I did not sign in with Google, but the import page still says "Importing…" without any action on my part. Will there be an option to manually upload a list of feeds?
I have the same problem as well. I didn't really want to create the account from my Google Account but would still like to import my feeds from Google Reader. If I click import it just hangs on the "Importing" page, which is odd as there is nothing to import.
The text says "You can safely navigate away from this page while your feeds are being imported " so it's confusing some of us who have not initiated an import.
It's ironic that the standard one-liner for this uses a pipeline but only counts the first word of the first command of the pipeline. Given itself as input, "sort" ought to be the most used command, but "history" is the only one counted. (I bring this up not for the sake of standard HN nitpicking but to point out that you probably do want to cover at least `sort` in your workshop, and it will be underrepresented in these results, along with `grep`, `wc`, etc.)
Unfortunately, shell grammar is complex enough that a correct one-liner is probably infeasible. For example, one of my top "commands" if you count by words is an environment variable setting prepended to an actual command.
EDIT: you can get good enough results by just splitting on "|", as others have suggested here -- any parts of regular expressions, etc that aren't really commands will probably be infrequent enough to get lost in the noise, and treating || as containing an empty command won't hurt. If you're going to catch ||, though, might as well get && too... and now you're going down the rabbit hole :-)
"And, you know, there is no such thing as society. There are individual men and women, and there are [corporations]. And no government can do anything except through people, and people must look to themselves first."
No, it isn't. Thatcher spoke about individuals and families, not corporations. And the sentence is of course a hyperbole which should be seen in the context of a longer speech.
Yes, she was a divisive figure, but has nothing to do with this Youtube thing, really.
(as others have noted, the program actually doing something here is bash: it attempts to dynamically allocate as much memory as it can to store the output of 'yes no'. Hopefully the author discovers ulimit.)
My anecdotal experience suggests that the author's point is rather accurate.
This was Spain, not SF, but I witnessed a bus filled with 50+ tech people (videogames & CGI) remain completely silent while the driver did the route speeding like mad, eventually hit a car, then refused to stop and assist. I was the only one to ask the driver to stop, the only one to offer assistance to the car dude when he followed the bus to our destination, and the only one to report the bus driver to the company. Everyone else just looked, commented among themselves, and walked away as soon as possible.
I long for something that would just wrap all big paragaphs of text at 70-ish characters without hacking at element widths (I've tried user stylesheets, scripts... nothing satisfactory). If this were implemented, I imagine it would be easier to do that.
(For example, the first line of the first paragraph of the post renders as 134 characters on my screen. Maybe I am just old, but I find this hard to read.)
I used a user stylesheet that added max-width: 50ex; to <p> and <li> tags for a long while, but found too many sites ended up funny (especially those that mixed <p> and <br>). These days I just make my browser narrow.
Simple elegant and effective. If it takes one second to transfer water from sink to machine, you only get one second to process the data and possibly get the wrong conclusion. If it takes 60 seconds to walk across the room, that provides time to think ... why did they make it so hard to add water to this thing? Plenty of time for data processing to kick in and notice ur doin it wrong