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looks like a cool product, thanks for sharing.


Apple TV's capabilities as a digital signage tool are evolving, offering a practical, affordable alternative to traditional signage systems with seamless setup and robust performance.


How well do they do running in somewhat enclosed spaces, many hours a day? I'm guessing Apple's cool-running chips make that doable.


They do perfectly well, as the newer models use an A15 bionic processor which is the same chip as the iPhone 13. My Apple TV stays on 24/7, with a screensaver in the background, and heat is never an issue. And they were designed to be kept in media cabinets which are enclosed spaces without much ventilation.


Hi HN!

Dark Sleep was created out of frustration with existing Apple TV apps that didn’t offer relaxing sleep sounds with a completely black screen. Most apps had distracting images, and the light was interrupting sleep. Instead of letting the TV light be a disturbance, it was turned into a feature—introducing a Sunrise Alarm Clock that gently wakes you up with natural light.

The app is designed with simplicity in mind: just a few clicks, no clutter, and a clean black screen. It's used every night for a peaceful sleep and a natural wake-up to the sunrise alarm. No subscriptions or in-app purchases—just a one-time purchase for less than a cup of coffee .

To celebrate the launch, I’m giving the app away for free to the HN community, for the month of September! Just hit me up here to get the App Store promo code: https://forms.gle/cGHDa9RmtuWCskBL6


ABPR is a good product but a ton of inputs, and not geared towards EV newbies who are not familiar with terms like SoC, reference consumption, charging overhead, etc..This is designed to give simple answers to simple questions such as cost to charge at home vs public station, how much charge time needed to make my trip, etc.


Hello HN community!

Finding deals on third party reserved instances for sale on AWS isn’t as easy as it should be, which is why this site was built. This site identifies the best bargains in the marketplace and makes it easy for you to search and compare against on-demand pricing. It was built to scratch our own itch, and hopefully you will find it as useful as we do.

Any feedback, suggestions, bug reports, comments, etc. are welcome and appreciated. Good luck!


aws lambda, api gateway, s3, cloudfront, route53, rds postgres, express js react, next js

100% infrastructure as code using serverless framework and cloudformation. architecture scales well, is fully managed, and super cheap to run. almost no cost if no users. express + next js + lambda pretenders the ui for speed and seo.


This, exactly. When you're one person, you don't want to be dealing with server hardening and making sure the CPU hasn't been exhausted, or getting DDoS'd and trying to scale up your servers. I ran a website on S3 with a CloudFront CDN fronting it handling for less than a few dollars per month.


thanks @mtmail! just fixed, should be good now! appreciate the report!


feedback?


UPHAIL.COM | Full Time | Full Stack Web Developer | On-site in NYC

http://www.uphail.com

"The 11 most useful web tools of 2014", Mashable

"desiredSkills": [ "HTML", "CSS", "JavaScript", "jQuery", "MongoDB", "Python", "Flask", "Git", "Linux" ], "responsibilities": [ "build beautiful products", "write readable code", "improve algorithms", "automate processes", "commit early", "commit often" ] }


You forgot the opening curly brace ;)


1. Realize that as a developer you will be in high demand in the workforce, surely you will find something better in no time.

2. Work on your startup idea / prototype during this downtime. It doesn't have to be perfect, just hacked together well enough to provide value to someone.

3. Brush up your skills on sites like Codeacademy, W3C, Tutsplus, etc. Take a few free online university / MOOC courses.

4. Sift through projects on Odesk / Elance. You may find some part time work that may provide some supplemental income while at the same time improving your dev skills.

5. Hustle. Knock on doors. Be proactive. Let your passions shine through. Don't take no for an answer.


> Sift through projects on Odesk / Elance. You may find some part time work that may provide some supplemental income while at the same time improving your dev skills.

You're probably better off taking unemployment and working on some quick projects to spiff up your github account. I experimented with Odesk/Elance for side income and the best job I managed to find was $20/hr.


Ah, the American way: Why work when you can get the same pay from the taxpayers pocket without having to?

I rather work at McDonalds for half that @dminor and still have my pride, than to be a burden on society.


thecolorblue has already paid unemployment insurance, via his employer, for exactly the situation he's in now. He is his own burden.


Do you expect lawyers or doctors to work for $20/hr? How about plumbers and electricians? But you expect a competent developer to work for $20/hr?


Unemployment benefits come come unemployment insurance. If the government is going to force us to pay the premiums, they best be willing to pay out the benefits.


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