Most return to office mandates benefit downtown real estate and businesses, despite remote work being equally as effective as in office for most office jobs.
So its not out of the question that processed food and alcohol companies might lobby to restrict or ban these medications to protect their profits, despite them being proven to be medically effective.
It wouldn't be the first time corporate profit interests override the interests of ordinary people.
> The year of YOLO and the Normalization of Deviance #
On this including AI agents deleting home folders, I was able to run agents in Firejail by isolating vscode (Most of my agents are vscode based ones, like Kilo Code).
Took a bit of tweaking, vscode crashing a bunch of times with not being able to read its config files, but I got there in the end. Now it can only write to my projects folder. All of my projects are backed up in git.
I have a bunch of tabs opened on this exact topic, so thank you for sharing. So far I've been using devcontainers w/ vscode, and mostly having a blast with it. It is a bit awkward since some extensions need to be installed in the remote env, but they seem to play nicely after you have it setup, and the keys and stuff get populated so things like kilocode, cline, roo work fine.
This makes sense. Imagine PHP or NodeJS without a framework, or front end development without React. Your projects would take much longer to build. The time saved with the open source frameworks and libraries is more than what an AI agent can save you.
While this might appeal to retro enthusiasts, I could see a Linux based drop in replacement for Windows 10/11 getting traction amongst mainstream users, especially if it had a good UI/UX.
Thanks for the share, but I'm having a hard time understanding this.
On step 2, it's only jailing VS Code. Shouldn't it also jail the Git repo you're working on (and disable `git push` somehow), as well as all the env libs?
Also, isn't the point of this to auto approve everything?
80-90% of the visible signs of ageing come from the sun. This is why, in older people, you'll find their body generally looks younger than their face. This is because clothes protected their body from the sun, but their faces were fully exposed.
Always wear sunscreen on your hands, face and neck every time you go outside. If you're the type of HN'er that is on the computer all day and rarely goes outside, doing this on the few occasions you do will take away one of the only opportunities the sun will have to age you.
A lot of people are already vitamin D deficient and avoiding sun or using sunscreen more will make it worse. The health risks and consequences are much greater than that of sun exposure, which is likely why sun exposure decreases cancer risk and mortality rates substantially, despite the increased risk of skin cancer.
looking young is a fine goal, but this advice is too general on a forum like this. The actual UV index varies wildly based on location and time of year.
Your advice would be crazy in seattle or london for example. Except summer time, or if one works outdoors.
You recommend I put on sunscreen when it’s cloudy, i can’t see the sun, and the weather app shows a UV index of 3? You did say “every time” lol. I’ve noticed people in this thread (not you specifically) don’t have the capacity for nuance on this subject. It’s baffling to me.
Questions people should ask themselves:
- how long will i be outside?
- is it early morning or early evening? if so sunscreen is pointless.
- what is the peak UV index in my location today? is it 2 or 11?
- am i genetically predisposed to skin cancer, or have very light skin?
Anyone who used their personal or work email to sign up to a site like pornhub should expect that email to be made public one day along with any other data they have on the site, including watch history.
In the case of personal emails, that same email can usually be used to look up the victim on social media (Facebook is an example) to reveal their identity, if, like most people, they used the same email on that social media site.
As most on HN will be aware, data breaches like this are extremely common. Its not a matter of if, its a matter of when. NSFW sites in particular are more juicy targets and often have bad security.
Honestly...be responsible for mail for at a large enough enterprise and all I can say is you'd be surprised how many people make work emails their only emails.
So its not out of the question that processed food and alcohol companies might lobby to restrict or ban these medications to protect their profits, despite them being proven to be medically effective.
It wouldn't be the first time corporate profit interests override the interests of ordinary people.
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