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

Ah the Silver Jubilee Mugs, we had a grey one with that weird bumpy ceramic effect.

Anyway, on the cameras you're spot on. I do wonder how much UK cameras are used though - like a microcosm of our national potential, the cameras have potential but how often are they really used: half are likely faulty, most have the person monitoring them on a tea break when something happens and it seems to need an extreme act of violence before they get used in earnest.


We lived in Manc in 1977 (Dad was a soldier and did a year at UMIST to get to Lt Col, family in tow). Then we buggered off to Germany (again). For a kiddie, I had an amazing life! We were posted to Cyprus too.

Our Jub mugs were mostly transfer printed. We had coloured ones and ones with a sort of silvery monochrome effort.

I'm not too sure that the meme that the UK is the most monitored nation in the world is too true.

You probably remember 1984. I went to a jolly posh school in Devon (Wolborough Hill School, Newton Abbot) and we had to discuss 1984 in 1984.

Do you feel too monitored? I suspect that monitoring is under-reported elsewhere.


Prices vary around the world but this seems pricey: they say it's at cost but it feels like a premium/markup on London prices, not a city known for being cheap!

Surely most people dropping work to focus on blogging would be looking for minimal costs (whilst they have limited income as they hone a skill) rather than maximal costs?!

If you rent sharing for maybe $1,500 pcm and then spend $50 a day you'd finish with $500 left vs Inkhaven.


> they say it's at cost but it feels like a premium/markup on London prices, not a city known for being cheap!

If you've ever looked at housing (or anything else) in the SFBA, yes, it's more expensive than even London. (Salaries are higher too).

> Surely most people dropping work to focus on blogging would be looking for minimal costs (whilst they have limited income as they hone a skill) rather than maximal costs?!

Maybe. In my experience when you're trying to switch careers, getting to the point where you can earn income (or discover that you can't) as quickly as possible is more effective than trying to extend your runway by cutting expenses. Others may make a different judgement call.


The tool capability is really impressive. The model is good too, although unforgiving of typos! (hardly surprising given the small size) When I had typos it would suddenly become rather literal


The colour corrections are also annoying when you're trying to take photos of things like cuts and bruises as you want an accurate record (eg to show a doctor) but instead it effectively says "let me clean that up for you" and you're left with the blemishes you wanted diminished!


Interesting because this empowers the user rather than making us the product - we need more of these use cases.

The one thing that seems unfortunate is the choice of name: Piper is already in use in a fairly related area, as a text to speech tool: https://github.com/OHF-Voice/piper1-gpl

I usually think such concerns are lawyers being OTT because they raise them for any potential clash, even when it's clearly very distant and unrelated but something like this is software and heavily using speech, so the potential for the average person misunderstanding and assuming a connection is that much greater.


I agree that the name clash is an issue, I immediately thought of piper tts when seeing the name.


OTT?


Over the top -- in this context, excessively lawyer-y.


Sorry! "Over the top"


I wonder what people do in that one area they are so often reticent to discuss: porn.

The (non-scientific) impression I have is that people don't tend to use porn apps, they stick with porn websites.

Therefore, do people basically know apps aren't well behaved with their data and yet in other scenarios they turn a blind eye?


I think it's more that people don't want others to see a pornhub icon when they are slowing holiday photos to friends and family. But they don't mind showing a Domino's app


I think people want to hide porn until they don't want to hide the porn, and they don't want visible reminders on their phone.


Are there porn apps? I believe App Store restrictions wouldn't allow that.


An app can’t be hidden easily, in a browser you just go incognito. Some people just don’t want others to know.


I think you may be missing the point: preventative treatment is typically much less expensive, for instance behaviour and dietary changes do not require drugs at all and avoiding some conditions can be helped by drugs which have long since come off patents.

But even with your point, all insurance companies I've ever had cover with in the UK have had some element of support for preventing illness (periodic assessments, support material and trackers) and, at least with people covered under company schemes, they clearly have an incentive to offer more if you are at risk of becoming affected by a preventable illness.


HSBC had famously terrible systems when I dealt with them for a mortgage years ago - they were so bad that the staff I spoke with pre-briefed me on the range of issues their website could suffer from.

The best was that certain sections were circular, so it would start to ask the same questions again but displaying answers prefilled in - yet it would arbitrarily forget particular (different) details on each loop, defaulting to values other than what you'd entered before, so there were only certain points you should exit the loop at, to be sure it would submit the right information!

On the plus side, despite their system woes, they had very competitive rates, so it was definitely financially worth spending another 20 minutes and accepting their idiocy!


This wasn't so much a competitive rate, but I literally couldn't have afforded to buy this house if they didn't offer a 105% mortgage - so no deposit and some extra money so I could buy some furniture. To be fair, I had some deposit so didn't really need all the extra 5%, but I wasn't anywhere close to the 10% deposit that was standard at the time.

Also, now I remember that I also had to jump through some deceptive hoops. The deal was technically only available on the graduate account, which my account had stopped being earlier in the year because it changed to a regular account after 10 years from opening. The bank manager said she'd bend the rules and let me have the deal as an exception, but then presented me with a load of life insurance policies to sign (which of course I didn't want or need) and it was strongly intimated that if I didn't sign them, she'd no longer bother bending the rules to get me the mortgage deal. So, I signed them, and as soon as I had the mortgage confirmation letter through the post I phoned up to cancel before the end of the 14 day cooling off period. I dread to think how much commission she'd have made from me if I didn't cancel.


A friend told me about a company where the CISO instigated security newsletters aimed at staff to build up their experience on such topics, yet the newsletters were emailed from an external email and contained links to a hosting site that wasn't related to any of the employers regular website domains and like this case would often come across as a phishing attempt, especially when they ran competitions (apparently they appeared too good to be true, as friend's employer was famously tight!)


Every weekly newsletter I get at work is sent from an external spam-sender, containing links to an external hosting site that have a unique ID for tracking clicks. Those links are then munged by Outlook which makes them hard to identify. I searched on the company web site for any confirmation that the external sender or external hosting site were legitimately being used by the company and found none, so I refuse to click on those links. I should also report them as phishing scams really.


Great news. Now hope they can sort it for Firefox on Android.


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

Search: