawsuit where people are trying to a) prove they were harmed and b) be compensated for that harm. The government is just the referee.

> Meta is removing these ads, because pretty much any advertising platform would do the same about ads that criticized it.

Which was not very smart because the next step will be a court order requiring them to put a banner on ever page with a link to sign up to join the lawsuit - for free.


> This has happened.

Source?


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: