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

D@mn, I believed you were thinking that no one (not noone) could be more pedantic than you.


Add to the list galalith: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galalith


Not that they couldn't reserve on the ads screens a narrow (let's say 100-200 pixels tall) band at the bottom of the screen to show the path with the green and red lights like the (good) ol' system.


Europe may be too wide a categorization, I am pretty sure that different countries have different ways to deal with the matter.

My (thankfully very little) experience in Italy is for civil litigations at least (where it is rare that one of the two parties get 100% reason) expenses are usually compensated (i.e. every party pays their own ones), in the more rare case where all expenses are paid by the succumbing party, what is liquidated is not really what has been paid, but rather what the expenses would be along some sort of tariff.

If your solicitor/lawyer is a famous (presumably very good as you won) one, it is likely that the amount you spend is much higher than what the judge condemned the other party to reimburse you.


Well, not really, the episode that article is related to came out as being a couple of homeless people walking on the railway:

https://tg24.sky.it/cronaca/2024/07/20/firenze-uomo-binari-t...

The day before they had some technical problems with electricity, but still nothing that can be connected to intentional sabotage.


Absorption refrigerator: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absorption_refrigerator

Einstein refrigerator: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Einstein_refrigerator

The principle is still used in some refrigerating devices (typically hotel mini fridges and similar small units for RV's) as there is no need of a compressor (i.e. the device is completely silent) and also in some HVAC machines.


Well, I must post this (stronger than me):

https://www.marriedtothesea.com/122607/pulled-over-in-canada...


NT 4.0 was not for the masses, it was costly (the OS license) and needed higher specs than the almost contemporary Windows 95 (which was largely sold with license included with the new PC). As well, Windows 2000 was a "professional" OS. Both were way ahead in stability when compared to the Win9x/Me counterparts, but in terms of number of users, they were a fraction of the 9x ones, so it is not surprising that you can find much more nostalgic people about the latter.

XP somehow "unified" the professional and home market, bringing the (unneeded) Fisher Price look that the professionals hated and the (unneeded) complexities of authorizations/NTFS that the home users were not prepared for.

I can testify for the stability of NT 4.0, I have run a machine for some 15 years, roughly from 2001 to 2016, running NT 4.00, on 24/7, and only reboots were once a year or so for cleaning or occasionally for replacing the (failed) PSU or hard disk (not as a server, as a desktop running a specific DOS based accounting software). I remember initially I had a few BSOD's because for some reasons there was a counter of some kind in the mouse driver that caused them, but once that was fixed, if I recall correctly by a change in the Registry, it was really rock solid.


Anyone remembers the character of Raymond Luxury-Yacht (pronounced "Throatwobbler Mangrove") ?

https://montypython.fandom.com/wiki/Raymond_Luxury-Yacht


The best (IMHO) ode/obituary for floppy disks:

A:las poor floppy, I knew you well.


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

Search: