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Anthropic built the Torment Nexus - calling it now.


> The New Yorker prefers insure to ensure. They have a unique house style.

That's not a stylistic choice, it's just incorrect use of English.


Well that’s just, like, your opinion, man. https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/insure


That M-W entry literally says they're different words with different meanings:

> They are in fact different words, but with sufficient overlap in meaning and form as to create uncertainty as to which should be used when.

> We define ensure as “to make sure, certain, or safe” and one sense of insure, “to make certain especially by taking necessary measures and precautions,” is quite similar. But insure has the additional meaning “to provide or obtain insurance on or for,” which is not shared by ensure.


Definition 2: "to make certain especially by taking necessary measures and precautions"

From the article:

> He sent the final memos to the other board members as disappearing messages, to insure that no one else would ever see them.

> Others were uncomfortable sharing concerns about Altman because they felt there was not a sufficient effort to insure anonymity.

> [...] to insure that the technology was deployed safely

All of these work just fine with that definition of "insure." Your comment that it's "incorrect use of English" is wrong.

The bit you quoted says there’s substantial overlap between the two. The New Yorker style is to prefer “insure” in cases where either could work.


I'm unconvinced but I'll ensure I do my homework before grammar-policing again :)


To be fair, I use “ensure” myself, but it’s just one of several quirky elements of the New Yorker’s style, along with the diaeresis on repeated vowels with different sounds (like in reëmerge or coöperate), several uncommon spellings, and unusual conjoinings like “teen-ager” and “per cent.” It’s part of the charm, I suppose


Britain has the 8th-most expensive electricity in the world[1], seems prudent that a Brit would try to be more self-sufficient in terms of generation?

[1] https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/cost-of-e...


Ok.

On your map, let's say the source is valid, UK has $0.4. I'm from CZ, we have $0.35.

UK has more than double median salary, DOUBLE. Which means that in some cities it will be actually more like 2x or 3x smaller. But price of electricity is more or less same in the whole country here.

Don't tell me something about expensive electricity and saving money. Because on top of that, let's check affordable housing stats

https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/affordabl...

Yep, one of the worst in EU, yaay.


> Anyone else into what my high school biology teacher loved referring to as "pseudo-arachnomorphic diagrams" (Mind Maps[1] / Spider Diagrams)?

Yes! Nearly all my notes are mind-map-ish. I’m a visual thinker/planner with ADHD and mind-map style “spatial notes” are the only ones that make sense to me when writing and reviewing later. I’ve tried a few methods of moving this process to digital over the years but nothing sticks like pen & paper.


Can't view the pricing page without logging in (/app/pricing immediately redirects to a login box). Not going to get invested in a product until I know how much it'll cost in the long term.


Came here to say the same thing, what a wonderful post.


I really don't want to be too much of a downer, but is this really just an HN post about someone putting something on a shelf?


You're not wrong.

How in gods name this article made it to the front page of HN is a mystery.


Because enough readers upvoted it to cause it to appear there.


Any ideas on that mystery, then? Since you’ve got your finger on the pulse around here.


There's no mystery. The way any story makes the front page is enough users upvote it from the "new" page for it to appear there.

So the answer to the question of "how did it make it there" is exactly what I said, enough upvoted it that it made it to the front page.

As to "why" those folks upvoted it, well, on that I have no idea.


No I already knew you have no idea, that’s no mystery.


16 points in 2 hours?


What can I say, I'm a Billy simp, there's one just behind me as I'm writing this comment and for about a year now I've been forcing myself to buy a new one to put it on the right-side of my current desk (sometimes I'm too lazy for my own good, as in this case). So just seeing Billy in the title and as the actual subject of the blog-post made me upvote the submission, apparently I'm not alone in this.


You <-----> The Point.


Literally today I was thinking about how to organize all my out of date computers in my room, and thinking about building a cabinet or shelves.

Oddly poignant. I can't be the only one.


Bots are in to stuff like this.


Hey at least it's not Yet Another Fucking LLM Article.


Well, you know how messy most hackers are..... my mom would like this article.


You could start a giant company using some computers on shelves: https://www.computerhistory.org/collections/catalog/10266216...


If the 486es were running OpenClaw then everyone would be losing their minds.


I mean, you can probably reduce any HN article to something that doesnt sound worthy of being on here if you want


Sure, but this truly is just about putting a motherboard on a shelf.

They couldn’t even be bothered to get a good photo of it ffs.


This article proactively saves you the time and effort to reduce. It is really just that. Man realizes his object fits on shelf.


> I don't agree about containers, they are a really handy tool to produce stable(-ish) deployments.

Agreed - at least so long as we're living with the current OS paradigms that have been around since the 70s. Redhat: bring us something modern that handles software distribution/dependencies/lifecycle management/partitioning/security boundaries in a nicer way and maybe we won't need containers.


> Good example because Liquid Glass is obviously preparing for the next paradigm shift in computing which will actually require/open up a lot of innovation on the UI front again.

Bruh, I just want to be able to read the text on my phone.


Yeah: most experiments fail and even the ones that ultimately succeed have rough edges.

That's my point about people swooning about the days of UI experimentation. There's a reason we don't do it once we figure out good solutions to problems (experimentation is hard and mostly bad).


> > Apple ... is shoving Liquid Glass onto devices that don't really benefit from it.

> Yeah: most experiments fail and even the ones that ultimately succeed have rough edges.

Vista / Aero 2.0 already did Liquid Glass. At least they had the decency to ship a "turn this shit off" toggle that actually worked.


Vista/Aero 2.0 was purely for aesthetics. Liquid Glass is obviously to enable UIs overlaid on top of uncontrolled content (i.e. camera input from the real world, or be used through fully transparent displays).

Apple really has to bite the bullet somehow here if they want to get everyone over to what they see as the next computing paradigm.


Much like transparent glass tablets in sci Fi movies, this looks pretty cool but I think makes text hard to read and gets old immediately. Is it really a compelling new paradigm?

I think if I had a really improved version of Apple vision I would still want non transparent windows that are clean and easy to read, not floating holograms with glass like distortion?


All important questions to answer and problems to solve.

It would be interesting if someone had a way to throw a couple hundreds thousand designers and developers into an environment where they have to find solutions so we could get a head start before the relevant hardware goes fully mass-market...


The iphone is kinda fully mass market.


Right, which is why they're pushing the developer community to solve the problem on the iPhone before the next transition to a form factor that's totally dependent on this probably being solved.


And I don't want the fucking notifications displayed on my glasses!

Oh wait, I have them all off. So what will AR do for me?


I already have a physical keyboard! So what will a touchscreen do for me?

Turns out that interaction shift actually enabled a lot.

IMO any individual (like you or I) are unlikely to immediately conjure up every possible high-value idea that AR makes possible.

Not saying those ideas necessarily exist (though I suspect they do), just that your lack of imagination isn't evidence against them existing and being discoverable in the next 10-20 years.


> I already have a physical keyboard! So what will a touchscreen do for me?

Replace a keyboard only in space constrained situations. Otherwise I'll use a keyboard thank you.


Just real-time text translation and annotating faces with names would be cool.


Microsoft’s early/rushed attempt at AI (the various things called “Copilot”) does start to feel like how they lost the mobile wars. They had a tech fairly early (Windows Mobile) but utterly failed to execute on it and ultimately, allowed a competitor to dominate with a better product.

It’ll be interesting to see how this plays out. With the sums of money involved it could end up being make or break?


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