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When it comes to Google it’s not being pessimistic, it’s just being realistic.

Maybe for most of their acquisitions (but I don’t know). But they do get acquisitions right: YouTube, android, double click, Waze…

The majority (all, I'd say) of those are 15 years (and more) in the past by now. Not sure about Waze, well, looks like I was wrong, they were only acquired in 2013, so it's "only" 13 years in the past for them.

And more relevant, Mandiant.

Or Apigee. Or Looker. These comments are tiring.

The best of them all.

Edit: meant gmaps


Gmail was an acquisition? I thought it was internal? I remember them launching as an invite only (how i got mine) and it went from there. What is the story?

Its boring though?

Pessimism is so lame and uninteresting for discussions


Are you not entertained?

6 months is even generous and optimistic

This is such BS… Google also bought YouTube for a bargain price early on… and that is far from the only successful purchase that Google has had


One of my kids just got a $13 “smart watch” which has a touch screen, camera with filters/editor, microSD storage, plays MP3s, records voice memos, has games, and more I’m probably forgetting.

It absolutely blows my mind how cheap tech is these days.


Can you post a link or maybe just the name? I'm curious!

This is so much fun, and some an awesome idea. Playing around with it gives me that same feeling as playing with MSPaint as a kid, exploring different brushes and seeing how they interact.

That’s already a thing. Infill. There’s lots of variations of infill that all have different strengths and weaknesses.


There is also 3d printing origami shapes [1]. But 3D printing is still plastic(usually).

The idea of origami steel sheets has stuck on my mind ever since I found out about laser welding. Cutting thin 2mm sheets of steel, stitching them back together in different shapes, and holding tons of weight? That sounds very compelling to me.

[1]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FNVBK7-h9Fs


Anyone knows how does 3D printed metals compare to CNC-made parts?

I know it's been used to build engines, which suggests they are strong, but there's also all this process around ancient swords around tempering, folding, etc that suggests that maybe just 3D-printing metals might result in weaker structures.


That’s like saying origami is already a thing. Agree that this could be cool to test as new kind of infill.


He didn't invent the pattern though


I used to consider it a form of flow-state when you’ve played Descent/Overload long enough that up/down stops being a thing.

It always took a while each session to get to that point, but once you were there it all just starting flowed so damn well, and manoeuvring the tunnels became so much faster/easier.


Yes. Especially when deftly rolling 90 degrees before taking the next turn to arrive with the desired orientation.


Overload VR was one of the most intense VR experiences I’ve ever had.

It also really helps immerse you in the “there’s no up/down” feeling.

Sure, you start feeling sick after a few minutes, but it’s such a fun few minutes that you can’t wait to do it again.


I think we might have different risk/reward levels. For me, using VR can make me feel sick and vaguely disorientated for many hours afterwards. Almost nothing is worth that.

I love the idea of VR but my brain / balance system most certainly does not!


OP site only has 2 posts, both about OpenClaw, and “About” goes to a fake LinkedIn profile with an AI photo.

Welcome to the future I guess, everyone is a bot except you.


Already happening. Check out clackernews.com — it's a HN-style forum exclusively for AI agents. They register via API, post stories, comment, vote. No human login. The bots already have their own community.


Oh it's not just me?

Typing on my iPhone in the last few months (~6 months?) has been absolutely atrocious. I've tried disabling/enabling every combination of keyboard setting I can thinkj of, but the predictive text just randomly breaks or it just gives up and stops correcting anything at all.


I haven't watched the video, but clearly there's a broad problem with the iOS keyboard recently.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46232528 ("iPhone Typos? It's Not Just You - The iOS Keyboard is Broken")


It’s not just you, and it got bad on my work iPhone at the same time so I know it’s not failing hardware or some customization since I keep that quite vanilla.


TheOldNet runs a decent WebRing that still gets new sites added to it pretty regularly, and is almost always just personal websites/blogs. I quite like it (and my site is on it)

https://webring.theoldnet.com

There's also geekring.net that is similar, and a few others that are still actively updated.

I still prefer WebRings for finding good personal sites, it has that old-web "exploration and discovery" type feeling that makes it actively satisfying to find new sites.


I’ve done multiple projects that use 20m+ of WS2812s.

I deliver the main power in segments from a single large PSU and run 5v signal (despite being designed for 3.3v signal most will handle 5v fine and works better for longer strips).

Running segments with connectors also makes it easier to swap out failed segments.


> 5v signal (despite being designed for 3.3v signal most will handle 5v fine

All WS2812B parts that I am aware of are specified for 5V signal and 5V power, not 3.3V.

Some brands won't even accept 3.3V input signals and require level shifting.


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