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

In what way is Linux kernel "developed in the US"?

Most Linux kernel development is done by people affiliated with US companies, often by employees on company time. Linus moved to the US a long time ago, and the Linux Foundation is based in the US.

Invoices have strict requirements and having the model accidentally hallucinate and make an incorrect invoice could put you in legal trouble. Besides, why would you pay for tokens instead of using a free tool?

"Richest 0.1%" is not some ultra wealthy billionaire class. Making $90k/year in the US already puts you in the 0.1% of richest people worldwide by income. I assume a fair share of the audience here makes this much.

https://www.givingwhatwecan.org/how-rich-am-i

Don't know what the data is for net worth, but given that the vast majority of people worldwide barely live paycheck to paycheck, I assume even a small amount of savings puts you in a very high percentile.


The license also says:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

If the copyright attribution for the original code is missing, that violates the license. MIT is not a "no rights reserved" license like 0BSD or Unlicense.


Yes, so it explicitly requires source attribution

> Finding a specific file by name across the system

> Linux: find / -name "config.txt"

This is not how you find a file across the entire system, you use plocate for that. find would take ages to do what plocate does instantly


Yes and no, with `find` I know I'm getting "live" results from the filesystem, whereas plocate (and s/locate) merely searches through a database updated god knows when, assuming it's even installed and the bulk of the files indexed.

No. "Slower" is not the same as "different functionality".

In fact, "find" is guaranteed to be more correct. And more widely available.


So is 2620:fe::fe for Quad9 DNS

> redefining what SWE means

Redefining the "SW" to stand for "slopware"?


They are promoting their own service


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

Search: