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It’s a good thing because it’s definitely an interesting company worth investing into long term. But not at this valuation. 10% seems reasonable given the profits perspective.

This is misleading and not the point of the wealth tax.

If you’re lucky enough that you don’t need to work for your income, you should be taxed. A lot. How much? Enough to make sure you don’t become so rich that your children don’t need to work.

Being rich is not fair, it’s very rarely deserved, and it needs to be taxed unfairly.


This is great news, maybe people are going to start caring about their electronic gadgets more and not treat them as disposable? Maybe longevity is going to become a criteria again?

The blokes in Agbogbloshie will hopefully make more money from recycled e-waste.

It has been a disturbing trend on TikTok to see all the livestreamers in the united states showing how to recover gold and metals from e-waste... it used to be an exceptionally dirty and low margin business only done by the world's poorest. Now it has become valuable enough, and the economic situation in the usa has deteriorated enough, that americans are doing it in their homes and backyards.


And then Apple pay and Google pay are not going to implement it, and nobody is going to use it.

Thankfully the EU is not against forcing these monopolies to support open markets.

Apple just had to open the NFC reader to alternative payment providers in the EU (Like PayPal) so what makes you think Apple Pay and Google Pay would be any different?

This is incredibly light in details, no verifiable claim as far as I can tell.

(I’m sure they’re not lying, but we’re not learning anything here)


It reads more like a PR piece than technical article.


They can’t disclose the technical details yet. They did say a detailed write up is coming.


Does it mean I can finally run Slack on Asahi?


From the paper, Elevator currently supports only single-threaded binaries, does not support binaries using exception handling, has unsupported x64 extensions, and does not support self-modifying or JIT-compiled code. Slack is Electorn based, so t embeds Chromium and Node and depends on V8.

Maybe try an emulator? There's also this project I found: https://github.com/andirsun/Slacky


Just curious, is there anything the Electron wrapper provides over the web/PWA version, other than the drawing feature?


They evolve and they don’t. People call things whatever they want. How is it going for X/Twitter?


Twitter/X is a company, it calls itself whatever it wants, and is likely registered somewhere under a specific name. Okay, people don’t call it X, the same way people pronounce IKEA weirdly or refer to vacuums as hoovers.

Language is a malleable, artificial construct. What’s your point? That some people are stuck in their ways? Because the comment I was responding to was appalled that someone dares use the modern spelling for a country.


I have renamed the bird Türkiye . It was called Turkey in reference to the country, I think it’s fair to rename the bird too.


So, nothing new?

The cosmic ray hypothesis has been dominant for a few years now.

This magazine…


> So, nothing new?

> The cosmic ray hypothesis has been dominant for a few years now.

> This magazine…

I think saying "This magazine…" as if the flaws of Quanta are well understood and agreed may need additional elaboration. If you mean that experts have known this—well, the role of Quanta is to disseminate and explain expert research to scientifically literate non-experts; it is not meant to be distributing the latest research itself.


> the role of Quanta is to disseminate and explain expert research to scientifically literate non-experts; it is not meant to be distributing the latest research itself

Quanta articles are invariably horribly written, horribly explained, and constantly do this thing whether they simultaneously are pretentious and over complicate things while also belabouring simple, elementary concepts. Essentially it’s the worst of every world.

And that’s to say nothing about how they click bait everything.


Well, let's say I just don't understand the popularity of this magazine on HN.


Why not explain why you think that? We can't all be perpetually online to have an opinion about a one website that shows up occasionally on this site.


Not the guy you’re responding to but Quanta articles are invariably horribly written, horribly explained, and constantly do this thing whether they simultaneously are pretentious and over complicate things while also belabouring simple, elementary concepts. Essentially it’s the worst of every world.


I just contributed this [1] which does what you want for seccomp. Well, not by default, but profiling is now effective against this attack.

Oh, an this [2] just happened

[1] https://github.com/containers/oci-seccomp-bpf-hook/pull/209 [2] https://github.com/moby/moby/pull/52501


Blanket blocking socketcall() caused regressions for all 32-bit applications trying to make sockets. In theory, glibc disables socketcall when running on kernel version >= 4.3. In practice, Debian/Fedora/Ubuntu all set glibc's "expected kernel version" to 3.2, so socketcall() is still used on most 32-bit glibc binaries shipped.

https://salsa.debian.org/glibc-team/glibc/-/blob/sid/debian/...

https://src.fedoraproject.org/rpms/glibc/blob/rawhide/f/glib...


That’s… great. But who runs containerised 32 bit applications?


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