| 31. | Level of Detail | (phinze.com) |
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In 3D graphics, there’s a technique called Level of Detail (LoD). The idea is simple: why spend GPU cycles rendering every vertex of a distant mountain when ... | |
| 5 points by zdw 2 days ago | 0 comments |
| 32. | ShannonMax: A Library to Optimize Emacs Keybindings with Information Theory | (github.com) |
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maximize your keybinding efficiency in emacs! Contribute to sstraust/shannonmax development by creating an account on GitHub. | |
| 3 points by sammy0910 12 hours ago | 0 comments |
| 33. | Against Theory-Motivated Experimentation | (journals.sagepub.com) |
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| 4 points by paraschopra 8 hours ago | 1 comments |
| 34. | US plans online portal to bypass content bans in Europe and elsewhere | (reuters.com) |
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| 12 points by c420 1 day ago | 1 comments |
| 35. | Old School Visual Effects: The Cloud Tank (2010) | (singlemindedmovieblog.blogspot.com) |
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| 3 points by exvi 16 hours ago | 0 comments |
| 36. | Measurement of a lithium plume from the uncontrolled re-entry of Falcon 9 rocket | (nature.com) |
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A 10-fold enhancement of lithium atoms was detected at 96 km altitude by a resonance lidar at Kühlungsborn, Germany, approximately 20 hours after the uncontrolled re-entry of a Falcon 9 upper stage. The upper-atmospheric extension of the ICON general circulation model, nudged to ECMWF, was used to calculate winds. Backwards trajectories, including wind variability as measured by radar, traced air masses to the Falcon 9 re-entry path at 100 km altitude, west of Ireland. This study presents the first measurement of upper-atmospheric pollution resulting from space debris re-entry and the first observational evidence that the ablation of space debris can be detected by ground-based lidar. The analysis of geomagnetic conditions, atmospheric dynamics, and ionospheric measurements supports the claim that the enhancement was not of natural origin. Our findings demonstrate that identifying pollutants and tracing them to their sources is achievable, with significant implications for monitoring and mitigating space emissions in the atmosphere. A plume of pollutants in the upper atmosphere above Germany is identified using lidar observations of lithium concentrations and can be traced back to the uncontrolled re-entry of a specific rocket launch through atmospheric modelling | |
| 5 points by smartmic 1 hour ago | 0 comments |
| 37. | University of Texas limits on teaching of "unnecessary controversial subjects" | (texastribune.org) |
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Opponents warned the policy’s vagueness could push professors to self-censor and leave students less prepared for the workplace. | |
| 6 points by bhouston 2 hours ago | 2 comments |
| 38. | Minnesota judge holds federal attorney in civil contempt | (cnn.com) |
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A federal judge in Minnesota held a Trump administration attorney in civil contempt for “flagrant disobedience of court orders” in the case of a noncitizen swept up in the immigration crackdown there earlier this year. | |
| 6 points by rawgabbit 1 hour ago | 0 comments |
| 39. | Womens Sizing | (pudding.cool) |
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The inter-generational struggle to find clothes that fit more than a tiny portion of women | |
| 9 points by zdw 1 day ago | 0 comments |
| 40. | Asbestos is a bigger problem than we thought [video] | (youtube.com) |
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How asbestos ended up everywhere, and why we’re still using it today. Sponsored by Ground News - Go to https://ground.news/Ve for 40% off the unlimited Vanta... | |
| 6 points by lisper 3 hours ago | 0 comments |
| 41. | A word processor from 1990s for Atari ST/TOS is still supported by enthusiasts | (tempus-word.de) |
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You're Welcome. | |
| 4 points by muzzy19 3 days ago | 0 comments |
| 42. | 5.25-inch floppy disks expected to help run San Francisco trains until 2030 | (arstechnica.com) |
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We have a technical debt that stretches back many decades." | |
| 3 points by austinallegro 32 minutes ago | 0 comments |
| 43. | Anthropic officially bans using subscription auth for third party use | (code.claude.com) |
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Legal agreements, compliance certifications, and security information for Claude Code. | |
| 8 points by theahura 20 hours ago | 1 comments |
| 44. | Netbase: A port of the NetBSD utilities for Linux | (github.com) |
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A port of the netbsd utilities for linux(and may be another unix like operating systems) - littlefly365/Netbase | |
| 3 points by jaypatelani 6 hours ago | 0 comments |
| 45. | IRS lost 40% of IT staff, 80% of tech leaders in 'efficiency' shakeup | (theregister.com) |
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| 16 points by freitasm 4 hours ago | 3 comments |
| 46. | Metriport (YC S22) is hiring a security engineer to harden healthcare infra | (ycombinator.com) |
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Metriport (https://www.metriport.com/) is an open-source data intelligence platform that helps healthcare organizations access and exchange patient data in real-time. We integrate with all major US healthcare IT systems and tap into comprehensive medical data for 300+ million individuals. We've found product-market fit with multi-million ARR, 100+ customers (including Strive Health, Circle Medical, and Brightside Health), backing from top VCs, massive recent infusion of capital, and years of runway. We're ready to scale. We're a tight-knit, high-performing team of mostly former founders (including two YC alumni). We're engineering-heavy, operate with minimal bureaucracy and high autonomy, and hire based on competence, not prestige. We push hard—founders work six days a week from our SF office—but give everyone freedom to craft their schedule. We measure output and we're committed to sustainable intensity. About us The following points are an assortment of the most relevant bits that will give you the gist of where we’re at, why we’ll win, and our company culture: We’re a tight-knit, high performing, and passionate team - we work with a consistent intensity and have become a leader in our industry with a fraction of the resources of our competitors. Consistency means we push as hard as humanly possible, while keeping our health and personal lives in check. Meaningful work is what gets us out of bed, and we just wouldn’t be satisfied by building yet another CRM company. By pedigree, we’re a group of underdogs - we don’t hire based on prestige, but on demonstrated competence and perceived potential. We’re engineering heavy, and most of our engineers are former founders (including 2 ex-YC founders). We operate as a relatively flat structure with little red tape, forced structure, or bureaucracy. We just opt to get shit done and foster a collaborative environment with high autonomy - our GitHub commit history and product velocity is a testament to this. The founders set the pace by working 6 days a week in our SF office, but everyone is given full freedom to craft a schedule that’s best for both the team and themselves - team output is measured. About you In a nutshell, we're looking for a security engineer with the following specific qualities: You’re entrepreneurial-minded, with an olympian-level work ethic (nearly our entire engineering team consists of former founders). You are passionate about security and are excited to own security related projects within the company end-to-end. You are confident in your ability to build scalable systems across the full stack, and people usually come to you for technical guidance. You believe you can solve any problem that comes at you, and don't shy away from diving deep into areas where you may lack domain expertise. You have a strong sense of ownership over your work, and have demonstrated ability to lead others. You know how to move fast - while still maintaining a strong security posture. You care more about the end result and delivering value, rather than what new and frilly tech is being used under the hood for a given feature. When someone scopes out a project with an ETA of 3 weeks, you ask yourself "why can't it be done in 3 days?". You’re a hacker at heart, and have a good sense of what rules should, and shouldn’t, be broken. What you'll be doing After quickly ramping up using our comprehensive onboarding materials to get familiar with our domain, product, and codebase, the goal would be to get you shipping product directly to customers as quickly as possible. Specifically, day to day, this looks like: Evangelizing security across Metriport’s growing team - we will look to you for guidance, and training. Driving full-stack security projects , big and small, end-to-end from ideation to production rollout.These projects could include things like: Implement an enterprise-grade audit logging solution for a new national healthcare network infrastructure stack. Implement fine grained RBAC on the API key access layer, and more robust roles on our UIs. Help us revamp our internal security policies and put tools in place to keep the platform, and employees, secure while still allowing the team to be efficient. Helping the engineering team with PR reviews with a security-focused lens. Work with the Go to Market team to complete customer security assessments and questionnaires. Work with the engineering team to harden security across the development lifecycle - think secret management, access controls, and vulnerability scanning. Managing your own work in Linear. Participating in bi-weekly sprint planning / retro sessions, and quarterly planning sessions. Attending a daily 30 minute remote stand-up at 7:30am PST Mon-Fri (our only regular mandatory meeting). Requirements You have 6+ years experience in security engineering and information security. You’re located in San Francisco or the Bay Area (or willing to relocate). Familiar with HIPAA compliant environments. Experience rolling out and maintaining security frameworks like SOC 2, NIST, HITRUST, FedRAMP, etc. Experience rolling out data protection