Monthly Archives: August 2021

Measuring ‘Return on Investment’ of Various College Degrees

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Unsurprisingly, the ROI on less expensive public schools is better, and the ROI on degrees where you are likely to work in your field of study is better.
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Firefox 91 – Revert back to old tab style

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Damn it Mozilla. Removing the borders from tabs, replacing them with ever more whitespace, and making it harder to fix with every release is some "we didn't learn the most basic ideas about UI from the last 40 years" shit. Stop doing this shit or stop wondering why you're bleeding users.
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New Leatherman Curl Multi-Tool Looks Like a “Wave Lite”

Source: ToolGuyd

Article note: Ooh. I might need one of those. It's between the Wave that I stopped carrying because it was too bulky and the Wingman that I've been carrying. Looks like it has a nice clip design.

Leatherman Curl Closed

Leatherman has started teasing about their new CURL multi-tool, model 832930, which they’re set to announce next week.

I took a closer look, and there are enough details on the Leatherman Curl multi-tool for a quick introduction.

Leatherman Curl Multi-Tool Open Pliers

The Leatherman Curl has a familiar look to it, almost like a “old Wave Lite” type of tool. Marketing copy says that the Curl was “inspired by their best selling multipurpose tool,” and so the resemblance makes sense.

As with other Leatherman multi-tools, the new Curl has combination pliers, a knife blade that’s accessible when the tool is folded closed, and also inside-accessible tools.

What’s different about the Curl is that it only has outside-accessible tools on one side. This is confirmed in Leatherman’s teaser image on social media, which shows a plain back with pocket clip.

Whereas the old Wave and Charge multi-tools had four outside-accessible tools, the new Curl only has two. With the Curl, you get a knife blade and a file.

Leatherman Curl Tools and Features

Leatherman says that the Curl multi-tool has 15 tools and functions.

  • Needlenose pliers
  • Regular pliers
  • Wire cutters
  • Hard wire cutters
  • Electrical crimper
  • 420HC stainless steel knife (locking)
  • Wood/metal file (locking)
  • Scissors w/ spring action
  • Awl with thread loop
  • Large screwdriver bit driver
    • Double-ended Phillips/slotted bit
  • Can opener
  • Bottle opener
  • Wire stripper
  • Ruler (4-inch)
  • Removable pocket clip
  • Nylon sheath is included

Specs

  • Blade length: 2.9″
  • Closed length: 4″
  • Overall length: 6.5″
  • Weighs 7 oz

The Curl is described as being made in the USA.

Price: $80

Buy Now via MSC
Compare: New Wave via Amazon

Discussion

I reviewed the Leatherman Wave a long time ago, and they have since updated it with an improved wire cutter. The new Wave currently retails for $100.

Leatherman multi-tools have increased in price over the years, and the company has made attempts to offer more affordable tools without making too many compromises.

Leatherman Curl vs. Wave Multi-Tools

Leatherman Curl vs Wave Multi-Tools

Here, the new Curl looks very similar to the Wave Plus multi-tool. If retailers’ $79.95 launch pricing for the Curl is accurate, that makes the Wave Plus a $20 upgrade at $99.95.

The Curl has similar pliers and cutters as the old Wave, and nearly identical tools and functions as the new Wave Plus. It looks like an awl is swapped in for the Wave’s eyeglass screwdriver bit driver feature. The Curl is missing the serrated blade and wood saw from the Wave, but it does look to have the same wood/metal file and plain edge knife blade.

The Curl comes with a pocket clip. You can add one to the Wave Plus for $5.

With only two outside-accessible tools on one side of the Curl, I would expect it to be more compact and possibly a little more comfortable for pocket-clip-carry. I bought a pocket clip for my Wave a long time ago, but hardly ever used it. In my experience, the Wave and Wave Plus multi-tools, and other full-size models, are more comfortably carried in a belt-mounted sheath. The Curl does come with a sheath.

The Curl weighs a little less, but there are no specs for the closed handle thickness yet.

Other images I’ve found for the Curl suggest that its tools don’t have the same active locks as Leatherman’s Wave Plus, Charge, and other like-styled full-sized tools. There’s probably still a slip joint or other passive locking mechanism.

So, it seems that the Curl is scaled down a little bit from the Wave Plus, but is it worth saving $20 for?

Or, is the Curl worth $20 more than Leatherman’s Sidekick (via Amazon) or Wingman (via Amazon) multi-tools, which are both currently priced at $60?

The Curl is advertising as having 15 tools and functions compared to 18 for the Wave Plus, but it looks like the Curl is missing the inner tool locking system, and that’s on top of the non-replaceable cutter jaws and half of the outside-opening tools. There could be other more subtle differences as well, such as with the pivots or user experiences.

The Curl looks to be a meet-in-the-middle type of tool. It lacks some of the more premium qualities of the Wave Plus, but offers upgrades over Leatherman’s more entry-priced tools.

Thoughts?

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Cory Doctorow: Uber is a bezzle

Source: Hacker News

Article note: I've been anticipating it for years, I wonder if it's actually time for the loot-and-scoot. The failure of some middleman entity and/or the taxi dispatch companies to agree upon a decent app/API is a "Sears failed to be Amazon, even though they already were" level blunder.
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Today’s Firefox 91 release adds new site-wide cookie-clearing action

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: ...A subset of the things Cookie Auto Delete has been doing (with user-settable policy and one-time overrides) for the several years since I switched back to FireFox. At least this should work on mobile since they won't bless CAD to run there.
This menacing firefox seems to be on the prowl for unwanted third-party cookies.

Enlarge / This menacing firefox seems to be on the prowl for unwanted third-party cookies. (credit: Hung Chung Chih via Getty Images)

Mozilla's Firefox 91, released this morning, includes a new privacy management feature called Enhanced Cookie Clearing. The new feature allows users to manage all cookies and locally stored data generated by a particular website—regardless of whether they're cookies tagged to that site's domain or cookies placed from that site but belonging to a third-party domain, eg Facebook or Google.

Building on Total Cookie Protection

The new feature builds and depends upon Total Cookie Protection, introduced in February with Firefox 86. Total Cookie Protection partitions cookies by the site that placed them, rather than the domain that owns them—which means that if a hypothetical third party we'll call "Forkbook" places tracking (or authentication) cookies on both momscookies.com and grandmascookies.com, it can't reliably tie the two together.

Without cookie partitioning, a single Forkbook cookie would contain the site data for both momscookies.com and grandmascookies.com. With cookie partitioning, Forkbook must set two separate cookies—one for each site—and can't necessarily relate one to the other.

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AI has the worst superpower medical racism

Source: Hacker News

Article note: The most fascinating thing to me is that there are indicators of biological race that are so blatant that shitty low-hanging pattern recognition tools can find them, but it's so fraught/taboo to discuss biological race even to enable better targeted medical care that no one is/will admit to being aware of them.
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A dubious writing style emerging in science

Source: Hacker News

Article note: The incentive structure is to vomit papers, so people vomit papers. Here we see the naturally resulting arms race between plagiarism detection tools and "automatic paraphrasing" tools in action. Some of the automatic paraphrases are amazing, "flag to clamor" for signal to noise, "focal preparing unit" for CPU, "arbitrary right of passage" for random access.
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University of Kentucky to require masking indoors

Source: Kentucky.com -- Education

Article note: It's official.

On Friday, University of Kentucky President Dr. Eli Capilouto announced that masks will be mandatory in all indoor spaces at the university beginning Aug. 9. In an email, Capilouto said … Click to Continue »

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Operating Systems: Timeline and Family Tree

Source: Hacker News

Article note: There are a few things I notice that are a little odd as far as attribution lines, but it's a nice chart with a ton of truly obscure things broken out.
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Apple’s plan to “think different” about encryption opens a backdoor to your life

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Sigh. Privacy getting "Think of the children"'d again. You build the technical capability to scan all your users' devices for undesirable content of any particular kind (with sketchy perceptual hashing tools! Surely nothing bad will happen there! How you feelin' "human inspection" hired to spend all day looking at pictures of people's kids in baths to make sure nothing sketchy is going on?), and you will get pressure from governments and interest groups to scan for arbitrary other things, because you have already expressed that your system can do so. Previous similar tools were a little less gross there was a "It's running server side, we're making sure we aren't storing or transporting illegal content" pseudo-justification, and the _vendor_ was running it on their hardware instead of user's expensive devices they supposedly "own" snitching on them.
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