Oh wow. I don't expect Apple to care about developers (not since Woz left), but this sounds extremely bad: https://bugs.openjdk.org/browse/JDK-8327860 and https://blogs.oracle.com/java/post/java-on-macos-14-4
Changing a SIGBUS/SIGSEGV to a SIGKILL just in between minor OS updates sounds extremely rude.
Awaiting Apple's response, but I currently don't see how one can justify this.
Are you looking for a quick way to get started with #OpenTelemetry and #Grafana? Try our new Docker image! https://grafana.com/blog/2024/03/13/an-opentelemetry-backend-in-a-docker-image-introducing-grafana/otel-lgtm/
Learning how to learn: Mental models by Neil Keleher is on sale on Leanpub! Its suggested price is $29.00; get it for $16.80 with this coupon: https://leanpub.com/sh/cueZLg3e #Philosophy #PersonalTransformation
OK, this is exciting: we now have four alternatives with benchmarks that put them in the same class as GPT-4 - up from zero contenders less than a month ago
Claude 3 Opus, Gemini 1.5, Mistral Large and now Inflection-2.5: https://simonwillison.net/2024/Mar/8/inflection-25/
Looks like the GPT-4 barrier has been well and truly smashed
GitHub is struggling to contain an ongoing attack that’s flooding the site with millions of code repositories. These repositories contain obfuscated malware that steals passwords and cryptocurrency from developer devices, researchers said.
The malicious repositories are clones of legitimate ones, making them hard to distinguish to the casual eye. An unknown party has automated a process that forks legitimate repositories, meaning the source code is copied so developers can use it in an independent project that builds on the original one. The result is millions of forks with names identical to the original one that add a payload that’s wrapped under seven layers of obfuscation. To make matters worse, some people, unaware of the malice of these imitators, are forking the forks, which adds to the flood.
“Most of the forked repos are quickly removed by GitHub, which identifies the automation,” Matan Giladi and Gil David, researchers at security firm Apiiro, wrote Wednesday. “However, the automation detection seems to miss many repos, and the ones that were uploaded manually survive. Because the whole attack chain seems to be mostly automated on a large scale, the 1% that survive still amount to thousands of malicious repos.”
I just looked up Voyager 1's current position for a talk and saw something wild: https://voyager.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/status/
The distance between Earth and Voyager 1 is actually *decreasing* right now (even though the distance between Voyager 1 and the Sun is increasing). A website bug?
Nope! Earth moves really fast around the Sun. Right now we're moving faster toward Voyager 1 than it's flying away from us
Earth orbits at 30 km/s around the Sun, Voyager is going "only" 17 km/s. I love orbital dynamics!
ok ok yeah yeah high availability and whatever but also have you seen how highly available a single fucking binary running on a single fucking computer can be? Have you seen the performance specs of sqlite?
I'm reminded of that one paper from like 2010 or so when a researcher showed that a single threaded binary could outperform many 100 core clusters because they were so poorly designed to scale *down* at all
Did we learn nothing from that? Anything? Anything at all??
So apparently the term "patch" in software development comes from punch cards.
"Small corrections to the programmed sequence could be done by patching over portions of the paper tape and re-punching the holes in that section."
@technicat the original Mac UI devs noticed and solved so many problems in *1986* that more recent Web 2.0+ frontend devs just ignore -- like this one, *drag delay* -- solving the problem that when the user moves their cursor towards an item on a popup menu, the mouse may drift outside the lines momentarily *en route*, so you should make sure not to close the menu prematurely; these days lots of popup menus instantly pop closed if you stray outside their bounds #UI #UX
Yikes. Postman recently pivoted to store all of your session data (including authentication tokens etc.) in their Cloud Service, which you can fully browse and explore in their online tool.
Their security page makes it clear that they have not considered the Okta-style risks associated with this change. If your company has any devs using Postman for production testing, I would strongly recommend Insomnia: https://insomnia.rest/, and then consider any credentials stored in Postman history to be at risk and should be rotated.
Not kidding about SLIM landing on its head... here is picture! This was taken by LEV-2 (SORA-Q) that adorbs transformer robot carried by SLIM that looks like a ball and then springs open to roll wild across the lunar surface and take photos as the mood takes it.
Clearly, it found this pretty funny and it autonomously selected this shot to send back to Earth.
There's a press release here that HQ can't be bothered to post the English.
Here's today's press release for JAXA's SLIM lunar landing!
TL;DR:
Pinpoint site identification was crazily successful.
We were lowering into position, detecting boulders like a champ.
THEN ONE OF THE ENGINES DROPPED OFF.
(I kid you not)
(we don't know why yet)
(maybe space pirates)
But we still soft-landed on 1 engine.
(TAKE THAT SPACE PIRATES!)
but on our head.
Strangely, might not be a big deal once the Sun moves round to the other side of the spacecraft.
RIP, legend. “German music producer Frank Farian — founder of the disco band Boney M — has died at the age of 82.”
@realhackhistory No links to any sources like always. I want to believe this, I truly do, but there is no reason why someone wouldn't just post something to paint Twitter in a bad picture. F12 is a thing and isn't hard to use.
It seems to be real after looking it up (the post is gone but the account is suspended), but please people, post sources! And the 77 others who boosted this, I hope you all validated this? You did, right? Right??
Long-time Microsoft employees explain changes in Windows:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30019307
Designers were handed full control over UX. Engineers who fought for usability over a slick-looking interface burned out and left after repeatedly being overruled.
Facts, not wishful thinking.
🇨🇦