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I think this belongs in r/shitposting


at least it’s not another AI shillpost


i dunno those vids may be generated with grok, et al


That is classified as an edge use-case. Realistically speaking I don't think the point of this hastily whipped up demo was to be a replacement for google sheets.


Yeah but since it claims "any CSV file", and CSV files are widely known to be variate, I didn't expect it fails to work on edge use-cases.


I was thinking of it as competition for GitHub’s CSV reader in repositories.


karma-farmer


I too, am heavily invested in my keyboard shortcuts. Goku + Karabiner gives me the luxury of toggling between apps and doing repetitive actions without moving my hands away from home row. I really want to switch but this missing feature is a dealbreaker for me.


Most of today's world furniture comes from -----. Most of the problems in the furniture market today deal with a trend that middle class try to imitate the rich interior design look and feel. The uneducated consumer is surrounded by a market ----- created demand for which is furniture knockoffs of fashion furniture brands that you see in Interior Design Magazines.

The furniture is built with poor materials, and dangerous chemicals treating finishes and frame construction. Almost all faux finishes (veneer, marble, concrete, leather, stone etc...) is made with really bad ingredients to give it the overall look and feel to the real texture they are trying to imitate.

The fashion brand furniture keeps evolving as a fashion brand should even when it comes to furniture. Therefore, furniture is a trend market, where people can afford it. Where people can not afford it, they fill their space with the knockoff furniture, realize it is not good quality, accumulate enough money to repeat the cycle with another poorly manufactured replacement. This is what is driving most of the demand today to keep churning out low price-point furniture for the newly emerging middle working class of today's world that do not understand what really goes on behind the scenes of how their furniture gets made, or maybe they don't care.

The other furniture market is for people who, as others commented, leave furniture pieces to their children. Those groups do not care about fashion, as with people that just need clothes to walk around not caring about the brand that they are advertising.

There is still good affordable furniture out there. Hand-built with care and precision as a Rolls-Royce car would be in the factory, mostly small companies in Italy and other parts of the world still to this day make great long-lasting pieces. The locality of the furniture manufacturer matters on the price significantly. Shipping logistics for furniture is a nightmare.


I'm impatiently waiting to become the ultimate armchair music video director I've always dreamed of once this video AI thing rolls out...


Reminds me of those DVD players that advertised 'UPSCALE TO 720p' features.


Devote a 4 digit budget for a new workspace that relieves RSI causing movements.


You don't need to spend that much. I mean, go for it, it sounds fun, but just getting a desk the right height (i.e. probably lower than it is now) and a stable chair solved mine. See sibling comment here.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=34852007


What bondsman has $250 million in the bank to do this? Seems like such an obscure niche to be in.


I doubt they used a bondsman. $25 million is a pretty steep fee. They likely paid the entire bail amount and will get that money back once SBF shows up to court.


How do you keep track of phony answers to security questions if they are different for each site? If it is the same phony answer for every site, it is not any safer to use real answers to the security questions.


You store the answers in your password manager and treat them like passwords


Yup. You pretty much have to do this. I love signing into my bank's bill payment system. "You appear to know your password and possess your second factor. But what's your favorite book? <all lowercase favorite book> WRONG YOUR FAVORITE BOOK IS ACTUALLY <starts with an uppercase book> NOW YOUR ACCOUNT IS LOCKED."

Even if you're using real answers, you will be locked out of your account if you don't treat them like passwords. Eventually.


Worse yet, real answers are just weaker passwords. Mother's maiden name? Childhood friend? Elementary / high school? For a targeted attack, against most people, this is very insecure in the all information online age. Nobody needs to know your 20 character password if they have your social media page.


I generate the password and stored them in my password manager under the notes. 1Password added functionality seemingly recently to add security questions and generate a random word string that I use these days.


Note that you should not generate a random password like D27fX$0f7RyD for your security questions. These are designed to give to a human operator on the other end of a phone. If an attacker calls up the account recovery line, gets asked for a security question, and just says "heh, I think it was a string of random characters", there's a decent chance the human operator will let them into the account. As you say, use an actual word string (passphrase) generator, which is a bit less susceptible to this attack.


Yep, if you can choose the question, choose something like "What was your first pet's name?" and then make up something silly like "Mister Poopy Eyes" (a conceivable child-given pet name).


I hate password managers. They sign you out way too often and god forbid you’re on another PC.


My work provides me with a 1Password subscription (for both work personal use) that I take advantage of that is pretty good. I think they only require you to reauthenticate with your master password once every two weeks or something. I use a PIN, biometrics, or my Apple Watch to unlock it when it timeouts in between that two week period, and I've had no problems syncing between several of my devices.


1Password on my Mac lets me set it to never require re-authentication with my master password, though it does seem to keep switching back to 30 days.


You can set how often they log you out, and I have a phone...


How often is way too often?


Pick your three favorite movie characters for which there is a lot of information about them (name, town where they grew up, age, dog with a name, etc.). Rotate through these three. Append the name of the service. Dog's name? buddylastpass

There will be no reuse, because for Facebook it would be buddyfacebook or dugfacebook, or something else… but you will always be able to guess it in three tries. A computer system doing some kind of pentest isn't going to parse out the "facebook" or "lastpass". A human might, but that's why you rotate through three names. At the point where you have a human targeting your account and actually thinking about your inputs you are probably !@#$ed anyway.


I have a small orange password book… oddly. If that gets stolen I think I’d be in big trouble. However it doesn’t have my email address in it. Answers to those inquisitions of a password reset nature are within.


in the notes field of the appropriate keepass entry.


memorable symbols and the site name

!%!%example.com%!%!


I used to do something like this. I avoid it now, and use a pass phrase of a few words as answers to these questions, stored as a password.

It was clear to me after I had to read such a security question answer over the phone to unlock an account the CSR was perfectly happy with "gibberish over the phone == gibberish in front of me", meaning my attempt to secure things made it less secure in the end.


answer$(first-word-in-question)


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