| 1. | | Apple hides a Patriot-Act-busting "warrant canary" in its transparency report (boingboing.net) |
| 380 points by e1ven on Nov 5, 2013 | 214 comments |
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| 2. | | Mangalyaan, India’s First Mars Mission (nextbigwhat.com) |
| 368 points by jayadevan on Nov 5, 2013 | 146 comments |
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| 3. | | Statistics Done Wrong – The woefully complete guide (refsmmat.com) |
| 331 points by bowyakka on Nov 5, 2013 | 70 comments |
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| 4. | | Everpix was great. This is how it died (theverge.com) |
| 320 points by coloneltcb on Nov 5, 2013 | 258 comments |
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| 5. | | Let's have coffee. (tgriff3.com) |
| 299 points by tg3 on Nov 5, 2013 | 142 comments |
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| 6. | | MacKenzie Bezos Writes Amazon Review for Jeff Bezos Biography (amazon.com) |
| 255 points by singular on Nov 5, 2013 | 157 comments |
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| 7. | | A Critique of Lavabit (thoughtcrime.org) |
| 245 points by tptacek on Nov 5, 2013 | 118 comments |
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| 8. | | Debian: Change default desktop to xfce (debian.org) |
| 218 points by r0muald on Nov 5, 2013 | 152 comments |
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| 9. | | Dear Google, Thanks For Copying My Startup But You’re Doing It All Wrong (willweinraub.com) |
| 196 points by willaaye on Nov 5, 2013 | 129 comments |
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| 11. | | We're going to send out invitations to YC interviews close to midnight |
| 181 points by pg on Nov 5, 2013 | 119 comments |
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| 12. | | Angular Announces AngularDart (dartlang.org) |
| 181 points by mushishi on Nov 5, 2013 | 175 comments |
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| 13. | | Introducing Google Helpouts (googleblog.blogspot.com) |
| 173 points by hiroaki on Nov 5, 2013 | 115 comments |
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| 15. | | Tap your iPhone to unlock your Mac (knocktounlock.com) |
| 160 points by jamesmoss on Nov 5, 2013 | 163 comments |
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| 16. | | South Korea is stuck with Internet Explorer for online shopping (washingtonpost.com) |
| 154 points by nichol4s on Nov 5, 2013 | 159 comments |
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| 17. | | InfluxDB – Open-source distributed time-series, events, and metrics database (influxdb.org) |
| 162 points by mnutt on Nov 5, 2013 | 76 comments |
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| 18. | | Bigger than Google Fiber: LA plans citywide gigabit for homes and businesses (arstechnica.com) |
| 155 points by shawndumas on Nov 5, 2013 | 59 comments |
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| 19. | | Features Firefox should implement to weaken Facebook's stranglehold of the web (forteller.net) |
| 146 points by forteller on Nov 5, 2013 | 104 comments |
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| 20. | | Adobe confirms stolen passwords were encrypted, not hashed (csoonline.com) |
| 149 points by monsterix on Nov 5, 2013 | 107 comments |
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| 21. | | Show HN: No YC interview, but here's my application (penflip.com) |
| 148 points by guynamedloren on Nov 5, 2013 | 92 comments |
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| 22. | | Programmable 6,000-Part Drawing Boy Automaton Built 240 Years Ago (thisiscolossal.com) |
| 138 points by nzp on Nov 5, 2013 | 39 comments |
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| 23. | | Everpix is Shutting Down (everpix.com) |
| 139 points by uptown on Nov 5, 2013 | 89 comments |
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| 24. | | Things You Should Know About AWS (highscalability.com) |
| 130 points by jpmc on Nov 5, 2013 | 50 comments |
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| 25. | | Nexus 5 Teardown (ifixit.com) |
| 124 points by mmastrac on Nov 5, 2013 | 118 comments |
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| 26. | | The World Chess Championship is an anachronism (slate.com) |
| 118 points by ssclafani on Nov 5, 2013 | 73 comments |
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| 27. | | Do “Shitty” Work (ryanhoover.me) |
| 116 points by honzzz on Nov 5, 2013 | 28 comments |
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| 28. | | How Minecraft Was Born (wired.com) |
| 114 points by Libertatea on Nov 5, 2013 | 71 comments |
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| 30. | | On Game Development (silvrback.com) |
| 105 points by akbiggs on Nov 5, 2013 | 55 comments |
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There is not a lot worth buying that is long-lasting. Most everything feels mass-produced and cheap, and the things that aren't are pretty obviously marketed at people trying to buck that trend. I don't want to pay 10x more for something without getting that increase in quality, and the fact is that I won't get it.
There is no reason to trust the banks. They're a bunch of fucking crooks, and the smaller the bank (or credit union) the less room they have to be crooks.
Credit rating is bogeyman. Ever since I was old enough to spend money I was told to worry about my credit rating, and to take out credit cards, and do all that other stuff. These messages occurred at about the same time we saw everyone getting hammered over credit-card debt, and heard the Republicans chest-beating over sound fiscal policy. It's plainly obvious that you aren't expected to actually be fiscally sound--otherwise why would they keep flooding you with credit invitations?
Cars are expensive and limited in utility. Insurance rates are high despite companies never actually helping you when you need it, gas is expensive as hell and is clearly being gamed in the commodities market, and commuting is bullshit as white-collar work becomes either redundant or distributed.
Our parents set our city planning up for failure. I live in the fourth-largest and sprawliest metropolitan area in North America (Houston). Every decent improvement is blocked by some greedy Boomer sonovabitch whose business or view would be mildly inconvenienced by the impact of construction. We have food deserts, and suburbs actively designed to discourage walking.
Our government doesn't care about us. Nobody in my generation believes that Social Security or Mediwhatever will still be around to support us in our old age. Nobody believes that our vote matters, that the politicians sitting in office will kowtow to anybody who won't pay for a fucking dinner or make a fucking donation.
Our government not only doesn't care about us, it schemes to make things worse. Because the Boomers and Generation X are still considered important, their views and more importantly fears are turned into policy. This gives us the TSA, crazy FDA regs, patent trolling, and all sorts of barriers to progress.
Our companies don't care about us. Congratulations, we're all contract workers now. Pensions? Hah. Healthcare? Cheapest we can justify. Vacation? Go fuck yourself you needy snowflake. No loyalty, nada, and they expect that they can reach you on the phone or email at all times.
We don't believe in advertising. We've had so much marketed to us for so long so pervasively that we genuinely do not respond to advertising. It's a developed blind spot, and with the social tools we have available we see no need to be advertised to--we know what we want, and can just search for it.
We don't believe in the police. Police are pretty obviously not policing neighborhoods and aren't on the beat--they're chaotic actors who get involved and always always always make things worse. The news is filled with stories of DAs fucking over little guys, of state troopers harassing innocent drivers to raise a buck, of SWAT teams kicking in homes and shooting dogs.
We don't believe in the news. It's become easier than ever to find different coverage on the same stories, and to spot patterns in news-speak. Every talking head sounds the same, and the news is always obviously slanted to one side or the other. There is no journalistic integrity anymore, there is nothing in the mainstream news we can trust.
We believe in each other. The sheer amount of fakeness delivered through ads and bullshit mass media has made us very interested in "real" things, in hanging out with our friends, in starting families. It's not that we're self-centered--it's that so much of the rest of the world is presented through some exploitative nostalgia that we hold it suspect.