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

Firefox extension need permission to work in private browsing [1], after I gave permission it worked for me.

[1] https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/extensions-private-brow...


This isn't the problem. Re-read what I wrote.


The numbers 1, 2, 3 refers to the task bar position.

If you order the programs that way on your task bar, then you can access them with these shortcuts.


Lol, I've been using Windows for a long time and had no idea these shortcuts exist - I will probably use them all the time going forwards.


The forecast over time shows the green candidate to rise sharply to be favorite and then decline over the last 2 months - what happened?


At the beginning, there were irregularities in her CV. Now she has a recently unearthed history of plagiarism in her book and the party tried its best to avoid confession of any wrongdoing.

Also, there was a gender-related shitshow in Green primaries in Saarland. Basically the country leadership of the Green party hates the idea that a female #1 was voted out of the Saarland list three times in a row, thus giving an opportunity for a male candidate to lead the list (contrary to the Green rule that odd-numbered positions in a list, including #1, of course, must go to women). Saarland is small but still pretty prominent in German politics, generating a lot of federal-level politicians. And a lot of attention, because the story is pretty bizarre. The next chosen woman for #2, Irina Gaydukova, had a very bad interview that basically showed her unable to address very simple question and cast doubt on her ability to speak German at a professional level. It reminded some voters thad IdPol is sort-of tacky and the Green party is very deeply into IdPol.

Baerbock does not seem to be a very strong candidate personally. She was basically chosen over Habeck because she was of the right gender, not because of any obvious political advantage over him. But Germany has had 16 years of female chancellorship by now, so the idea of having a woman run the country is no longer particularly new or attractive.

But to be honest, all the leading candidates are fairly boring, perhaps with the exception of Olaf Scholz, who nevertheless leads a very dysfunctional party (SPD) and does not really have a shot.

So it is a fight between equals in mediocrity.


>At the beginning, there were irregularities in her CV. Now she has a recently unearthed history of plagiarism in her book and the party tried its best to avoid confession of any wrongdoing.

The CV irregularities seem to be rather minor (probably deliberate) miss-translations from English to German, if I understood it all correctly. Definitely not good, but hardly worthy of a proper scandal. The plagiarism stuff is all BS. Did someone use ctrl-c and ctrl-v? Yes. To an illegal or even immoral extent? IMO, no.


Given current EU and German legislation protects products of the press down to "smallest snippets" (generally thought to be less than 7 words), courts will quite certainly find it illegal, at least when pertaining to copying from newspapers. Immoral depends on your point of view, I do find the respective laws immoral, so any action to break them is no moral concern of mine.


"Definitely not good, but hardly worthy of a proper scandal."

I do not judge her hard for that, but I am definitely interested in her reaction.

The position of a German federal chancellor is a "high friction" one. Whoever gets elected will be drawn into power games with Putin, Biden and Xi. This requires certain toughness and willingness to fight back smartly. I am not sure yet whether Baerbock has it; her experience with high-level political positions is very limited.


The CDU had a rough period where they were accused of mismanaging several important parts of the covid strategy (including giving contracts for pursuing masks to their cronies) and they couldn't figure out who should become their candidate (they don't have primary elections and Laschet who was prefered by the establishment was vastly less popular overall than Söder. Laschet is now their candidate).

So the Greens had a good start but their candidate has no experience in government and has recently been painted as incompetent. She inflated some parts of her CV and apparently didn't cite all the sources she used for her book (even though she sometimes copied paragraphs almost verbatim). Nothing too bad, but it still doesn't look good.


> Laschet who was prefered by the establishment was vastly less popular overall than Söder. Laschet is now their candidate

I too was quite baffled when they went with Laschet. I've since heard the theory that the CDU leadership was worried that Söder would transform the Union party into an ego show like Christian Kurz did with the Austrian conservatives, or like Christian Lindner did with the German liberals. If they genuinely believe that threat to be worth taking serious, I can see why they would prefer Laschet. A one-man party is fine as long as the leader is going strong, but falls apart quickly when they disappear.


She got caught stuffing her qualifications with memberships in a lot of high profile organizations. In the same way a software developer would list a valve partnership in his qualifications after buying a game on steam.


There where mistakes in here resume. Nothing too bad, but I guess this depends on which political side you are on. Of course PR used it to gain a foothold and it seems to work pretty good.

Guess the other party saw the numbers and activated its network to counter.


The Greens had and squandered the oppportunity to present themselves as being fresh, unencumbered, honest, evidence-based, non-corrupt. Baerbock's resume problems and the plagiarized book sections destroyed that hope, as well as her election as a women over an obviously more qualified man (Habeck). So the Greens lost their advantage in that regard, now they are just one bad option among other bad ones with regards to political ethics.

At the same time, the CDU started to enact some Green policies like raising fuel prices, but doing so with the hint that they would look out for the economy and the little man and be more responsible than the Greens. Since the greens also include some pretty radical eco-deindustrialist people, that move made the CDU look like a better alternative while still soothing peoples' bad eco conscience.

So yes, bad PR work by the Greens, good PR work by the CDU/CSU.


IFIR the sharp dip was around the time when the Greens announced their election program, which included rising petrol prices and some other things that are not all too popular with car owners. Still a big no-no in Germany apparently (funny enough the CDU has roughly the same goals, but I guess their PR is better).


1) The overall "mood" wasn't good, as we were locked in perpetual half-lockdown and other developed countries like the UK and US had a better vaccine rollout than us. - Now the country is opening up again, vaccine rollout is going well, so all is forgotten and forgiven.

2) There were multiple corruption scandals coming to light in the ruling party: In spring 2020 the halth ministry ordered overprized masks from politically well-connected entrepreneurs. In a different story, multiple backbenchers and local politicans of the conservative parties had backroom deals with the Aserbaijani dictatorship. The conservative party in Germany has often been caught in corruption, but it seems to hurt them much less than the other parties.

3) The CDU/CSU elected a candidate who doesn't inspire much confidence.

The dip of the Greens can be explained by a mix of the rollout going well now, the scandals being forgotten again, and massive (social) media campaign against the Greens, often on the basis of false information. (Actually reminds me of Hillary's emails)


This would be an excellent addition to services like homebyme https://home.by.me/en/

They have a feature where you can put a floor plan and then retrace it yourself manually with walls, doors, windows etc.

It's quite a pain to do, having this automated would be a boon.


Oh yes. This could be a nice interface to provide other inputs we (plan2scene) want as well. Like photo to room assignments. Then, plan2scene can create 3d houses with appropriate materials. Thank you for sharing this link.


I like this one a lot: https://blog.fefe.de/

It's in german, but has a nice mix of political and technical topics


The file is 38k lines, in case anyone wondered


Many years ago I did a just for fun project with vvvv, a virtual graffiti wall.

This involved a webcam that captured the graffiti input in form of infrared beacons and two outputs that were projected onto large projector screens - one for drawing and one to show the resulting grafitti to spectators.

I've been a text based coder all my life and had no experience with graphical programming before, but the ease of use and stability of vvvv was just incredible.

I would encourage anyone to try it.


I use a screen mirroring program on my computer and have the phone hooked up to it. The program allows you type, touch on the phone from your computer, copy and pasting between the systems works fine too.

So I only really need to use the phone itself to type when on the go.


But that's like connecting to a file server over VNC and then opening up an explorer window. It's so much nicer to just mount a remote volume.


What software are you using?


I use Vysor for Android, it comes with a few caveats:

- You need to have your phone in developer mode for it to work

- The free version has full screen ads that come up on your phone while you're mirroring it


the automotive market


Do you mean cars?




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

Search: