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

Outdoor gear also contains pfas.

Rust should add a way to sandbox every dependency.

It's basically what we're already doing in our OSes (mobile at least), but now it should happen on the level of submodules.


How would that work? Rust "crates" are just a compilation unit that gets linked into the resulting binary.

This is a nice exercise for compiler researchers.

I suppose it can be done on various levels, with various performance trade-offs.


Git is still pretty lacking in the area of big files. This is quite annoying if you're dealing with big deep learning data. So your LEGO vacuum robot could actually benefit from a better Git.

Didn’t dvc try to fill this niche and absolutely fail at it?

Good artists enable others, great artists enable only Apple users.

I wouldn't be surprised. Their 3D solid modeling is done on Windows, so why not their electronics.

Isn't there some kind of three-strikes approach which judges can use against repeat offenders?

They reserve that approach for drug laws that fill prisons.

The trick is to make a robot that has a Lidar and a camera, then train a model that can replace the Lidar.

(Lidar can of course also be echolocation).


The harder trick is to do it cost effectively. I picked up my Roborock for $200 and it has LiDAR. Works really well.

200$ is insane, sounds like economies of scale is really working for them

I don’t follow models and there are a ton of them. Here is an example $280 version with lidar.

https://a.co/d/0cuCgBSZ


Yeah this would help a lot to collect good trainable data, teleoperating the robot around and collecting large amount of good data is quite hard

I thought the trick is just to use an xbox kinect. But lidar got a lot cheaper in the recent years.

Most real projects are skyscrapers built on the foundations of a shed.

Can it render SVG with all of its features? (Does it support all modern 2D drawing primitives)

There is an Svg widget. It only supports static images, not animations, though this is certainly something I'm interested in.

It does support the modern 2D imaging model. It is in transition from using "Vello GPU" (aka Vello Classic) to the understory imaging abstraction, which means it can use any competent 2D renderer, including Skia.


But can it withstand Qualcomm's patent lawyers?

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

Search: