I love the work of the ArchWiki maintainers
from k7r.eu
327
by
panic
7h ago
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Article:
3 min
The author expresses gratitude towards the ArchWiki maintainers on Free Software Day, highlighting their invaluable contributions to software freedom and documentation. They share personal experiences of using the wiki for understanding various tools and distributions, praising its utility in resolving issues and providing insightful information.
- The appreciation of free software documentation can inspire others to contribute to similar projects, promoting a culture of sharing knowledge and contributing to open-source communities.
- Regular consultation of the ArchWiki for understanding tools, distributions, and configurations.
- Usefulness in resolving issues and discovering features or configuration tips.
Quality:
The article is an opinion piece, but it provides factual information about the ArchWiki and its maintainers.
Discussion (61):
16 min
The comment thread discusses the high quality of Arch Linux's wiki, with users praising its extensive and detailed content. Many also mention using NixOS for a more stable system management experience. There is some debate about AI-generated documentation compared to human-written ones, as well as discussions on stability in different Linux distributions.
- Arch Linux's wiki is highly regarded by users who have used other distros
- NixOS offers a unique system management approach with good documentation
Software Development
Free/Open Source Software (FOSS)
Flashpoint Archive – Over 200k web games and animations preserved
from flashpointarchive.org
56
by
helloplanets
3h ago
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Article:
3 min
Flashpoint Archive is a community-driven initiative aimed at preserving over 200,000 web games and animations across various browser plugins and technologies. The project utilizes open-source software to provide reliable navigation and playback of preserved content through a launcher, proxy, and sandbox.
Preservation of web-based interactive experiences ensures cultural heritage and access to historical content, potentially influencing future generations' understanding of internet history.
- Involves hundreds of global contributors
- Non-profit organization with a mission to preserve web-based interactive experiences
Discussion (12):
2 min
The comment thread discusses opinions on Flash and modern web technologies, focusing on their innovation, resource consumption, legal implications for preservation, and the availability of web-based renderers. There is debate around the comparison between Flash games and those made with HTML5, as well as concerns about copyright issues when preserving old content.
- Flash was innovative and had unmatched content
- HTML, Wasm, CSS, JavaScript can waste resources
Counterarguments:
- Legal torrenting might still be a copyright violation
Internet
Archive/Preservation, Open Source
My smart sleep mask broadcasts users' brainwaves to an open MQTT broker
from aimilios.bearblog.dev
428
by
minimalthinker
17h ago
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Article:
6 min
An individual successfully reverse-engineers a smart sleep mask's Bluetooth protocol and discovers it broadcasts users' brainwaves to an open MQTT broker, enabling unauthorized access to personal data.
Privacy and security concerns for IoT devices, potential misuse of personal data
- Enables unauthorized access to personal data
Quality:
The article provides factual information without sensationalizing the issue.
Discussion (204):
37 min
The comment thread discusses various opinions on a smart sleep mask that collects EEG data, with concerns over security vulnerabilities, privacy implications, and ethical considerations. Users debate the legitimacy of the story's claims and suggest ways to address IoT device security issues.
- The smart sleep mask collects EEG data and sends it to a server without proper security measures.
- There is concern about privacy and potential misuse of the collected data.
Counterarguments:
- Others argue that the device might have legitimate uses in research and personal health monitoring.
- There is a debate about the level of security required for IoT devices and whether current regulations are sufficient.
Security
Cybersecurity, Privacy
Zvec: A lightweight, fast, in-process vector database
from github.com/alibaba
139
by
dvrp
1d ago
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Article:
5 min
Zvec is an open-source in-process vector database built on Alibaba's Proxima. It offers blazing fast, simple, and efficient similarity search capabilities for both dense and sparse vectors, with support for hybrid search and running anywhere from notebooks to edge devices.
Zvec's lightweight and fast vector database capabilities could significantly enhance the efficiency of data processing in various industries, including AI, machine learning, and search engines.
- Supports dense and sparse vectors
Discussion (23):
4 min
The comment thread discusses the capabilities and applications of usearch, embeddings, and other vector search solutions. It compares different tools, highlights operational considerations, and explores performance benchmarks on various datasets.
- usearch is fast
- embeddings can partition document stores
Counterarguments:
- classification accuracy with embeddings may not be high
- not suitable for small scale applications
Software Development
Database
Instagram's URL Blackhole
from medium.com
183
by
tkp-415
1d ago
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Article:
2 min
An article detailing an interesting discovery made by an individual exploring the file system of a jailbroken iPhone 6s, uncovering an SQLite database within Instagram containing a 'url_blackhole' table with entries classified under various violation types related to cybersecurity and phishing.
May raise concerns about user privacy and security on social media platforms
- Entries classified under cybersecurity violation types such as phishing, greyware/spyware, and uncategorized.
- Common top-level domains used for the URLs include t.co, tinyurl.com, is.gd, tr.ee, linktr.ee, shorten.is, shorturl.at, shorten.ee, bit.ly, cutt.ly, goo.su, s.mkswft.com.storage.googleapis.com.
Quality:
The article provides factual information without expressing any personal opinions or biases.
Discussion (27):
3 min
The comment thread discusses various topics including Facebook's content moderation, Apple's app store policies, and malicious apps in the app store. The discussion is mainly neutral with some amusement and criticism. There are recurring themes about Facebook's practices and Apple's business model.
- Facebook aggressively filters URLs
- Apple allows 'phone antivirus' app
Counterarguments:
- Funnily enough that's given as an example of a prohibited type of app in their review guidelines.
- But it's rated 4.4 stars!
- I'm guessing it hoovers your contacts and tries to get you to sign up for the IAP subscription.
Cybersecurity
Security Research, Phishing Analysis
I'm building a clarity-first language (compiles to C++)
from github.com/taman-islam
28
by
hedayet
4d ago
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Article:
8 min
ROX Language Compiler: A Clarity-First Programming Language
ROX promotes a more transparent and predictable programming experience, potentially leading to better maintainability and understanding of code among developers.
- ROX aims to provide a clarity-first programming language
- It enforces explicit types, errors, and control flow
- Example code provided for implementing Two Sum algorithm
- Features include num, num32, bool, char, string, none, list[T], dictionary[K, V], rox_result[T] types
- Control flow includes if/else, repeat loop, break, continue statements
- Built-in functions like print, isOk, getValue, getError
- Math library with num32_abs, num_min, num_max, etc.
- Error model does not use exceptions but explicit error values
- Strings are immutable sequences of UTF-8 bytes
- Dictionaries are hash maps for key-value storage
- Comments start with //
- ROX is compiled to C++ and then to native executables using clang++
Discussion (33):
5 min
The comment thread discusses a programming language called ROX, focusing on its memory management, data structure implementation, and design philosophy. There are mixed opinions about the trade-offs between simplicity and functionality, with some praising the clarity of the language while others criticize its limited scope for custom data structures and strict semantics.
- The language prioritizes clarity over convenience
- ROX avoids implicit structural sharing and persistent data structures
Counterarguments:
- The language is stricter than Rust
- It's not very 'clear' either
Programming Languages
Compiler/Interpreter, Minimalist Languages
5,300-year-old 'bow drill' rewrites story of ancient Egyptian tools
from ncl.ac.uk
110
by
geox
4d ago
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Article:
7 min
Researchers from Newcastle University and the Academy of Fine Arts, Vienna, have identified a 5,300-year-old copper-alloy object as the earliest known rotary metal drill in ancient Egypt. This discovery challenges previous understanding of Egyptian tools and technology during the Predynastic period (late 4th millennium BCE). The tool was found to be used with a bowstring-powered mechanism, demonstrating advanced drilling techniques that were mastered more than two millennia before similar preserved drill sets.
Discussion (24):
5 min
The comment thread discusses the evolution of archeological methods, the importance of physical evidence in scholarship, and the perceived bias towards sensational theories within the field. Participants debate whether archaeology has become too conservative or if it's a natural progression in the discipline.
- The current approach to archaeology is too conservative
- Physical evidence is crucial for acceptance in any field of scholarship
Counterarguments:
- Archaeology has come a long way over the last couple of centuries
- It takes a significantly higher bar of evidence to put forward specific tooling than an engineer's intuition
Archaeology
Ancient History, Tools and Technology
News publishers limit Internet Archive access due to AI scraping concerns
from niemanlab.org
480
by
ninjagoo
14h ago
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Article:
32 min
News publishers like The Guardian and The New York Times are limiting access to the Internet Archive due to concerns over AI scraping of their content for training purposes.
This could lead to a decrease in access to historical and archived content for AI research purposes, potentially affecting advancements in AI technology development.
- News publishers, including The Guardian and The New York Times, are scrutinizing digital archives as potential backdoors for AI crawlers.
- The Internet Archive operates crawlers that capture webpage snapshots, which can be accessed through its public-facing tool, the Wayback Machine.
- Concerns over AI bots scraping content have led news publishers to limit access to their articles and regional homepages on the Internet Archive’s repository of over one trillion webpage snapshots.
- News outlets like The Guardian and The New York Times are taking proactive measures by excluding themselves from the Internet Archive’s APIs, filtering out article pages from URLs interface, and adding crawlers to robots.txt files.
Quality:
The article provides balanced information on the topic, presenting both sides of the issue.
Discussion (302):
60 min
The comment thread discusses concerns over news publishers blocking access to their content through the Internet Archive due to AI scraping and copyright issues. There is debate around the impact on historical records, business models, and biases in news reporting. Opinions vary on whether news organizations should facilitate independent archiving of their content or if there are alternative solutions.
- AI companies are relearning software engineering poorly and ignoring signals like robots.txt.
- The death of traditional news sites is coming due to AI-generated content.
- News organizations have biases that are not fully aligned with the best interests of their readers.
Counterarguments:
- News has a business model: do actual journalism.
- Every business (even news) needs a business model.
Internet
Data Center, Data Science, Artificial Intelligence