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The reproducible build requirement seems to be a major blocker for many addons, including one I use for Twitch: https://github.com/FrankerFaceZ/FrankerFaceZ/issues/1495#iss...


Anime has had no shortage of adaptations disrespectful of the original. Most of the time it's due to not having enough source material like HBO GoT, which somehow sent Fullmetal Alchemist to 1920s Germany in the first adaptation's movie. But sometimes you get people like Bokurano's director who straight up said he hated the manga.


Fullmetal Alchemist and its movie are both excellent, though, even though they it's vastly different from the source (and of course, the more faithful adaption in Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood).

I think the Lord of the Rings trilogy is also quite good, even though it does stray quite a bit from the books, omissions aside.

It's really hard to make good media and I haven't found any reliable indicators hinting at whether an adaptation will be good or not. I found The Hobbit trilogy to be laborious despite having Peter Jackson at the helm of it as well. Though in that case, maybe the source material itself is the issue.


LOTR was a work of passion , The Hobbit was a mess.

With The Hobit , there was a change in directors (originally Guillermo del Toro) and lots of studio meddling (eg pushing for 3 movies when the original is a 200 pages book, inclusion of LOTR actors for wider appeal).

I think Peter Jackson was brought in to try to salvage what he could.


It also happens sometimes when anime looks to western media. "Tales from Earthsea" and "Lensmen" are notoriously bad adaptations.


I will gladly do the work myself if it means not being stuck behind people chatting up the cashier or doing complicated coupon/return/exchange/gift card transactions. The value is in the consistency and predictability of time spent for someone who just wants a single bag of onions or a single T-shirt. If stores had no-BS lanes (more than just "X items or less" lanes) operated by human cashiers I would use that too, but I suppose we as a society consider it as impolite or bad service, so machine checkout it is.


> The value is in the consistency and predictability

"Consistency" and "predictability" are not the words I associate with self-service checkout. Maybe I'm spectacularly unlucky, but almost every time I use one of these machines with more than 3 products, the machine will get confused about the weight, or decide to randomly check me, or find another reason to lock up and have me wait for a clerk to show up and unlock it, which takes anything between 1 to 5 minutes. And I'm not the only unlucky person, either - I see it happening often enough to others, which usually reassures me that I made a good call standing in the queue for the old-fashion human-operated register.


That's still a lot more predictable than my human cashier experience. I wish I didn't have to dread being held up by the only cashier in store holding a riveting conversation with 4 groups in front of me. Will the other groups hold up the line too? I guess we'll see!


I wish this and Ghostfolio supported stock splits.


You can have surface or elevated heavy rail too. I never understood this fascination with modern light rail.



I'm curious about investing and economy, and I always wonder about P/E ratios like Crowdstrike's (currently 450-something, was over 500 last week).

Some P/E ratios for today, for some companies I find interesting:

- Shopify: 615.12

- Crowdstrike: 455.70

- Datadog: 341.98

- Palantir: 212.34

- Pinterest: 187.67

- Uber: 99.0

- Broadcom: 77.68

- Tesla: 58.33

- Autodesk: 52.36

- Adobe: 49.23

- Microsoft: 37.97

What's going on here? Do investors expect Shopify, for example, to increase their earnings by an order of magnitude despite already having done extraordinarily well in a very competitive market? Can anyone ELI5?


Former equity analyst here. Nobody on "The Street" is actually valuing these companies on PE ratios. Tech companies often intentionally re-invest earnings back into the business in real time and so their reported EPS is often quite low and a poor metric to evaluate the underlying business on. So instead, analysts typically use other metrics like EV/EBITDA or even P/Sales ratios in their valuation models.

Very generally speaking, trading these companies is kind of more of like placing a bet on whether or not their future top-line growth will be dramatically different than the market's current expectations.


The only common belief held by investors in a stock is that the price is going to go up. You may have value investors with a belief that Shopify is undervalued based on earnings, you may have investors betting that the rest of the market will buy Shopify, you may have people who’ve seen the line go up and decided to buy…

Stock prices have been decoupled from earnings or “value” for a long time now and that’s toothpaste we will never get back in the tube. We are in the Robinhood age where you can buy and sell a stock in seconds with no effort.


> Stock prices have been decoupled from earnings or “value”

No, they aren't, but the market can remain irrational for longer than you can remain solvent. It doesn't help that our dear government seems loathe to actually ensure competitive markets.


> We are in the Robinhood age where you can buy and sell a stock in seconds with no effort.

I read somewhere that retail investors are less that 10% of trades.


a fairly small volume of trades can still have a large impact on prices, no?


The greater fool theory: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greater_fool_theory

Essentially, investors buy as long as they think they will be able to sell at a higher price in the future, regardless of economic fundamentals.


> regardless of economic fundamentals.

not regardless, but only if. The future is unknown, so their bet is also based on that unknown. Is it foolish? Who knows. Did nvidia seem foolish if somebody made that bet before their ai boom?


You can also just say things you don't understand are always created by fools.

Now, there are some fools buying these stocks. But to say that each one of these has a high P/E because every shareholder is a fool is very reductionary.


> You can also just say things you don't understand are always created by fools.

Do you have a better hypothesis that would explain the extreme valuations of those stocks?

> But to say that each one of these has a high P/E because every shareholder is a fool is very reductionary.

That's not what "greater fool theory" means.


> Do you have a better hypothesis that would explain the extreme valuations of those stocks?

This isn't crypto, these are real, well run companies with good fundamentals.

The trade may be a bet that they are able to corner the market and extract more value. Maybe, it's wrong, but doesn't mean it's just empty hype.


