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Recently I stayed in the Korean hotel where the toilet and the bathroom had the door but made out of semi transparent glass. And the worst, the toilet was next to the glass and walls while on the opposite side was bed. Perfect view and the smell my friend


How in practice their products work? For example Palantir Gotham. What for they use it? I wonder if it’s like Tableau for military?


The military boots on the group consider it a mapping tool, intelligence like ‘bomb here’.


There are demo vids of most their software on YouTube.


Isn’t OpenJDK or other open source sdk enough to not worry about Oracle? Genuine question.


> OpenJDK (the "Name") is a trademark of Oracle America, Inc. ("Oracle") (the "Trademark Owner").

https://openjdk.org/legal/openjdk-trademark-notice.html

Not worth the risk of stepping on their toes. There are plenty of other good programming languages to choose from.


The trademark only matters if you publish the trademarked term somewhere.

If you bake a cake, it probably contains a dozen ingredients that have trademarked names. You aren't in any legal risk from doing so.


Don't get me wrong, I wish your start-up all the best, but this particular application seems so stereotypical by current standards. It's at least four buzzwords combined into one "idea". As someone who has never tried to apply, I wonder how difficult it was to get through Y Combinator's selection process.


Agree, atlassian products are much worse in terms of reliability.


We use Jira. It's a horrendous product, but I cannot remember the last time it was down, unlike Github.


I use self-hosted jira, it's a great product, but I have full control over my teams tasks and workflows and as a tiny team we make them work for us (subject, description, comments, occasional linking to other tickets, assigned to, and status of "open", "blocked" or "done")

Most of the problems I hear about are micromanaging product managers. That's not the fault of the tool itself per-se.


I have so many of tech blogs in my bookmarks. And I open them maybe once per month. How often do you read these blogs?


I read them especially when I'm picking up a new task at my job with new technologies


It may be GPT-4.55 as well. I find it really funny to explain someone non technical versioning of LLM models of different companies.


4.1 coming after 4.5 is plain mockery


That's good information for the FOSS community. Most people I know could go the same way. They are using an operating system solely to launch a web browser and occasionally office applications.


I like the simplicity of this project. I created my own open-source, no tracking captcha using both proof-of-work and image puzzle challenges 4 years ago as a side project for my studies and my former employer's internal hackathon [0].

At the time, it was an idea based on spam prevention active systems. However, for the browser, there are many issues with such solutions—if you can solve it, then bots can too. It slows them down a little, but that's about it.

[0] https://github.com/pilotpirxie/devcaptcha


I found some data on slate - between 7000-14000 sheets to balance an iPad over 3 years of usage. [0]

[0] https://slate.com/technology/2011/09/paper-versus-the-ipad-i...


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