Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | Jun8's commentslogin

Everyone’s entitled to their opinions and more than a few people have written similar ideas. However, I find this chain of thought both offensive to what being a slave meant and ignorant. If you think being a coder is the modern equivalent to being enslaved either you’ve never worked as an entry level employer in the service industry or else have forgotten your experience.

This was great as it went farther than Rayleigh scattering. On this topic you have to watch this fantastic undergrad physics lecture demonstration: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sJG-rXBbmCc&t=1674s

Related: Sorry, but as an AT fan I couldn't resist: https://adventuretime.fandom.com/wiki/The_Enchiridion_(book)


They cannot receive from federally funded Medicaid but some states have programs or state-funded Medicaid programs that allow non-citizens to benefit. CA and NY do for some categories. See this example for WI: https://www.dhs.wisconsin.gov/medicaid/noncitizens.htm


These programs really support illegal immigrants? They support legal immigrants, for sure, but the question was about illegal immigrants?


The states that run these programs have political leadership that doesn't want to make a distinction between legal and illegal immigrants, and wants to give state -funded benefits to illegal immigrants, and so deliberately doesn't check citizenship or legal residency status when you apply for benefits.


Sociologist Zeynep Tufekci's book Twitter and Teargas explains why, for protest movements to be successful they should have charismatic leaders and decentralized mass protest movements have a much harder time succeeding: https://www.twitterandteargas.org


Related: Rumi’s Mesnevî also opens with “bishnav”, “listen” in Persian.


Note that English audiobooks are typically around 150-170 wpm and fast talkers speak around 200 wpm.


A signal cannot be both time and frequency band limited. Many years ago I was amazed when I read that this fact I learned in my undergraduate is equivalent to the Uncertainty Principle!

On a more mundane note: my wife and I always argue whose method of loading the dishwasher is better: she goes slow and meticulously while I do it fast. It occurred to me we were optimizing for frequency and time domains, respectively, ie I was minimizing time so spent while she was minimizing number of washes :-)


Signals can be approximately frequency and time bandlimited, though, meaning the set of values such that the absolute value exceeds any epsilon is compact in both domains. A Gaussian function is one example.


It’s literally the Heisenberg uncertainty principle, applied to signal processing.


For those who don't get this comment, the Heisenberg uncertainty principle applies to any two quantities that are connected in QM via a Fourier transform. Such as position and momentum, or time and energy. It is really a mathematical theorem that there is a lower bound on the variance of a function times the variance of its Fourier transform.

That lower bound is the uncertainty principle, and that lower bound is hit by normal distributions.


Thats. I always assumed it was more a quirk of the universe than something driven by pure mathematics. Amazing.


I feel the same holds for the 2nd thermodynamic law. It's mathematically imposed that the most probable event will happen eventually, so a tautology. It's not that some gas or molecules cannot be reverted to a previous situation.


Yes that’s fair to say. The tradeoff is mathematically inevitable. Physics just dictates the constants.

It’s also the kind of thinking that can throw a wet blanket on the “beauty” of e.g. Eulers identity (not being critical, I genuinely appreciate the replies I got)


thank you for that reminder/clarification. I forget sometimes how much we think we have clear pictures of how things like that work when really we're just listening to someone trying to explain what the math is doing and we're adding in detail.


Another example: ears are excellent at breaking down the frequency of sounds, but are imprecise about where the sound is coming from; whereas eyes are excellent at telling you where light is coming from, but imprecise about how its frequencies break down.


that's mostly due to light waves being FAR shorter and many orders of magnitude more "sensors"

Ears are essentially 2 "pixels" of sound sensing; and for that limitation they are ABSOLUTELY AMAZING at pointing out the sound source.


> I was minimizing time so spent while she was minimizing number of washes

I'm probably just slow, but I'm not following. Do you mean because you went fast, you had to run another cycle to clean everything properly?

If you haven't already, you should watch the Technology Connections series on dishwashers.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jHP942Livy0


Since I’m rushing to load it as fast as possible the packing is not as good as hers so some dishes are left out. Overall this leads to more loads.


Ahhh that makes sense!


Do you two ever play friendly games of Tetris against one another?


The self loading dishwasher would be the greatest marriage saving invention since car navigation systems.


One of the things that I feel blessed of in my marriage is that my wife has the same way of loading the dishwasher like me. Anyway, fellow husbands think about the dozens of other conflicts that you are might avoiding.


you just need to go "if you want it loaded your way, you do it" and all is solved

And if loading dishwasher is on top of your marital issues you're probably in very happy marriage.

The constant small degree of conflict and strife is key to happiness, people can't be permanently happy, they just find ways to sabotage when they do


If you’ve hit the 500 tabs for a tab group limit on iPhone and opened another group you’re a real tab boarder like me!

Why do I do it? To see all my tabs visually and quickly go back to a particular page. And also as a hard limit to start cleaning up tabs.


Associated article: What baby names reveal about American and British society https://economist.com/interactive/culture/2025/03/20/what-is... from The Economist


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: