Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | haar's comments login

Apple review your apps before approving them onto the App Store.

You can opt to not follow their rules, and they can opt to not approve your app.


Click to watch the keynote... "You must log in to continue."


He was prompted to sell the tank to a museum, or collector - what distinguishes him from a "collector"?


Perhaps the other collector has friends in high places and he doesn't.

Or simply a licence.


Is there a Tank Driving test or something?


Came here to ask this :)

He sounds to have had quite the collection. If he actually had it in a shooting condition complete with a big case of live shells I can imagine it but the article doesn't really specify.


>If he actually had it in a shooting condition complete with a big case of live shells I can imagine it but the article doesn't really specify.

They almost certainly wouldn't omit that kind of thing if he did.


A _tiny_ side note:

You'd be better served using an example.com email address for test accounts over a test.com account, with the former being a reserved domain name and the latter being a real one.

https://www.iana.org/domains/reserved


I think generally your comments would be more well received if you provide links backing up your statements. Currently your posts just seem to be going through criticisms and simply stating "No, reverse of above statement".

This doesn't lead to a discussion, or informative comment threads.

You can ask for the same in return from those you're interacting with, but considering you're a brand new account seemingly created to provide a counterpoint; it felt worth calling out (with your declining Karma).


I tried that and it seemed broken for me, for some reason clicking agree in the text above marked it as passed :confused:


Two schools of thought?

- Those that really try hard to make sure the computer cannot crash.

- Those that see the computer crashing as an inevitability, and want to ensure the appropriate behaviours are in place when it does happen.


When it comes to high risk activities, the preference should be for: those that really try hard to make sure the computer cannot crash and also have plans in place in case it happens.

The two are not mutually exclusive at all.


I think the distinction is more like: those with combat drill practice and those with actual combat experience.


Just as a off-hand personal comment -

If those are the Bose NC700, mine decided after a year to stop charging, and instead smell like melting plastic with smoke coming out of them.

That in itself wouldn't be an _absolute_ terrible thing, except their customer support was _abysmal_.

First of all they suggested I hard-reset the headphones, much to my surprise. When I emphasised that I wouldn't be plugging them in again and repeated the point about smelling melting plastic and smoke coming out, they then asked for pictures before initiating a replacement order process they'd suggested.

I explained that there isn't any visual indicators on the headphones such as melting plastic as I'd noticed it immediately, but they insisted I send them photographs anyway.

On sending them photos as asked (and clarified) they've since gone radio silent for 3 weeks, and ignored any more attempts to get in touch with them.

So yeah... I won't be touching Bose products at all in future.


Strange, I've never had a bad experience with Bose support. On the contrary, when my QC35ii suddenly died, they replaced them (after warranty!) without questions...


yikes. good job they were free.


I introduced ASDF at the company I currently work at and it spread like wildfire to every team.

Having a single version manager that manages the versions for numerous tools across different teams has been invaluable.


I am unable to get a decent wired internet connection in the middle of a city center in the U.K. (13Mbps peak via ADSL).

I’ve recently switched to using a 5G connection for home internet and whilst it’s very early days - a slight sacrifice in latency (ADSL isn’t great there either), and a daily modem restart, is a welcome price to pay for 250Mbps down/50Mbps up (at the same price point).


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

Search: