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30 votes
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A year around the Sierra.
8 votes -
Tories on brink: Historic split looms as Brexiteers and Remainers threaten to torpedo government
6 votes -
Waste crisis looms as thousands of solar panels reach end of life
8 votes -
Bishop's "DRAIN SHIT" Playlist
aight folks - finally got around to migrating my thicc playlist. decided i'd share it bc why not. here's my 200+ track emo rap playlist if you're looking to dive in headfirst. i had a bad habit of...
aight folks - finally got around to migrating my thicc playlist. decided i'd share it bc why not.
here's my 200+ track emo rap playlist if you're looking to dive in headfirst.
i had a bad habit of adding like everything in the beginning, so i recommend shuffling and going from there.
https://open.spotify.com/playlist/2UyWgllEzeDFhjn9izxacl
abuhubuhbuhb bishop La Dispute isn't rap jnfjewndlqwdul Daughters isn't dwnauibdaw
stfu th frick up budy
enjoy
š š š¤
7 votes -
Amazon unveiled Key for Garageāa system that allows Amazon drivers to unlock garage doors to make secure deliveries.
15 votes -
How the UN migration pact got trolled
5 votes -
A basic analysis of the 2018 US midterm elections suggests it was less gerrymandered than other recent elections for the House of representatives
Now that the ballots for the 2018 House of representatives election have been counted, how badly was the vote gerrymandered? Gerrymandering is the creating of political districts to maximize the...
Now that the ballots for the 2018 House of representatives election have been counted, how badly was the vote gerrymandered?
Gerrymandering is the creating of political districts to maximize the number of representatives a political grouping gets per vote.
The degree of gerrymandering can be approximated by calculating the difference between the outcome of a proportional voting system and the actual districted representatives each party gains.
Here's a look at the last 5 elections to the House of representatives.
In this congress, the Democrats have 235 representatives, the Republicans have 199 and there's 1 other representative.
Voter turnout was 50,3%, the highest for a midterm election since 1914.
The Democrats got 53,5% of the popular vote and 54,0% of the seats. The Republicans got 44,8% of the vote and 46,0% of the seats. Others got 1,8% of the vote and a single seat.
Since the Republicans are no longer getting vastly outsized representation, is gerrymandering dead?
If the US would have had a proportional voting system, 7 of the 435 seats would have been distributed differently in 2018.
The Democrats would have had 3 fewer representatives, the Republicans would have had 4 fewer and others would have had those 7 seats.
Here are the similar figures for the last five elections.
Year Votes per seat ('000) Dem diff. Rep diff. Other diff. 2010 199 -3 +18 -15 2012 281 -11 +27 -16 2014 179 -10 +24 -14 2016 295 -15 +27 -12 2018 261 +3 +4 -7 The change from getting 27 seats "wrong" in 2016 to 7 seats "wrong" this year is large and changes the historic trend.
Turns out that higher turnout led to more accurate representation in 2018. Who would have guessed.
(There are many other additional possible explanations for why this has changed too)
If we just look at the two major parties, what does this mean in real terms?
Here's an overview of the average difference in the number of voters the Democrats have needed for each seat they actually got in the last five elections compared to the Republicans.
Year Additional Dem voters for a seat 2010 8,6% 2012 19,4% 2014 16,6% 2016 21,4% 2018 0,8% There are other ways of trying to engineer specific election results.
This basic overview only looks at people who actually vote. Therefore it obviously doesn't consider those who are prevented from voting in the election process, whether that's from voting requirements, accessibility of polling places, registration requirements, etc.
It will be interesting to see what happens in 2020.
Is this a trend that'll continue?
Is it just a blip because those gerrymandering haven't been able to predict what party voters vote for in today's political climate?
What about turnout?
15 votes -
The future of the minimum wage is alive in Seattle
7 votes -
Ontario is under one-man rule. Who will stop Doug Ford?
13 votes -
This is what Black burnout feels like
7 votes -
The holes in the map: England's unregistered land
6 votes -
Donald Trump Was Never Vetted
20 votes -
SpaceX to lay off over 10% of its workforce
15 votes -
Finally made my first instrumental
hi folks, billy mays here. after getting some new music equipment for christmas, i finally sat down and spent the last 15-ish of the last 20 hours working on my first instrumental. it's not super...
hi folks, billy mays here.
after getting some new music equipment for christmas, i finally sat down and spent the last 15-ish of the last 20 hours working on my first instrumental.
it's not super polished, and kinda rough in parts (as things usually go with first projects)
but hey - it's mine and it's a point to grow from.
so here ye go peeps - "Elk Song" x Bishop
(no vocals obvi, it's just instrumentals and lyrics for now until i find someone with a studio in the area.
...and money.)
as always, any thoughts/feedback are more than welcome. cheers
bishop
8 votes -
How the Latin East contributed to a unique cultural world
4 votes -
Superannuation overhaul presented to government could add $500,000 to some accounts
1 vote -
Wriggly, giggle, puffball: What makes some words funny?
3 votes -
Google drones can already deliver you coffee in Australia
4 votes -
The weight I carry - What itās like to be too big in America
14 votes -
Woolie Will Figure It Out Ep 1 - About abandoned games and the creative process
3 votes -
Noam Chomsky - The Right Turn (1986)
9 votes -
On hiring for tech positions: How do you get what you need from the HR department?
I wish I had a dollar for every time I heard a manager complain, āThe HR department included āmust have college degreeā in the job req even though I donāt careā or āThey asked for 5 years of...
I wish I had a dollar for every time I heard a manager complain, āThe HR department included āmust have college degreeā in the job req even though I donāt careā or āThey asked for 5 years of experience in a technology thatās only been around for 3ā or āI have no idea why they rejected this candidate without even contacting me.ā
Still, in many cases you donāt have a choice. If you want to hire someone, you need to deal with HR, at least to a small degree ā especially if you work in a big company.
So Iām writing a feature story for technology managers, collecting real-world advice from people who learned their lessons the hard way. Hereās the questions Iād like you to answer:
ā¢ Tell me about a frustration you had with the HR department (in regard to hiring). That is, tell me a personal story of HR-gone-wrong. Because we all love schadenfreude, and that gives me an emotional example with which to begin.
ā¢ Letās say you have a new opening in your department. In what ways do you involve HR? (That could be anything from, āgive them general guidelines and let them choose the best candidates for me to interviewā to āI do the search myself, and use HR only for on-boarding.ā) What makes you choose that path? How much choice do you have in the matter?
ā¢ What weaknesses have you discovered in your HR departmentās ability to serve the needs of a tech-focused department?
ā¢ What have you done to cope with those weaknesses? Which of those efforts worked, and which failed?
ā¢ What do you wish you knew ānā years ago about dealing with your companyās HR department?
ā¢ So that I can give the reader some context: Let me know how to refer to you in the article (at least, āEsther, a software architect at a Midwest insurance companyā), and give me some idea of your company size (because the processes appropriate for a 70-person company arenāt the same for one with 7,000 employees).You donāt have to answer all those questions! I asked these to get the conversation going. Tell me as much or as little as you like.
Please donāt assume that I think HR always sucks. However, there isnāt as much to learn from āwhy HR is your friend.ā The idea here is to help techie managers cope when HR doesnāt offer what you hoped for.
16 votes -
Nogu Svelo! - Haru Mamburu (1993)
2 votes -
Some plants āhearā through flowers. A study found petals vibrated in response to recordings of a beeās wingbeats, leading plants to sweeten their nectar.
10 votes -
The twenty best TV dramas since āThe Sopranosā
17 votes -
It's the end of the gene as we know it
15 votes -
Passion, direction, inspiration : How do you rediscover it?
I'm stuck in a rut. What do you do to get out? How do you rediscover something that inspires you? Or something that you can be passionate about? I've got a handful of "projects" on the go at all...
I'm stuck in a rut.
What do you do to get out? How do you rediscover something that inspires you? Or something that you can be passionate about?
I've got a handful of "projects" on the go at all times - writing some music, getting better at the sport I play, learn a new language for work, do some "proper" research. But they all sort of sit there looking tedious on my whiteboard. I'm just not passionate about any of them really (except maybe the sport, but I'm approaching 40 so it's not like I'm on the verge of setting the world on fire with it!).
What do you do to rediscover your inspiration? What has worked for you?
15 votes -
The battle for the Boqueria
8 votes -
Is trade in turmoil a change for justice? The global free trade system is being battered like never before. Can any good come of it?
7 votes -
The Feds cracked El Chapo's encrypted comms network by flipping his system admin
10 votes -
Must writers be moral? Their contracts may require it
8 votes -
Reviews of the Royole FlexPai - the first foldable smartphone/tablet
Victory, Royole: The FlexPai is the first folding phone we've seen The foldable Royole FlexPai has a way to go World's first foldable smartphone is glorious, and a hot mess
10 votes -
How Technicolor changed movies
5 votes -
A 1950s TV show had a fear-mongering conman named Trump who wanted to build a wall.
7 votes -
Unity's ToS update blocks the use of SpatialOS
13 votes -
Unity responds to Improbable's (SpacialOS) blog post
9 votes -
Parent links?
Just a few hours ago I was thinking about how much I miss parent links from Hacker News, and now I see that they have suddenly appeared on user pages and in topics. Did Deimos just roll out an...
Just a few hours ago I was thinking about how much I miss parent links from Hacker News, and now I see that they have suddenly appeared on user pages and in topics. Did Deimos just roll out an update, or have I been blind this whole time?
4 votes -
Over a million IP addresses geolocate to a house in Pretoria, South Africa, causing people (and police) to show up regularly in search of criminals, stolen phones, and more
9 votes -
Designing the Flexbox Inspector
5 votes -
The noisy dispute over the meaning of populism is more than just an academic squabble ā itās a crucial argument about what we expect from democracy
12 votes -
For owners of Amazonās Ring security cameras, strangers may have been watching too
10 votes -
How "At the Gates" took seven years of my life ā and nearly the rest
10 votes -
Danish government to improve conditions for prostitutes
9 votes -
How Magic: The Gatheringās most expensive card changed the game
9 votes -
Experiences with LineageOS and/or moving from iPhone to Android (or LineageOS )
Hi there, I'm considering purchasing a used Galaxy S7 and moving to LineageOS and would like to hear about similiar experiences. I currently own a iPhone 5S (only my second smartphone). I plan to...
Hi there,
I'm considering purchasing a used Galaxy S7 and moving to LineageOS and would like to hear about similiar experiences. I currently own a iPhone 5S (only my second smartphone). I plan to continue using Ting as my provider.
I am attracted to LineageOS because it's open source and allows greater control than the standard Android-build I'd get from an ISP. I'm not afraid of installing ROMs or tinkering - I know I'll be doing a lot more of that by moving to an open-source OS.
I was looking at Galaxy S7 because it's well-known and has wide support/information available on forums, etc and of course because it's relatively cheap to get a used one ($200-ish).
I'm in the US and use Ting as my provider.
So some questions I have are:
- Should I expect to use the standard Google Play store? I'm still a little unclear on this after looking at the LineageOS website and wiki. The best I could find for an answer is this article talking about installing default google apps. I think my question is so basic it's not addressed on their site lol.
- Can I drag and drop MP3s from my computer to the phone? In other words, can I get my music on there without having to install something dreadful like iTunes or use Spotify/Amazon Music?
- The LineageOS project looks healthy to my untrained eye...any rumors that it'll vanish overnight?
- I found these instructions for a Galaxy S7 Anything else I should know or look out for?
- Any general thoughts/advice about moving from the Apple to the Google ecosystem? I'm entrenched in Google everywhere BUT my iPhone where I mostly use Google apps.
- What else should I look out for? See any gaps in my understanding?
19 votes -
Suburbs and car centric urban design is the worst mistake in modern history
Designing our countries to accommodate cars as much as possible has been one of the most destructive things to our health, environment, safety and social connectedness. The damage has spread so...
Designing our countries to accommodate cars as much as possible has been one of the most destructive things to our health, environment, safety and social connectedness. The damage has spread so far and deep that it has reached a crisis point in most developed cities in almost every country. The suburbs we live in are subjected to strict zoning laws baring any form of high density building and any form of mixed zoning. As a result our houses are spaced so far away from each other and from the essential services we need that unless you own a car you are blocked from having a normal life. The main streets full of independent stores and markets have all been killed by megamalls 30km away from where people live with carparks bigger than most park lands. All of this was caused by car usage pushing our societies further and further apart to the point where many people find it acceptable and normal to drive 40km each direction to work each day.
One of the more devastating effects of this urban sprawl is the supermarket has been moved so far away that most people avoid going as much as possible and limit it to a single trip every 1-2 weeks. Fresh food does not last 1-2 weeks which leaves people throwing out mountains of spoiled food that wasn't eaten in time as well as the move to processed foods packed full of preservatives. As well as a shift to people buying dinner from drive through takeaway franchises because their hour long commute has left them with little time to cook fresh and healthy foods.
Owning a car in many countries is seen as the only way to get a job. This locks the poor from ever regaining control of their life because the cost of owning and maintaining a car is higher than most of these people get in an entire year. Our city streets which should be places of vibrant liability have become loud, unsafe and toxic.
Elon and his electric cars solve none of these issues. Electric cars are not the way of the future. They don't even solve air pollution issues entirely because a large part of air pollution is brake pad fibres and tire wear which is proportional to the vehicles weight. And these Teslas are not light.
The only solution is reducing personal vehicle usage as much as possible in urban areas. Of course there will always be some people who will genuinely need vehicles such as in rural areas but there is simply no reason to have the average person drive to and from their office or retail job every day. Its wasteful and harmful in so many ways.
There needs to be a huge push to reclaim our cities and living spaces to bring back the liveability that we could have had. In my city some of the side streets were closed to cars and the change was incredible. Plants and seating filled the spots that would have once been a row of free parking. The streets are filled with the sounds of laughter instead of the roar of motors. The local pubs and cafes have benefited hugely. They didn't benefit at all from street side car parks that were always filled by people who have done 5 laps of the city looking for an empty park and do not intend to shop there.
What is everyone's opinion on this topic and what can we do about it?
64 votes -
On building your favourite web browser from source
25 votes -
Netflix's "Abstract: The Art of Design" is possibly one of the best docuseries I've ever watched
11 votes -
(Don't) return to sender: How to protect yourself from email tracking
13 votes