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Huh? LI is standard on like every internet router there is.

Backdoor no? “Lawful” sure ;)

Very neat tool. Thank you for your efforts!

I am wondering how state replication works on the backend. The design mentions using crdt and a gossip proto, but I'm not sure what is actually implemented as it is a tad vague. I haven't dug into the code so forgive me if it is obvious or explained elsewhere.


State replication is currently based on corrosion: https://github.com/superfly/corrosion


Love the part about the CEO being a Musk sycophant. Right down to the similar language in tweets: "Some of SF got poor sleep. We must fix this."


I remember when mimicking Steve Jobs dress and etc was a thing and how it was kinda cringey. Man I could go for some of that these days.


We were spoiled back then. Creeps and weirdos were relatively endearing.


Yeah, in hindsight, the black turtlenecks everywhere were the good ol days.


> While the Eight Sleep CEO Matteo seems focused on providing DOGE with great sleep, the real doge (pictured above), whose name is Latte, is sleeping great tonight.

It’s better than that. He’s putting in backdoors where they sleep. I’m sure there’s a market for that data.


Most rural houses in Australia are built this way. They still burn down.

I don't think anyone really understands how intense wildfires can get when fanned by wind. It will destroy almost anything.

See: Black Saturday bushfires, Australia.

> "it really made no difference whether the houses were brick or timber. In fact, with the speed of the fire front some timber houses fared better than brick as it moved too fast for the houses to catch, but the bricks exploded from the sudden change in temperature."

> "When you have a fire front coming through at 800C it'll melt your window seals and aluminum window frames. The glass will fall out then everything is on fire.


In the LA fire most home fires were ignited by the trillions of red hot embers driven by the wind. If these embers can ignite a home then the house is lost. So the key is to make the house from materials that resist ignition from wind driven embers.


Immich is amazing, truly great software, and it's oss


It’s still beta though and often has breaking changes that can require updating the server software in sync with the mobile app versions.


Not really, Uranium itself isn't dangerous or even that scarce.

Super-enriched Uranium, however _is_ super rare, expensive and desirable.


Really. Raw Uranium is still pretty rare, the US got it from Congo/Canada, the Russians from Czech/East Germany. You still need a thousand tons to get a bomb and if you got no reactor to produce it for you easier.

The enrichment to weapon-grade U235 is trivial, you just need enough good gas centrifuges or a reactor.


> Oppie, a scientist at the peak of his field, willingly handed over the most powerful weapon known to humanity to... a person with a less-than-stellar moral code: President Truman

As opposed to ...

- not handing it over? Prison, then they figure it out anyway.

- handing it to someone else during wartime? Prison or a firing squad, then they figure it out anyway.


When he walked into the President's office, he held enough power at that moment that he could have told Truman to get out of his (Oppie's) chair, and GTFO of his (Oppie's) office.

Obviously, in reality, it would have required much more planning and preparation, but that's essentially a statement of the balance of power at that moment in history.

The Soviets were clawing at the door to get this new superweapon (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_spies), and even the UK - which was a partner in the bomb's development - was locked out of the technology (https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/28866320-test-of-greatne...).


Symptom of an organization that doesn't plan and instead of budgeting for 1.3x employees for outside hours support, budgets for ~0.9x and extracts the rest with "expectation".


What size of organization are you talking about? There is a huge spectrum between startups and established corporations. Also, organizations of all sizes have planning errors.


Well, this thread was about setting a boundary of 9-5...would people go to a startup expecting that?

So...definitely for larger orgs, where "emergency availability" would be a big red flag, unless one explicitly opted into a (compensated) on call rota.

I guess one can make an exception for very early career, but again this was about setting a 9-5 boundary


Im always surprised these things are not calculated into the salary. For a startup, if you can get a very competent dev willing to take a salary cut it seems worth considering. They would bring sanity to the crap one writes when awake for 30 hours+


APAC transit costs :shrug:


Or just Australian.


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