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a bit off-topic: Are you running a single boiler and if so, how are you mixing UFH with radiators given there's a ~20C difference between the recommended temps for the two?

My knowledge is that for UFH you run at temps between 40-50C and radiators run at 60-70*C.


UFH has mixing valves, so it runs on 38 C and radiators run on 55C. Single boiler.

With the appropiate butterfly wing flap everything is deterministic.

https://xkcd.com/378/


(looks at laptop running a Node app hosted in minikube running on Podman in WSL2 in Windows) of course. easy peasy


I don't get how you can advertise Kubernetes from 0 euro / month and then you have to choose a node that costs 3 euro / month.

I have no idea if it's cheap or not but how is this kind of advertising legal?


That’s quite common, it means they host the control plane for free but not the kubelets (worker nodes).


I click "Create new cluster", I see "Cluster plan -> development" for 0 (zero) euro / month with "Up to 30 worker nodes". When it says "Cluster plan" I don't read control plane, I read cluster.


Good point, it does indeed read like that


It's normal to split k8s billing between the control plane and the resources being controlled.


This right here is peak Microsoft:

  set DOTNET_GCName=clrgc.dll
  set COMPlus_GCPath=ManagedDotnetGC.dll
Good luck understanding this when you come back 2 months later.


Every mature programming language ecosystem has quirks that only those that were around since the early days get why they are there.


It was my understanding the ridiculous and historic COMPlus name had been replaced with just DOTNET several years ago.


Deeper horror:

> I got closer to the goal when I realized an interesting quirk: .NET supports environment variables prefixed by either DOTNET_ or COMPlus_, whereas NativeAOT only supports DOTNET_. So if we set COMPlus_GCName=ManagedDotnetGC.dll, only the .NET runtime will pick it up, and the NativeAOT runtime will ignore it.


It is rather hard to name environment variables as COM+.


So why wasn’t it named DOTNET? My point is that the COMPlus name was about 10 years out of date after Core.


Most likely because it predates it, COM+ Runtime is on the genesis of .NET, originally designed with J++ in mind, and backwards compatibility.

For example,

https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/archive/msdn-magazine/2001...


Just write a batch file? I don't see the issue


Explain what these lines do and why they're necessary, then you'll understand the problem


They are environment variables specifying DLLs to use.


I'm just here to praise the "Login as guest". Thank you !!


You're very welcome :)


Tell me you've never googled lyrics without telling me.....


Sources are linked below the lyrics though!


You're the second commenter, so far, to mention exclamation marks. What do they mean to you that would bother you so much to point it out, or anyone for that matter? I haven't even noticed them until I read the comments here on hn.


Not gp, but I feel similarly. For me, I can't help read it with emphasis. As in, the voice in my head gets all fancy in an annoying way. If you imagine someone in person reading it out-loud with exaggerated emphasis, that's what it feels like. Same thing with comic books for me, the sprinkled bolded words in dialog are really grating.


To me it's fairly similar to someone making excessive use of CAPS LOCK. It can be used as a stylistic choice at times, but use it TOO MUCH and it just becomes DISTRACTING.


I DON'T SEE A PROBLEM WITH THIS EITHER! BUT I EMPATHIZE! I GET COMMENTS FROM PEOPLE SAYING THAT I'M SOMEHOW YELLING AT THEM ALL THE TIME BUT I'M ACTUALLY SITTING IN SILENCE, TYPING QUIETLY ON A MEMBRANE KEYBOARD! LOL???


Isn't producthunt (and similar) aimed at VCs fishing for unicorns? The idea being that they'll know to then market your product where it belongs so they can grow it and make their billion. If that's not it, then vcfish.com is $12/year and available


That sounds right. Now, I haven’t used producthunt but I believe they market themselves differently, with a heavy focus on ”creator community” and I believe they also call the VCs ”hunters”, suggesting perhaps that people are there looking for products to use and purchase, rather than an early investor club. LinkedIn, but instead of laborers and employees, it’s early founders and VCs? Doesn’t sound as sexy, and definitely not very indie hacker, tinkerer, explorer vibe. I don’t know if that’s the case, but it nevertheless feels like a mismatch between messaging and reality.


tldr: needs email to play with it


I think its decent considering it requires money , and even chatgpt in its early stages didn't allow for anonymous chats / unlimited chats and I remember going on all these chatgpt clones becuase of that.

I also understand the hilarious spin that you added considering tldr (too long didn't read) lmao. but still its worth your email.

Crazy how I realised that tldr meme after I had written the first paragraph


believe it or not I picked the tldraw name because I already owned the domain (I'd bought it for a different project called telestrator) and it was only weeks later when Francois Laberge complimented the clever name that I noticed the portmanteau


I'd appreciate if you didn't consider Firefox Relay emails as disposable email. The Firefox folks specifically have tried to make Relay anti-abuse.

It's an unkind thing to do to your prospective users.

From Bleeping computer's coverage the last time someone tried to dump Relay in with a disposable email blocklist:

> Back in November 2021, Firefox Relay's team lead had requested the maintainer of a separate burner email list, "burner-email-providers" to exempt the particular domain form the blocklist:

> "We are operating Relay with a number of features that I think mitigate the risks that these aliases pose," Mozilla's privacy and security engineer Luke Crouch explained in November.

> Firstly, if a @mozmail.com alias is disabled by the user, any emails sent to the alias are not bounced back but instead discarded with a 404 error message returned by the service's HTTP webook, stated Crouch.

Secondly, he explained, the anti-abuse protections built into Relay limit free users to a total of five aliases, and further rate-limit premium customers so they cannot abuse the service by creating large-scale throw-away aliases for, say, automated signups to web services.

> With that reasoning, mozmail.com was swiftly removed from that blocklist. And it appears, the creators of "disposable-email-domains" have also honored the clause, for now.


Oh sorry, that's a toggle in Clerk (our auth provider), it doesn't provide granularity around which are disposable and which aren't. I'll take a look and see whether there's anything I can do short of turning off that feature.


Thank you! Appreciate the transparency. It's helpful to know it originates elsewhere.


I am sorry but I am confused.

To whom exactly are you talking to?


To Steve, who has answered.


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