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

Really, that’s a place for the MacPro: slide in SoC with ram modules / blades. Put 4, 8, 16 Ultra chips in one machine.

What is good at SVG design?

Not svg, but basically the same challenge:

https://clocks.brianmoore.com/

Probably Kimi or Deepseek are best


Graphic designers?

Ive not seen any model being good in graphic/svg creation so far - all of the stuff mostly looks ugly and somewhat "synthetic-disorted".

And lately, Claude (web) started to draw ascii charts from one day to another indstead of colorful infographicstyled-images as it did before (they were only slightly better than the ascii charts)


Not getting permits, and no permits required are two different things.

Unless you got cash, then it’s the same.


Lame on user machines, but sometimes needed in a server environment. Easier to detect if someone is hauling off with your database as that will be the one you can’t see what’s going on. Of course, solve one problem and introduce three more.

I guess today, instead of 128bit pointers we have 64bit pointers and secret provenance data inside the cpu, at least on the most recent shipped iPhones and Macs.

In the end, I’m not sure that’s better, or maybe we should have had extra large pointers again (in that way back 32bit was so large we stuffed other stuff in there) like CHERI proposes (though I think it still has secret sidecar of data about the pointers).

Would love to Apple get closer to Cheri. They could make a big change as they are vertically integrated, though I think their Apple Silicon for Mac moment would have been the time.

I wonder what big pointers does to performance.


It's not secret, it just reuses some of the unused address bits.

Webgpu v2 in 10 years, seems about right.

We have mapped the planet, yet no grocery has a freaking map to find what you need.

That's intentional. Grocery stores are laid out to encourage you to spend more.

Like almost everything people complain about nowadays, this is not a tech problem, has never been a tech problem, and cannot be fixed with tech.


Third parties with tech could fix it.

When I was a kid, 30 years ago, some grocery stores did have an aisle guide printed on the cart. I haven't seen one recently, but they at least did exist.

Is this a US thing?

I think here in France the best example is Lidl. The stores are laid out the same, so not only your usual store doesn't change, but you can go to any store in the country and find what you want at the same spot.

Personally, with self-checkout, I spend less than 15mn in the store to do a week of groceries.


Not sure if it is just a US thing but it to add a little more depth. Most stores as already stated want you to wander a bit to possibly purchase more things but the other piece is most stores custom to local preferences both on what they carry and where it’s located.

Thought differently most major chains capture all of this data and can optimize stores for sales.

I think the bigger complaint is a typical US grocery store carries an insane amount of SKUs. If I was just going to Trader Joe’s it’s no problem. Low sku count layouts never change. Walmart has probably 10x the skus and it’s a struggle sometimes just finding what you want. Oh I need dry dill, well in the spice section there are 3 or 4 brands. Within those sometimes it’s not in alphabetical order. Things are misplaced or just out of stock.


That’s mostly my problem. Some of the apps have locations, often I find things not there. But for most stores they want you to wander and shop.

Though I don't like shopping at Walmart, I still have to (no store in my area, even "supercenters," has everything I need), and their phone app is absolutely stellar at telling me where a particular product is. Especially handy where there's no staff on the floor (as often happens).

When I go to visit the Midwest in the winter, the perishables are… non-existent.

Some of the funnest work, if you could get it, was swapping ssds out of laptops coming through customs for high value targets.

Which is another reason we need to strip this hardware attestation stuff out of the hardware. It either needs to use exclusively keys the user loaded into the device themselves or the keys aren't on the device whatsoever and then the "high value targets" verify the contents of the drive from a known-clean machine once they get it back from the adversarial foreign officials before putting it back into service. Or better yet, keep a separate laptop on each side of the border and then sync the data over the internet instead of losing physical control over the device at an adversarial border.

Plenty of adversarial countries have a competent security service. A foreign government can compromise the corporation's root signing key for the devices through technical attacks and through bribery, espionage, physical intrusion, etc. And they're not going to tell you that they have before using it against your high value targets, so how do you protect them? By not relying on systems with a single point of compromise.


These are new machines before users get a chance to load anything. Thus the customs part.

Are they also putting malware on all the drives in every random retail store or what stops someone from just buying one when they get there?

Can you expand a bit? They didn’t notice the ssd swapped? Which country? Customs as in sending deliveries or passing a border with a laptop?

A company buys laptops for its employees and they get shipped from outside the US, and before they get delivered nice changes have been made.

Any specific individual that is high value will walk into a store and buy from stock.


Ok and buys the laptop with malware? How the customs knows that high value target will buy that specific laptop they swapped the ssd? And what they do exactly? Put malware to steal his data?

You are working inside freaking customs and know where it is being delivered. Read between the lines.

I hate all infotainment systems, so I’m still on a car from 22 years ago — with no screen and ratting me out on how I drive to unknown entities.

If I had the optional GPS screen from 22yr ago, I think I would have ripped it out and replaced it a bunch of times or just bought a new car.

I’m curious to try the new iDrive 10. We will see…


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

Search: