Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | Linkd's comments login

even more so combined with the fact that these are supposedly being sent into the government.


Yeah.. it would be straight forward to make this into an image and make it so much more usable


Very neat way to browse a feed.. Any plans to implement up/down voting?


Thank you and yeah this is something I also have on mind


Squarespace is not 'tagged' in my brain under the "domain registrar" category yet. When I blindly think of domain registrars, as much as I dislike them, Godaddy is the first to come to mind.


Are there any tools that can receive an entire code base like this, then analyze and answer questions about the code, structure, functionality?


Ya the one between your ears. Kidding! Maybe Sourcegraph Cody https://sourcegraph.com/cody, or possibly Github copilot. I think Cody might handle the multiple files better, and allows you to pick from multiple models.


apparently folks are making tools to do this: https://martinfowler.com/articles/legacy-modernization-gen-a...


Cursor can do it.


It appears you're stuck in 99'?


1999 was pretty great! I was running Linux, with a nice huge full-colour display running XFree86. Back then it was Mozilla, not Firefox. I had Emacs. TCP/IP and Ethernet had won. MP3s were common. Streaming existed, albeit the options were pretty poor. I had a CD player in my computer and a DVD player in the den. OTOH, CPU, RAM and hard drives were a lot smaller, slower and more expensive.

Here in 2024, I am running Linux, with a nice huge full-colour display running XOrg (because Wayland is still not ready for primetime). I’m using Firefox. I have Emacs. TCP/IP and Ethernet are still around, although if I want spotty performance there’s always WiFi. FLAC and Ogg Vorbis have mostly replaced MP3s. I can easily watch high-resolution video, which is a definite improvement. Streaming, too, has gotten a lot better. I have a CD/DVD RW drive in my computer. CPU, RAM and storage are a lot larger, faster and cheaper.

It’s not really that different, other than the spyware infesting the web. That pretty much didn’t exist in 1999.

I wouldn’t mind going back to 1999. The software I used had a lot less bloat!


It's really not that hard. At the end of the day it's just a human making quick decisions hundreds of times a day. I've had more than my share of rejected updates that get approved after a re-submission with no change.


> At the end of the day it's just a human making quick decisions hundreds of times a day.

My company had a version of our communications app in the app store for several years. We decided to sell private-branded versions for some customers where the only differences were the color palette and logo shown on the login screen.

For the app versions we created for customers, one was approved on first review, another required a couple months of back-and-forth with the reviewer, and the third never got approved.


A hover alt-text would also be a neat and clean option.


Does not work on mobile


Tooltips (hover text) are actually the title attribute, not the alt attribute, and they definitely do work on mobile. Head over to xkcd and long press on an image. I think it works not only for <img> but also <a> elements.


Good.


Only when combined with an actual link, please.


Absolutely recommend a motorized sit/stand desk. However, learn from me and choose a "3-stage" one, that goes down to 24". My original desk's lowest point was too high for my chair and ultimately led to shoulder pains after prolonged usage. I'm now working on automating the desk to force myself to stand/sit for the appropriate amount of time and pattern.


I tend to use videocardbenchmark.net by PassMark, but I'm sure there's more out there.


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

Search: