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

Wait, is it expected for them to be able to change? According to this SO answer [0] it's only really possible through GDB or "nasty hacks" as there's no API for it.

[0] https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/38205/change-enviro...


The process itself (including other threads) can call setenv whenever it wants.

That's a fermented food too!

> It's not X — it's Y.

The "author" sure did...


That's right:

> Kagi Assistant's web tool uses Kagi Search, and that has nothing to do with this subscription plans discussion, we're not changing anything there. The same applies to LLM-powered features in Kagi Search, like Quick Answer.


Luckily they're not changing that part.

> Kagi Assistant's web tool uses Kagi Search, and that has nothing to do with this subscription plans discussion, we're not changing anything there. The same applies to LLM-powered features in Kagi Search, like Quick Answer.


They're cool, but centralized and, well, a ring. I like how this is a decentralized graph, the next step in their evolution.


I think Apple is just really careful about how they segment their product line for each use case, and would never go for a "jack of all trades" solution like this.


Your "violent or not" point is really interesting. Without a world model that includes a model of violence, whether that's instinctual or learned, it would not distinguish DOOM and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chex_Quest


> For starters, it is spelled “Alena” so people who see it in writing pronounce it the way it is spelled [...] Yes, it’s spelled with an e because there is a letter exactly like that but with two dots above it in the Russian language and it sounds more like o

I know the article is mostly about speech, but I wish the immigration process or w/e just went with <Alyona>.

<ё> in Russian never represents anything close to <e> in English. It's /ʲo/ (superscript j for palatalization of the previous consonant) and iotized to /jo/ word initially. Its use over <йо>/<ьo> is strictly etymological - йогурт "yogurt" could've easily been ёгурт.

We're already picking correspondences by sound, like transliterating <л> as <l> and not <n>. There's no reason to complicate things by bringing in Russian orthographic rules into English.


Reminds me of a 2011 reddit post (obviously in the format of a rage comic) that led to the formation of r/playdate, although that shifted to just looking for people to play games with over the years.

https://www.reddit.com/r/gaming/comments/j8hpz/idea_for_subr...

I love seeing the original concept brought back with a cool UI.


I remember the formation of /r/playdate! Good times, I remember getting very drunk on voice chat, I barely remember what we were playing, maybe CSS


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

Search: