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Who will sue the SEC for causing the stock to plumet due to this lawsuit? :x


Come on... The fault here is with Musk and Tesla. Why should investors be allowed to sue regulating bodies because the bad behavior of their companies results in a loss for them?


Why blame the fraudster, when you can blame the people fighting fraud?


Have you seen what the SEC has been doing to crypto? You're telling me the chairman appointed or Trump couldn't stand to benefit from their decisions? https://www.investopedia.com/tech/bitcoin-vulnerable-sec-man...


Why don't you tell us, what horrible things has he been doing to crypto? And how will the SEC chairman and Trump benefit?



I helped a family member to get access back to his instagram account which also got hacked and got his username changed. What we did was follow the instructions in https://help.instagram.com/contact/740949042640030 and kept in touch with the instagram staff via email. They kept asking various security questions during email and finally sent a recovery link.


Brilliant tool!!


Here's a link to the mcdonalds commercial: https://vimeo.com/176208286 Link to cyriak's video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FavUpD_IjVY


I know this is a ver non HN comment to make, but cyriak's stuff is amazingly incredible. Long time fan of the music and the visual arts.

Sadly, this sort of creativity stripping is rife. Did RatherGood.com not have simialar issues with Coke using their art in a foreign country?


C* makes it much easier to manage a cluster of Solr as the data grows (specifically with DSE), as with the tight integration you get all the benefits of C*. (HA, eventual consistency, multi-dc replication..)


Why do you think this approach isn't scalable? would love to hear your input on that. Also what commercial database systems do you think will be good for this?


The suggested approach most likely requires a lot of recursive backtracking. Of course, there's an efficient way to implement this, and that's what most commercial databases' path analytics features do. Here's one example by Oracle: https://docs.oracle.com/database/121/DWHSG/pattern.htm

I've always found it befuddling why so many developers want to use Solr/Elasticsearch for analytics heavylifting. It's probably because

1. SQL is not the most intuitive (although most pervasive) API for data analysis

2. Much of the data is already in Solr/Elasticsearch to make your data searchable/perform simple roll-ups and filtering, etc., so it'd be great if you can do more complex analytics against them as well

AS to why Solr/Elasticsearch is not ideal: the existence of superior alternatives that is OLAP databases.


+1, hate Bing Maps on Facebook


It's either not case insensitive or matching parts of words, as it didn't filter this: Bitcoin?s roller-coaster ride gets wilder as Wall Street, China climb on (arstechnica.com)


Although this isn't a tutorial, but I thought it was worth mentioning. pragprog.com has released a screencast series on Backbone, by Derek Bailey, the creator of Backbone.Marionette and various other Backbone extensions. I've personally watched the series and gained lots of insight on Backbone thanks to it. (http://pragprog.com/screencasts/v-dback/hands-on-backbone-js)


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