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This is awesome. I just maxxed out my tokens in Shelley, but was able to vibe code this Rails app that lets anyone register an aircraft and then fly it in a synchronized world interfaced through a Garmin G1000 knock off. Sign up (feel free to use a fake email address) and set up a flight now and let's see how many aircraft we can get going! If this is a cool idea let me know and I'll probably end up paying to continue developing this :)

https://exexe.exe.xyz/cockpit


So… hear me out. Could I connect this to an airline’s paid in-flight WiFi network, and then broadcast an open network to effectively open up access to all other passengers for free? If enough WiFi pirates do this on flights perhaps it would kill paid WiFi entirely (just need enough Good Samaritans)

(And yes I know there are other bypasses you can do like spoofing MAC addresses to get around some device count restrictions)


Really what you should be doing is setting the SSID to "$2 in flight WiFi!" and selling access.

You'll make tens of ... dollars every flight.



Ok Lol but they got arrested for stealing others people data not for making a wifi on the flight. That's different.


>That's different.

Is it though? It genuinely looks like you might get caught doing this, and I'm sure you are at least breaking airline policy, even if you're not charging money; not to mention if you charge.


Airlines throttle per device, unfortunately.


These travel routers have an option to impersonate the device you are using to get round this.


The throttling is "per device", not "per type of device". If you connect 1 travel router and use it to share internet with >1 user, those users are sharing the capped capacity the plane gives to "one connected device".


That’s not going to be an issue at all domestically soon unless you fly one of the cheapest airlines.

Delta has had free WiFi for awhile now as does JetBlue and I believe Southwest. It’s coming soon to AA and United.

I fly Delta 99% of the time.


“Soon”? Why would they give up that money though? I feel like there’s so little competition they aren’t feeling the pressure. Otherwise everyone else would have been hurting 15+ years ago when JetBlue started their free Wi-Fi.


Why? Because Starlink. Starlink requires airlines to offer it for free (apparently, for now), and the airlines that have started offering it are making a big deal out of it because it's actually usable compared to a lot of the LEO- or ground-based offerings before.

United was looking to have its regional fleet done by end of this week, Qatar has finished their 777s; Hawaiian's entire fleet is done, so is airBaltic's. WestJet are also close.

British Airways is starting the rollout now, so are SAS, Air France and a few others.


Oh wow. I didn’t know that. People love to hate on Musk but that is exactly the sort of uncommon move that I’d expect out of him. Most companies would never challenge the “rights” of their customer (here the airline) to nickel and dime their way to incremental profit.

>Starlink requires airlines to offer it for free

What's the catch?


Once one airline has it, the other airlines will have to buy it. But Delta is already using another satellites internet service.


Delta and America already are offering free wi-fi on most domestic routes.


Just got back from several flights with Hawaiian, free Starlink on every one.


Maybe. And then get throttled or banned for using too much bandwidth. You don't need this product to do this though, you can do the same thing with a laptop and your phone


They throttle.


Android phones can share their wifi connection like this.


(some android phones: my Pixel can, Samsung can't, although it seems that other Samsungs do have it.)


I installed another app on my S10 to enable this. It's called "Wi-Fi Hotspot" and it works pretty well


Insane to me that Apple still does not support this.


Not that surprising. Unless you’re going to sell access to that hotspot and give Apple a 30% cut, it really wouldn’t interest Tim Cook.


Is it? I can’t picture a real situation where other devices would prefer connecting to mine, running down its battery, instead of directly to the wifi it’s broadcasting.

Besides, at least where I live, 5G/4G is often faster than shared wifi. I’d be surprised if this is used by more than 0.1% of all users.


The situation is almost always “weird networking.” A WiFi hotspot too new for a device you have. Captive authentication you can’t solve on your e-reader (this was the case for me at college). Or, as I’m using one right now, as a simple booster (with a battery plugged in).

Given that this has been available on Android for years, I do not consider it an overly difficult feature for Apple to implement.


I carry a burner Android just for this feature. Great for sharing with my iPhone and iPad on a flight.


Playing with fire. It could be potentially construed as an attempt to steal personal info.


I’ve done this. Works fine. Issue in general is the airlines throttle the heck out of devices.


I basically do this so my gf and I can connect all of our phones and computers.


Probably. I do this with a GLinet and it works great.


Flight internet usually comes with a data quota.


Yes


Why would this kill paid wifi? A bunch of airlines are already switching to free wifi anyways, but the ones that aren't seem unlikely to just kick back as an army of easily-identifiable tech bros attempt to defraud them. It's a bit like trying to steal money from the bank after you've handed them your ID and debit card.


The mmWave functionality requires a glass section on the frame as it can't pass through metals. They've redesigned this on the 17 Pro[1], but likely didn't find a way to integrate into the Air's design.

  When Camera Control was introduced on iPhone 16, Apple moved the 5G mmWave antenna to pass through the back glass of the iPhone, that way it was no longer something you needed to see.

  Now though, with iPhone 17 Pro – that can’t work. The iPhone is now largely made of aluminum, requiring Apple to revert to an old design technique: a glass cutout for 5G mmWave passthrough
1. https://9to5mac.com/2025/09/09/iphone-17-pro-mmwave-glass-cu...



Aha! I'd forgotten where I'd read it, but it makes sense it was here. Thank you!


Pretty amazing how DeepSeek started the visual reasoning trend, xAI featured it in their latest release, and now Anthropic does the same.


I took DS visual reasoning to be an elegant misdirect from how much slower DS returns your query's output.


You almost have to do this, or atleast some sort of progress bar, else people will think their requests failed and spam the server.


I thought my internet cut out the first time I used o1.



Do you know how to actually disable these new features (i.e. the elements that were added within Gmail, Docs, etc.)? I'm not seeing where they can be disabled and Google Workspace support was not able to point me in the right direction either...


A little searching suggests you may have to contact support to get the toggles: https://support.google.com/mail/thread/318850451?hl=en&msgid...

I don't have a good way to verify that though.


$3.37 per CPI Inflation Calculator, though it may be even higher given food has increased above the average.


Sure, but I'm not inclined to believe that number on its own. Practically, even the cheapest grocer like Aldi could turn out to be expensive than the quoted $3.37.


Rice and beans - been my staple for most of my life - isn't too much more than this. Two cup dried rice + two can beans is around $4 and that is generally enough for me. Although it is much better with a few eggs and some hot sauce or salsa as well.


>Two cup dried rice + two can beans is around $4

USD? Wow, you're getting ripped off big time.


Get those beans dry and you'll have $ for salsa :D


The CPI is, for largely good reasons, primarily tracking things other than groceries, so it's arguably indeed pretty useless in comparing these over time.


I'd bet it's closer to $5 now to buy equivalent food in practice.


Can you provide some more information as to what the ERP system is built on? (i.e. open source software, "from scratch", etc?)


Latest Oracle JDE E1


I forget where I ran across it, but one interesting adoption of URL design is to make the root of the directory part of the site's domain name. I.e. there was someone's website that was shared on HN, where their name was assembled with the domain name, TLD, and some characters after the first slash:

  firstna.me/lastname/
  firstna.me/lastname/about


One example that springs to mind is the documentation site for WLED, an incredibly powerful microcontroller firmware for controlling addressable LEDs:

https://kno.wled.ge/


This arguably started with del.icio.us.


And I'm so glad they eventually registered delicious.com (or whatever it was) because remembering exactly where those "."s went was a real pain.


For another example, the recently featured https://fastht.ml/


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