> these are real, well run companies with good fundamentals

I'm not disputing that. But even "real" companies don't warrant P/E multiples in the three-digit range, unless there's a very good reason to expect them to grow their profits by 10x or more in the foreseeable future – and that has to be the expected value of earnings growth (roughly, the average growth over all possible futures), discounted by the time value of the investment.

P/E multiples over 100 are practically never justifiable, except as "someone else will come along and pay even more" – i.e., the greater fool theory.


Capture the market by not making customers pay full costs => low profits.

Grow revenues without substantially increasing costs (i.e running a loss)

Hope you can turn up the profit dial later.

Seems like the modern way?



Stock buybacks help push these up. Buybacks are a way to pay investors at capital gain tax rates instead of normal income (dividend) rates.


The enterprise value is 80.58B. The gross profit is 2.5B. 80/2.5 is 32, similar to Tesla stock.

The earnings are affected by how much the company reinvests (which shows up as a cost) before it becomes earnings on the accounting sheet.


TBH I don't think many figures here make any financial sense -- but I gotta hold it if my friends all hold it. And once everyone holds it no one is allowed to mass sell it because it's going to hurt your friends, and in finance that's a sin.


With numbers like that, either the market is crazy or the market believes the actual meaningful earnings are substantially higher than the GAAP reported numbers. Although even there the difference would have to be pretty big.


arm is also surprisingly high at 557.95x according to my broker btw. yet it's the only stock in my portfolio that reliably goes up.


Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future performance


30-50 is a reasonable PE range for larger companies.


There's a lot of comments knocking the due diligence, but the call out of the threat vector and timing of this make it a bit hard to brush off as coincidence.


How is Microsoft stock down less than a percent?

The problem was Windows giving arbitrary access to the kernel to software that can be updated OTA without user intervention and allowing that to crash the kernel, right? Wouldn't this mean that Windows is considerably less secure and stable than assumed?


No one assumed Windows were stable and secure that's why they install crowdstrike


Not really. These were kernel modules authorized and installed by the system admin. Of course kernel code runs the risk of crashing your system. The same is true on Linux, and according to another commenter it already has happened with Crowdstrike for Linux


Coincidence?


Probably.


That's bananas. Bro is about to get a knock-knock.


He says he bought seven put contracts for $7.30 at the $185 strike. Absolute max profit, from CS going to -0, would be (185-7.3) x 7 X 100 = ~$125k.

I don’t know if the absolute amount of profit affects decisions here. It seems if he were more certain of what’s going on he would have bet a lot more.


> It seems if he were more certain of what’s going on he would have bet a lot more.

Outside of the HN bubble, $125K is already a pretty big sum of money to get all at once, and unlikely to bring too much scrutiny, if it was somehow not a coincident. Seems like a smart strategy, if the user was sitting on inside information and didn't want to ring too many alarm bells.


However posting on reddit about it, would not be such a smart strategy. I think it's genuinely just a coincidence, WSB gets plenty of worthless "DD" posts every day that end up amounting to nothing.


Fair. But, one more point, even with its pre market drop, it’s still way above that strike, though the value of the put is going to be up.


Yeah, tongue firmly in cheek, but that was a very specific, prescient analysis.


Most timed post ever?


This smells of some inside trading. Someone internal at crowdstrike (or their relative/friend) got wind of this and is trying to save face if they get investigated.

Reading the post its obvious they don’t have a deep understanding of tech, while having that be core to their thesis.

It’s prohibitively hard to hack into a “cloud system” due to few possible entry points - as a reddit commenter said, open S3 buckets are tough to crack!


It wouldn't work, the SEC has incredible tools for finding these things.

Especially for the mom/pop investors.


TLDR context: a randomizer shuffles around game items/skills and even game areas such that the game is completed in a different order. Archipelago shuffles those things among different playthroughs. For example, I might pick up an item in my Pokemon playthrough that unlocks a gun in your Doom playthrough, and when you pick up a keycard it might unlock Ground Pound for a Mario player, and so on. It's like a giant collaborative puzzle game.

Here's an example with 114 playthroughs (includes some game spoilers in the latter half): https://youtu.be/YwUIfxF3ujo


I don't understand this at all. So if you were playing Doom, you might get stuck because someone in some random other game needs to find your key? That sounds awful.


It's intended to be a collaborative endeavor, often played with people who are on a live call with each other. In the kinds of games that work well with randomizers, you usually have multiple different options for how to proceed, and you have to figure out how to check as many item locations as possible to unlock things for yourself and (in the case of Archipelago) for other players.

It doesn't work as well with linear or mostly linear games.

And as another reply noted, sometimes you get stuck ("BKed"). Sometimes each person has more than one game in the randomizer, so they have a couple of options to play further. Sometimes people go watch someone else play until they're unblocked again.


That's definitely a concern. Players call getting stuck by others' checks "BK'd" because a player once went out to get Burger King and returned before they got unwalled. But I think sharing the challenge/frustration and randomness with other players is the fun part, and that's what makes this such an interesting way to play games.

The organizer can also kick inactive players out and release their checks. You could play solo with one or multiple games.


It's too bad that the portable display mode doesn't support touch. That was what stopped me from getting one.


Little odd too, since the keyboard is supported.


I think this stuff (Termux, Winlator, etc.) is a lot more developed and popular than you think. There's GPU acceleration through VirGL so some older games seem to work alright.

I've used Termux to run utilities like ffmpeg and imagemagick on the go. I think one of the limitations for graphical usage might be the limited memory space that it's sharing with Android. It's intriguing that this usbredirect setup allows swap space allocation without root.


Apple isn't reading the room at a time when many older creatives (their customer base) feel threatened by generative AI.


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