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

I used for a side project really liked. Dev UX was great when compared to UX of SQS. UI is very nice.


I was just put on 6 weeks of antibiotics (ampicillin and ceftriaxone) for sepsis.

I thought I was coming down with an annual bug (so did the docs). 3 days after going into an urgent care where I was told I was negative for flu and covid, I went to the ER, where they drew blood. All 4 blood cultures returned positive for enterococcus faecalis.

The bacteria is very common in the intestines, but it's not clear (and probably never will be) how it made it into my bloodstream. Their best guess is inflammation in my gut allowing it to "leak" into the blood. This is after CT and ultrasounds of the abdomen.

29 years of no sepsis then.. random sepsis diagnosis!


Glad you are OK. I am not your internist (/IANAL disclaimer) and I usually don't comment in HN medical threads as weird opinions here, but reading HN taking a break from my work, I'll say generally unless you have some reason like a recent dental procedure to have gotten it depending on your age I'd ask to get a (non urgent) colonoscopy or at least MR enterography or at least consideration of it with a reason why not with someone who knows the particulars of your case and can give you real medical advice.

CT has limited ability to pick up GI malignancy that can lead to translocation of bacteria from colon. If you had something like an autoimmune colitis that lead to translocation you would need to get treated and not all have preceding symptoms.


I am also not your internist but wanted to upvote and second this comment. Op mentions being 29 years old, but should have a gi tract evaluation. Not necessarily now when dealing with the bacteremia but should be discussed.


Great ideas, I will ask about these in the follow-up with infection disease.


For sure. I hope it shows nothing and it is a one off but would not want to miss something that needs treatment or predisposes you to recurrence. Take care!


Thank you for saying this! A loved down was “in the clear” for some stuff. Unfortunately not so clear.


> but it's not clear (and probably never will be) how it made it into my bloodstream.

The term for this is “bacterial translocation”. The intestinal barrier isn’t perfect and some level of bacterial translocation from the GI tract to the bloodstream isn’t abnormal by itself. However, some combination of increased intestinal permeability, reduced immune defense, overgrowth of the bacteria in the GI tract, or mutations of the bacteria can lead to systemic infection.

They probably gave you the “inflammation” explanation because it’s more satisfying than “it happens some times and the potential causes are diverse”.

Glad you’re doing better.


Are Weibo and Xiaohongshu used widely outside of China? Given the names alone I'd imagine their adoption is fairly limited to China.


Xiaohongshu is generally known as RedNote outside of China.


To directly answer the question, Rednote is not generally used outside China, and the point about these apps being representative of "global" social media apps is false.


Xiaohongshu is used by a lot of huaqiao outside of China. It has a sizeable overseas userbase, but it also has 300M total users.


To their point, almost exclusively Chinese overseas until the recent memeing.


RedNote was #1 on the App Store download list for a couple of days.

https://www.vice.com/en/article/chinese-app-rednote-hits-1-i...


So was this app at one point in time: https://www.theverge.com/2020/1/9/21058399/david-dobrik-disp...

It's called Dispo. You probably haven't heard of it because it became almost irrelevant a few weeks after launch. #1 on the app store doesn't mean a whole lot.


RedNote is a bit different: it has been wildly popular in China for a number of years, and the Chinese community has been using it overseas already.

It may not retain all the new users, but it is not going to become irrelevant.


I agree. But I'm just saying that #1 on the app store doesn't preclude something from being a fad and my guess is that in 1 month's time, no one is going to be talking about RedNote outside of Chinese communities.


That’s an extremely recent development caused by the TT shutdown looming.


How many of those downloads originated in China? Genuine question, I read the article and it doesn't say. Apple's App Store is available in China, and China's population alone could be skewing those numbers.


App store top apps are per-region. And China one likely even running on completely different infrastructure because CCP.


Yes it's called a meme and it won't last.


It received some popularity among TikTok refugees from the US and subsequently also from around the world by users who got curios about what the fuzz was all about.


Which is honestly weird. It's Little Red Book, not Red Note, in reference to Mao's little red book.


"Little Red Book" doesn't resonate with people outside China


Xiaohingshu is widely used outside China... by Chinese.

My experience in the UK is that the whole Chinese community is on it for anything (discussions, classifieds...) instead of Facebook, Insta, etc.


Looks like it's getting a lot of TikTik refugees now

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c2475l7zpqyo


Yeah, if "widely used" means that multiple nations and cultures use the service, then they are not widely used.


What is the cost of "general intelligence"? What is the price?


About $3.50


Schemio looks cool. I've been building a lot of flow diagrams using Claude, which outputs to Mermaidjs (and renders it in the browser). I would love to do something similar with Schemio given the improved zooming in/out from flow to sequence, etc features.


How can I get involved in this work as a software engineer?


Having worked at a large world renowned genetics laboratory as an SWE I believe I can say that it is unlikely you will have the option of having any direct input into this kind of work, in that role.

That being said, there is a lot of things an SWE can do in a support role.

Some of the things I did were data processing pipelines (both automatic and human centric UI for phenotype gathering) and interconnected networks of scientific instruments, as well as some deployments of R and Python code.

Sure, your name wont show up along with hundreds of others in the Nature publications, but you will know that you contributed to the overall success. And it does feel good.


If you can't find out yourself then you're probably not motivated enough.


Does asking the HN community not fall into the category of “finding out”?


What an uncharitable thing to say


Anyone have ideas on why there aren’t more of these point and shoot at home games? I loved the ones I played as a kid. It always felt like something relegated to arcades


It was a major genre on the Wii. The Wii Zapper was an optional attachment that gave the WiiMote a pistol grip. Titles off the top of my head include CoD III, Metroid Prime 3: Corruption, Resident Evil: The Umbrella Cronicles, Resident Evil: The Darkside Chronicles, and House of Dead II & III Return.

I think the main reason that it never took off much was that it kinda sucked. It worked great when it worked, but the tracking was often glitchy and it was super frustrating when you're counting bullets to have the occasionally shot go offscreen. I have a feeling we had a higher tolerance for this with Duck Hunt due to the novelty and arcade games due to the format. (I feel like arcade games tend to avoid showing you a reticle for this very reason, but I don't have data to back this up.)

That being said, I still ended up beating Metroid and both Resident Evils, so they were still super fun!

Also, I was in Dave and Busters recently and they had Time Crisis 5. Beat that too!


FWIW, I had until now completely forgotten that I was playing these games at home, on a PC with a "shooter" experience.

They were mouse controlled, but I had a gyration air mouse -- (with the clever thing of instead of requiring infrared, it just had a 3rd button that had to be depressed for actual movement)


I'm surprised you call it glitchy. I heard elsewhere that Resident Evil 4 on Wii was easier than the GameCube original because the aiming was more precise than with a stick.


They can both be true! It worked great probably 97% of the time, but the 3% where it flicked 20px to the left for a frame or lost tracking entirely add up over the course of a boss fight. Missing when using a joysticks feels like a skill issue. Missing when using the WiiMote could be frustrating.


LCD televisions became popular which don't work with old light guns. We might have the sinden gun now but it kind of came too late, i don't think you can play much on it except for old/emulated games. although there was the Wii so i think people getting bored of light gun games could be a factor, they are all quite similar after all.


Which people are voted of light guns? Young people never had a chance to try them.


This is a common game type for VR headsets now.


There might not be many new games, but for the old games getting a used crt is free and the consoles are cheap too! I’ve been playing through the ps2 light gun games and it really does feel like you’ve got an arcade at home.


The CRT requirement has pleasantly eroded recently.

A kickstarter a few years back for the Sinden light gun [1] realized that by using webcams, some quick image processing and perspective transforms, you could make a light gun work anywhere and could get real-time performance on non-CRTs by essentially adding a small border region of the screen, making it work on essentially any monitor. He filmed and wrote extensive technical breakdowns about the build process and mechanics at play, which were great.

The maker also seems to have had a solid understanding of what made those old light gun games cool, because he made sure to build versions with solenoid-based recoil as well as the big chunky metal foot pedal you’d use for games like time crisis.

[1] https://youtu.be/grcGpr_8W9Y?si=z800V7f62dDS1KGs


Sinden is no longer the way to go. Most lightgun enthusiasts have now gone the Gun4IR route [0]. It uses the IR sensor from a WiiMote plus a microcontroller in the gun (either a gutted commercial controller like the PS Guncon, a modified Nerf or similar, or something straight up 3d printed) and four IR LEDs placed around a monitor / TV at the midpoints of each each. This system is extremely accurate and there is no flashing border around the screen like with Sinden. Unfortunately, the whole shooting match (see what I did there?) is closed source code and (as of now) Window's only for the calibration-based PC software.

The current open source competitor to Gun4IR is the Samco light gun [1]. It uses four LEDs as well, but with two on the top edge and two on the bottom edge of the screen. A couple Wii LED bars will do the job here as well. I don't think it is quite as accurate as the Gun4IR as I don't think it accounts for perspective correction if you move from the position it was originally calibrated at. But...

Sam & a few others are readying a new design called OpenFire [2] that will be at least on par accuracy-wise as Gun4IR and will be fully open source and cross platform. It should be available relatively soon. Pair this with the PiCon [3] and you have a lightgun with a pretty crazy feature set. All the guns mentioned support some kind of solenoid & rumble support, but the PiCon kicks it up a notch with exclusive OpenFire features like an OLED display, NeoPixel LED, accelerometer, and analog joystick.

[0] https://www.gun4ir.com/

[1] http://forum.arcadecontrols.com/index.php?topic=160517.0

[2] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aE9a-fsnMwU

[3] https://diylightgun.com/lightgun-details/?lgid=506

edit: make more specific reference to OpenFire


That's true, but crts are basically free and plug and play while looking extra crispy. I think if you're okay spending a lot more to get an equivalent setup those are good options, but harder to recommend.


It still exists nowadays, works alright actually, very analog with interchangeable shapes, 2 guns, etc.

https://www.smythstoys.com/uk/en-gb/toys/games-puzzles-and-b...


"relegated" seems like the wrong word - the best ones IMO were the later arcade versions like Gunblade NY (pivot mounted machine gun style) or the Time Crisis series (big foot pedal to take cover) with special hardware that would be too expensive for home sales.


There were home console versions of most of the Time Crisis games on PlayStation consoles. I think the 3rd and 4th games were on PS3 along with light guns. There were probably about 10-15 games on each console (PS1/PS2/PS3) which supported light guns. Although I don't think the home console versions had foot pedals, instead using a button or gun movement to achieve the same thing.


Some dedicated players with soldering irons may have hooked up a simple pedal switch across the gun's "cover" switch. Omg how I loved Time Crisis and arcades in general. Sigh.


I played a Time Crisis on the ps3 using a gun handle attachment for the ps move [1].

Tbh I don't remember if it had a cover option or not.

[1] https://www.amazon.ca/PlayStation-Move-Shooting-Attachment-S...


You could buy third party guns that had pedals though. I had one that also came with a cool realistic moving thing at the top that made cool shooting sounds when you pulled the trigger....and gave you a massive headache after a while.


the most recent one i had at home was the Resident Evil rails shooter for the Wii

it was really fun with a friend


Great read. Thanks for sharing. I am not familiar with Adam Curtis' work but will be looking for more!


I'd go as far as saying that he's the only genuinely serious person in his domain (on TV at least) at this point .

Others have recommended "the century of self" for example which is great but I highly recommend his earlier stuff like "Pandora's box" and "The Mayfair set"


+1 for Pandora's Box. The conclusion sums it up nicely https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-FDrA7yUdFc&t=2466s


Got started with the series "All watched over my machines of loving grace".

I think more engineers and technologists who build systems that affects people's lives at a large scale need to watch those.


If there wa required viewing for entering big tech. This would be it.


>I am not familiar with Adam Curtis' work but will be looking for more!

You're in for a treat, then. He has hours of wonderful documentaries.

https://watchdocumentaries.com/tag/adam-curtis/


As noted below, Century Of The Self would probably be the best starting point:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DnPmg0R1M04


His 4-part Century of the Self series is on Youtube, IIRC. Interesting watch. Hypernormalisation didn't grab me as much.


I think “Can’t Get You Out Of My Head” may be of more interest, topically, to hacker news readers, because it converges on the use of computing as a means of controlling social unrest.



Hypernormalisation is kind of a miss.

It might be true, but it doesn't work because Curtis himself is hypernormalising — he isn't a journalist, he tells stories and emotions rather than a left-brained truth.


Sounds like you need to use a ReplacingMergeTree + final keyword.


Useful info. Might want to make the ordered quantity and contract length ranges though, re: fuzzing anything that might identify the client


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

Search: