Article:
The article discusses preventive measures against malware infections, emphasizing the importance of running anti-virus scans on personal and shared networks.
Discussion (200):
The comment thread discusses the adoption of Opus 4.7, comparing it to older versions and discussing factors like cost/quality trade-offs and benchmarking practices in AI model selection.
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Article: 29 min
ggsql is an alpha-release SQL-based visualization tool that implements the grammar of graphics syntax, designed to bring rich, structured visualization support to SQL users. It allows for modular composition of visualizations through a series of declarative clauses, making it easier to create and iterate on plots.
Discussion (60): 8 min
The comment thread discusses the new visualization tool from Posit, ggsql, which combines SQL with the grammar of graphics for creating visualizations directly against remote databases. Users appreciate its modularity and potential to simplify visualization creation for SQL specialists unfamiliar with R or Python. However, some users question the necessity of a new SQL-like language and express interest in future support for more database backends and deployment options.
Article: 31 min
An investigation into the prevalence and impact of fake stars on GitHub, detailing a peer-reviewed study by Carnegie Mellon University researchers that found approximately 6 million fake stars across 18,617 repositories. The article also discusses how these fake stars are bought and sold in various marketplaces, with prices ranging from $0.03 to $0.85 each. It highlights the role of venture capitalists who use star counts as a sourcing signal for potential investments, often leading to manipulation of star counts by developers or automated systems. The article further analyzes manipulated repositories using GitHub API data and presents metrics such as account age, public repos, followers, and bio presence to identify patterns indicative of fake stargazers. It also discusses the connection between GitHub star counts and startup funding, with VCs explicitly using star counts for sourcing signals during fundraising rounds. The investigation concludes that the problem extends beyond GitHub to other platforms where popularity metrics influence trust, such as npm downloads, VS Code Marketplace extensions, and Twitter promotion.
Discussion (311): 56 min
The comment thread discusses the limitations and controversies surrounding GitHub stars as a metric for evaluating open-source projects, particularly in relation to investment decisions by venture capitalists (VCs). The community debates whether star counts are reliable indicators of project quality, popularity, or user engagement, with concerns about manipulation and gaming. Alternative metrics such as issue activity, contributor retention, and usage telemetry are proposed as more robust signals. The thread also touches on the role of AI in detecting fake activities within the open-source ecosystem.
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Article: 1 hr 39 min
Kefir C17/C23 Compiler is an independent compiler for the C17 and C23 programming languages developed by Jevgenij Protopopov. It supports a wide range of features including complex numbers, bit-precise integers, and GNU C built-ins. Kefir has been validated with 100 software projects, including well-known applications like Nginx, OpenSSL, and Perl. The compiler targets x86_64 architecture and System-V AMD64 ABI, supporting Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, and DragonflyBSD systems. It includes an SSA-based optimization pipeline, DWARF5 debug information generation, position-independent code support, and bit-identical bootstrap capabilities.
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