technologies like SSO, MFA, VPN, FIPS, etc. Experience with organizational secret management. Experience implementing SCA, SAST, DAST in CICD workflows. Experience with Mobile Device Management (MDM). Proficiency in cloud security & networking on AWS - IAM, WAF, KMS, etc. Proficiency in authentication, cryptography, encryption, and security protocols such as: mTLS, RSA, SSL, HMAC, RBAC, etc. Bonus: experience with IHE profiles (ATNA, CT, XUA). Benefits Competitive equity + compensation package 🚀 Salary range: $160,000,00 - $220,000.00 Full family Platinum health insurance, dental, and vision coverage 🦷 401(k) retirement plan + matching 💰 Flexible work from home or in-office 🏢 Healthy lunches are complimentary when working in-office (and breakfast + dinners as needed) 🍏 Quarterly company off-sites with the team ⛷️ MacBook provided by us 💻 Unlimited PTO (we work hard, but trust you to take time you need to be at your best) 🧘♂️ Our tech On the frontend, we use React - on the backend, we rely on Node.js and TypeScript for writing core business logic. We deploy a wide range of AWS cloud services (ie ECS, Fargate, Lambda, etc), and manage our infrastructure as code with AWS CDK. Data lives in PostgreSQL, DynamoDB, S3, Snowflake, FHIR servers, and more. We use Oneleet for security and compliance. Metriport provides equal employment opportunities (EEO) to all employees and applicants for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age, disability, genetics, sexual orientation, gender identity, or gender expression. We are committed to a diverse and inclusive workforce and welcome people from all backgrounds, experiences, perspectives, and abilities. | |
| 1 point by dgoncharov 1 day ago | comments |
| 47. | How to Choose Between Hindley-Milner and Bidirectional Typing | (thunderseethe.dev) |
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A false dichotomy that hides the real request | |
| 4 points by thunderseethe 4 days ago | 0 comments |
| 48. | ChatGPT ads are appearing on the first prompt, not after conversations | (searchengineland.com) |
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ChatGPT ads are spotted by U.S. users — and they're appearing on the very first prompt, not after lengthy conversations as some predicted. | |
| 5 points by speckx 2 hours ago | 0 comments |
| 49. | Palantir partnership is at heart of Anthropic, Pentagon rift | (semafor.com) |
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The roots of the conflict point to the changing nature of software stacks as top officials push to modernize the military. | |
| 7 points by everybodyknows 3 hours ago | 0 comments |
| 50. | YouTube Blocks Background Listening Workaround for Free Users | (pcmag.com) |
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Background play in Brave appears to have been restrored, though. | |
| 6 points by ripe 3 hours ago | 1 comments |
| 51. | 27-year-old Apple iBooks can connect to Wi-Fi and download official updates | (old.reddit.com) |
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| 9 points by surprisetalk 1 day ago | 0 comments |
| 52. | Apple Watch or Don't Bother | (fireborn.mataroa.blog) |
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| 3 points by samtheDamned 2 hours ago | 2 comments |
| 53. | The Mongol Khans of Medieval France | (historytoday.com) |
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| 3 points by Thevet 3 days ago | 0 comments |
| 54. | Famous Signatures Through History | (signatory.app) |
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Free online signature maker. Draw your signature with a natural pen feel, then export as PNG or SVG. No signup, no bloat. | |
| 7 points by elliotbnvl 9 hours ago | 4 comments |
| 55. | -fbounds-safety: Enforcing bounds safety for C | (clang.llvm.org) |
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| 3 points by thefilmore 3 days ago | 0 comments |
| 56. | Visualizing the ARM64 Instruction Set (2024) | (zyedidia.github.io) |
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| 3 points by userbinator 4 days ago | 0 comments |
| 57. | Your Agent Framework Is Just a Bad Clone of Elixir | (georgeguimaraes.com) |
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Python and JavaScript/TypeScript AI frameworks are reinventing what telecom solved in 1986. What 40 years of production-grade concurrency teaches us about building AI agents. | |
| 6 points by ellieh 1 day ago | 0 comments |
| 58. | Canada If Day, WW2, when "German" troops invaded Winnipeg | (bsky.app) |
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On Feb. 19, 1942, German soldiers marched through Winnipeg. The mayor, premier and Lt. Governor were arrested, and the city was renamed Himmlerstadt. Books were burned, and the German flag flew across the city. This is the story of Winnipeg's If Day. 🧵 1/12 | |
| 3 points by vinnyglennon 1 hour ago | 0 comments |
| 59. | All Look Same? | (alllooksame.com) |
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China, Japan, Korea: What's the difference? | |
| 8 points by mirawelner 1 day ago | 0 comments |
| 60. | Meta CEO Knew Kids Were Being Hurt and He Covered It Up | (dispatch.techoversight.org) |
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| 7 points by speckx 8 hours ago | 0 comments |