It was interesting to think of a drag and drop editor as a visual programming language, but i suppose that makes sense. Given this view I wonder how powerful other no code tools are? Are some of them Turing machines?
I suspect some are much closer to simulating Turing machines than others. In theory, no automata can simulate a Turing machine unless it has access to unbounded (infinite) memory, which can't actually happen in the real world. If there's branching, for loops, and some proxy for memory like reusable registers, it can certainly approach a Turing machine. So maybe Zapier is? I don't recall many tools having a proxy for reusable memory though.
This HN show covers two major announcement and feature from YoBulk.
1.YoBulk is cloud ready now - https://cloud.yobulk.dev/ for product managers and customer success teams to check YoBulk features without installing docker or cloning the code base.
"So, it's not about selling data, it's about usefully linking together different devices to make your home actually smart." - herein lies the difficulty, are they going to check how all third party services use the data?
It seems to me like pschedelics are being seen as a new sort of panacea. While they were probably disregarded for too long, do we have long term studies of their efficacy. The phase 3 trials I see only last for a few months.
"Such silicon-rich anodes, which can squeeze more range from batteries" - Is the primary driver of the increased range, the anode? Why does it make such a big difference
I'd hazard a guess that the sanbusak and samosa are not that related to the dumpling, but that nepals momo's are. But hey could be wrong here the mongols did reach the middle east so its possible
"For Teslas built since mid-2017, “every time you drive, it records the whole track of where you drive, the GPS coordinates and certain other metrics for every mile driven" - wonder how long it is before this data starts getting used in court proceedings.