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I am guessing socialism, because that's the context it was replied in


Correct. The latter. I think capitalism and corporatism are interchanged a lot but socialism has gone way beyond describing economics.


Most of what he is complaining about are regulations, which has more to do with a free or a closed market economy rather than the ownership and investment into the production mechanisms


Ah my bad. I was mostly talking about people wanting govt to intervene with prices of things they're buying (employee time, hospital visit, google play store). Apologies, english isn't my first language.


FWIW I think the meaning is clear — "socialism for X, capitalism for Y" is a pretty common template that people use in the exact way as your blog post, even if it doesn't exactly fit the dictionary definition of either word.


Rules for thee, not for me is the generic version.


"Regulations when I buy, free market when I sell"

Just doesn't have the same oomph to it as your wording


Haha, yes!


The verge article paints a different picture, which I kind of agreed with (as someone who has grown as a developer in last 5-10 years). But then again, I haven't contributed to Linux so it might be a bad thing. FWIW, the problem with email clients seem to be with Google and Apple. My Outlook mail client handles the text email very well!


Been using this for a month, the app is very well designed, and $5 is nothing compared to joy I get by collecting colours during commute and sharing the exact code when I am trying to design with physical world as an inspiration.


Thank you!


I don't even remember why scroll lock exists


It's an early implementation of the same idea as the mouse scroll wheel. Engage scroll lock, and the arrow keys are used for scrolling the current text view instead of moving the cursor.

The idea of also using it to pause scrolling console text, I think, originated in Linux.


There was a PC Magazine utility from the 80s, WAITASEC.COM, that allowed you to use Scroll Lock to page through command output that had scrolled off the screen.


On a Linux/Unix non-X system terminal, enabling Scroll Lock makes the Up and Down arrows function like a scroll wheel instead of iterating over command history like they usually would.


I think only Lotus 1-2-3 actually used it, but Lotus 1-2-3 was literally the entire reason to use early PCs. With Scroll Lock active, in Lotus the movement keys would shift the whole spreadsheet, keeping the current cell highlight steady on the screen, rather than move the current cell highlight.


It's handy to lock your cursor on the right PC if you use Synergy [1] but aside from that I've never used it

[1] https://symless.com/synergy


At this point: Excel users.


On fullsize keyboards, Num Lock is less useful than Scroll Lock.


Numlock would make a lot more sense if fullsize keyboards both didn't have arrow keys at all and also split the 0 numpad key into numlock & 0, so that way it's easier/simpler/ergonomic to toggle. We could also do away with Page Up, Page Down, Home, End, Delete, and Insert, since they're already integrated into the numlock key.


The numlock key exists today because of the keyboard layout of the original IBM PC (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:IBM_Model_F_XT.png).

That original keyboard did not have separate arrow and pgup/pgdown (cursor control) keys, and numlock was how one toggled between the calculator keypad being 'numbers' vs. cursor controls (see the image above). The current 'separated' cursor controls and number pad layout arrived sometime during the IBM AT era, and at that point the 'numlock' key started to make less sense. It was kept around for backwards compatibility with old software that used the state of the numlock key to change its behavior (and/or that relied on the exact scan codes output by the number keypad in combination with the state of the numlock bit).


You see, my comment was made because I do believe that numlock makes sense. The ANSI layout is wider than it needs to be because of duplicate keys separating the main area from the numpad. Remove those keys, move the numpad further in, put numlock in a more ergonomic spot, and now they everyday keyboard has become more compact, ergonomic, and useful.


I knew, but had always wondered why anyone needed it.

Then, one day, on a bare terminal, output was flying by that I needed to read. The lightbulb went on, and I pressed the key.


I map it to lock the screen which makes so much more sense!


Thank baby jeebus for Wikipedia:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scroll_Lock


Aren't any kind of financial products, insurance tech then? You can theoretically sell them with a couple of clicks.


Won't be able to use it productively without support from Sublime Text :(


VC will not participate in the next round, or vote favourably with founders in next board meeting, or spread false news about work ethics or some other crap, which can lead to a down round. Have seen all the three happen.


I've lately seen myself using the !g flag for a lot of my searches because it seems inevitable when DDG results don't match up.


> I've lately seen myself using the !g flag for a lot of my searches because it seems inevitable when DDG results don't match up.

DDG and Verbatim-mode Google searches are pretty equivalent, in my experience. Google seems better because it makes the assumption that what you "really" want is what everyone else wanted, which is annoying when it's actually getting it wrong.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=12045959


Huh, surprisingly for me it was the opposite. I tried to switch to DDG 4,3,2 years ago, eventually coming back to Google due to the need to use !g very often. But in the last year or so it became a non-issue, so I finally switched.


Same with me - I use DDG for my main search engine for the last year or so, and do a g! search about a dozen times per month since.


I made https://monitorcertificates.com from this simple script - https://hackernoon.com/monitor-your-https-certificate-expiry...

It reminds you when your certificates are due for renewal, or if they have been configured incorrectly.


The way you sell it seems pretty effective. Do you have any "big boy" clients yet?


No, mostly devs who have been burned by bad certs, and devs who's boss bought a certificate and now doesn't remind devs when they get a "reminder" to renew.


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