This is default featured slide 1 title

Go to Blogger edit html and find these sentences.Now replace these sentences with your own descriptions.

This is default featured slide 2 title

Go to Blogger edit html and find these sentences.Now replace these sentences with your own descriptions.

This is default featured slide 3 title

Go to Blogger edit html and find these sentences.Now replace these sentences with your own descriptions.

This is default featured slide 4 title

Go to Blogger edit html and find these sentences.Now replace these sentences with your own descriptions.

This is default featured slide 5 title

Go to Blogger edit html and find these sentences.Now replace these sentences with your own descriptions.

Friday, April 7, 2023

New best story on Hacker News: Building GitHub with Ruby on Rails

Building GitHub with Ruby on Rails
589 by Lukas_Skywalker | 275 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: Grid World

Grid World
604 by tobr | 89 comments on Hacker News.


Thursday, April 6, 2023

New best story on Hacker News: WebGPU is available in Chrome 113

WebGPU is available in Chrome 113
599 by itsuka | 301 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: Neural Networks: Zero to Hero

Neural Networks: Zero to Hero
556 by whereistimbo | 64 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: Dang is going to have 65,535 karma points soon

Dang is going to have 65,535 karma points soon
527 by codetrotter | 322 comments on Hacker News.


Wednesday, April 5, 2023

New best story on Hacker News: CAN Injection: Keyless car theft

CAN Injection: Keyless car theft
445 by kotaKat | 253 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: How to do hard things

How to do hard things
428 by tacon | 147 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: Deep Learning Foundations to Stable Diffusion

New best story on Hacker News: Creator of Catan, Klaus Teuber, has died

Creator of Catan, Klaus Teuber, has died
502 by miiiiiike | 120 comments on Hacker News.


Tuesday, April 4, 2023

New best story on Hacker News: iOS lets carriers add WiFi networks that you can’t remove or stop from joining

iOS lets carriers add WiFi networks that you can’t remove or stop from joining
579 by newZWhoDis | 222 comments on Hacker News.
Well this was a major surprise so I figured I’d share it here to get some eyeballs on it. Essentially, the latest iOS (16.4 at post time) allows your cellular carrier (via eSIM) to add “managed networks” to your device. These networks cannot be removed, they cannot have “automatically join” disabled, and they have equal priority with your real, personal networks. So guess what happens when your neighbors get a wifi/modem combo that blasts a free hotspot SSID? Not only does it pollute the already crowded 2.4ghz band, your iPhone will often prefer this connection over your real /local wifi (despite said wifi being at 1 bar). As of post-time, there is no way to remove these networks short of completely disabling cell service/removing the eSIM and resetting all network settings. You can see this for yourself by going to WiFi/“edit” and scrolling down. Edit: to clarify, I can disable “auto join”, but in 4-5 minutes all of my devices have auto-join turned back on. I’m guessing it re-syncs with the carrier profile. Also, this does not seem to be eSIM or SIM related it can happen on both.

New best story on Hacker News: How to be a -10x Engineer

How to be a -10x Engineer
482 by surprisetalk | 318 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: Launch HN: OutSail (YC W23) – Wingsails to reduce cargo ship fuel consumption

Launch HN: OutSail (YC W23) – Wingsails to reduce cargo ship fuel consumption
447 by jmoorebeek | 211 comments on Hacker News.
Hi HN! I’m Joseph, and along with Arpan and Bailey we are the founders of OutSail Shipping ( https://ift.tt/WMPU0As ). We’re building a sail the size of a 747 that rolls up into a shipping container. When deployed, it will generate thrust from the wind to reduce the fuel consumption of a cargo ship. An array of these devices will reduce fuel consumption on ships by up to 20%. These sails are easily stowed and removed to cause no interference with cargo operations. Here’s a short video showing our prototype: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VUpVqzpym54 . Sails powered ships for millennia; but then the convenience of energy-dense fuels displaced sails. As ship speeds eventually exceeded wind speeds, the consensus became that sails had no place in shipping and were relegated to hobbyists and sport. Fast forward a century and a half, and maritime shipping, like all other industries, is facing a reckoning to mitigate the greenhouse gasses produced by their activities. The International Maritime Organization (IMO) has introduced new regulations which use a vessel’s Carbon Intensity Indicator (CII) to grade ships. This grading scale becomes more aggressive over time, and any ship with a poor grade must take corrective action. The corrective actions can be as non-invasive as reducing speed (aka: slow steaming) or as extreme as a retrofit to use a different, cleaner fuel source. This costs millions and takes a ship out of commission for months, and it’s difficult to ensure your (now more expensive) fuel is available at every port of call. Ship owners are hedging their bets that slow steaming will dominate their future, with ship order books full to reflect the increased capacity needed when containers take 20% longer to cross the ocean. Or option three. There is sufficient wind on the ocean to power the entire shipping industry, if you’re willing to grab it. Wind Assisted Ship Propulsion (WASP) devices can be used as a corrective action to improve a vessel’s CII rating, without reducing ship speed or changing the route. In other words, a return of sails. We are hardware engineers with over two decades of experience between us, working at Tesla, SpaceX, JPL, Relativity, and some startups. The idea for OutSail came from Arpan and Joseph getting coffee after work one day. When we asked each other “What would you do if you weren’t building satellites?” maritime cargo came up from both sides; Arpan from having studied the industry for opportunities to reduce emissions, and Joseph from a love of hydrodynamics and maybe too many sea-shanties. Bailey and Arpan, meanwhile, had been looking at working on bicycling infrastructure. What brought the three of us together was actually a Dungeons & Dragons game where we realized we made a good team! We settled on OutSail as a good fit for our hardware hacking mentality, trading in our druids staffs for spanners. Aerodynamically, sails are simply vertical wings. Wind blowing across the vessel causes the sail to generate lift and drag, and the resultant vector has some forward component to pull the ship through the water. However, if the wind comes from an angle too close to the direction of travel, there is no thrust. As an added complication, the sail only sees the relative wind. If the ship travels faster, the wind will appear to come from closer and closer to the direction of travel, even if the true wind is coming from perpendicular to your course! Despite this, standard sails can still produce forward thrust as long as the wind is at least 20 degrees off from directly in front of the vessel. This is how our sails can still save power, even on a fast moving vessel. There are many sail technologies out there. A common question we get asked is “Are you going to use flettner rotors/suction airfoils?”. Both of these technologies use power supplied by the ship to increase the lift produced by a surface; rotor-sails spin, and suction airfoils…suck? Each of these have a place, especially at low vessel speeds. But our customers ask us for a solution that works for container ships cruising at the relatively high speed of 22kt. At these speeds, the relative wind is almost always ahead of you, so lift/drag becomes more important. Powered sails suffer from poor lift/drag, both from the high induced drag from very high lift coefficients, and system losses from drawing on ship’s power. So no we are not going with flettner rotors/suction airfoils. While they are the new exciting technology on the block, if you factor in their power usage and high drag ratio, they are just not as practical as a simple sail. So now that we’ve given a general summary of sailing, it’s time to explain how a 747 wing will ever fit inside a 9ft tall cargo container. It’s simple really: imagine a tape measure. In a tape measure a thin, flexible strip of metal is wound into a spiral. Then, when the metal is uncoiled, it naturally returns to its original shape. That’s exactly how we plan to make our sails. The skin of our sail or the inner spars (we haven’t finalized our design) will be made of tape measure like material (2mm thick steel) and the wing will be able to extend out of the cargo container. The video in the first paragraph explains this in a bit more detail. By fitting our sail into a cargo container we allow for our device to be installed on any cargo ship right at port. Remember how we mentioned that some shippers are ordering a lot more ships and some ships are getting retrofitted with new fuel? Well, shipyards are backed up for the next 5 years. By making a device that requires no shipyard to install, not only will we drastically outcompete other retrofit WASP companies in terms of deployment cost, but we will be the only company with a product shippers can put on their ship without a multiple year wait time. Do you have any interesting stories around sailing or wind tech? We would love to hear your ideas, experiences, and feedback on any and all of the above!

Monday, April 3, 2023

New best story on Hacker News: Midjourney CEO Silencing Satire About Xi Jinping

Midjourney CEO Silencing Satire About Xi Jinping
415 by remote_phone | 299 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: Saying Goodbye to GitHub

Saying Goodbye to GitHub
455 by donutshop | 374 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: The Mullvad Browser

The Mullvad Browser
486 by Foxboron | 190 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: Italian privacy regulator bans ChatGPT

Italian privacy regulator bans ChatGPT
506 by sarusso | 677 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: The day Windows died

The day Windows died
595 by alexzeitler | 453 comments on Hacker News.


Saturday, April 1, 2023

New best story on Hacker News: Postgres as a graph database

Postgres as a graph database
505 by elorant | 110 comments on Hacker News.