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This is brilliant work! I hope that Apple doesn't hit you with a takedown order.


This is the best thing I've seen on HN in a long, long time.


That's so sweet. Thank you.


Isn't "securing lasting freedoms for all" a hyperbolic title for this issue?


"Reducing our payment processing costs" doesn't have quite the same ring to it.


Having the potential to restore general purpose computing to a device I own is a noble cause even if the standard bearers are an unpleasant bunch.


Restoring general purpose computing is so immensely removed from allowing 3rd party payments on a regulated software market, I would hesitate to even call it a step in the right direction.


It is in the pantheon of possible solutions to the crisis. We know for fairly certain epic wants their own store on iOS. That does move the needle significantly.


Particularly when Epic's entire business model depends on restricting people's freedoms.


Calling it now:

After Epic's claim to "secure our freedom", Apple replies that they are "freeing our security" by only allowing verified payment methods.


Happy New Year's


Happy new year my dude


This looks like a very promising resource.


I paid 100EUR for VIP.


According to sokra, this ought to be the final rc. From the release notes: "This is probably the last RC. We released it as final test. If no critial bugs are discovered, we release 2.2.0 in < 10 days."


"The English and Their History" by Robert Tombs. This isn't simply another "here's what happened" history book. Rather, it focuses not simply on what happened and why it happened, but more so on the stories the English tell themselves about their own history and how that formed and continues to form their complex ethnic, national, and historical identity. For example, the Henry V that impressed itself on the English imagination was not so much the real, historical Henry V, but rather the hero of Shakespeare's "Henriad": Henry IV, Parts I and II, and Henry V. (Cf. the St. Crispin's Day speech: "We few, we happy few, we band of brothers," etc.) Dr. Tombs is the Professor of French at Cambridge. Ironically, after devoting a lifetime to studying the civilization on the opposite side of the Channel, he has written a masterpiece on the history of his own people.

If you're looking for a book on the British Empire, this isn't it. Of course, the Empire is an essential topic in the book; however, Tombs focus remains centered on Britain, and, more specifically, England itself. For example, when discussing the Seven Years War, Tombs emphasizes how events abroad affected domestic politics without going into great detail about the international events themselves.

I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in English history.


Dear Facebook,

Thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you.


IME, breathless superlatives such as "all x should be y" are almost never true. That said, the author did go to great lengths to support his argument.


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