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Stories from March 29, 2013
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1.Mystery Malady Kills More Bees, Heightening Worry on Farms (nytimes.com)
345 points by donohoe on March 29, 2013 | 153 comments
2.The Lie Hollywood Loves to Tell (jmtame.posthaven.com)
301 points by joshmattvander on March 29, 2013 | 249 comments
3.Ask PG: Did the "apply to YC without an idea" experiment work?
276 points by maximz on March 29, 2013 | 58 comments
4.tmux 1.8 Released (sourceforge.net)
247 points by john2373 on March 29, 2013 | 159 comments
5.A new blog dedicated to Emacs (emacsredux.com)
240 points by bozhidar on March 29, 2013 | 57 comments
6.Two Letters from Steve Jobs (davidgelphman.wordpress.com)
228 points by dwynings on March 29, 2013 | 84 comments
7.ZFS on Linux 0.6.1 released: Ready for wide scale deployment (groups.google.com)
209 points by iso8859-1 on March 29, 2013 | 101 comments
8.The Ouya works, it’s here, and it’s heading your way (penny-arcade.com)
203 points by richeyrw on March 29, 2013 | 108 comments
9.What Being a Handyman Has Taught Me About Male Insecurity (theatlantic.com)
186 points by wallflower on March 29, 2013 | 130 comments
10."Attrition is a group statistic. It doesn't apply to me." (josephwalla.com)
185 points by arram on March 29, 2013 | 110 comments
11.Bitcoin Hits $1 Billion (ieee.org)
187 points by sangfroid on March 29, 2013 | 195 comments
12.If Only I Knew This Shit in College (zachholman.com)
179 points by DanielRibeiro on March 29, 2013 | 93 comments
13.Why You Make Less Money (jobtipsforgeeks.com)
152 points by fecak on March 29, 2013 | 108 comments
14.Why is my TI-99/4A in Black and White? (pagetable.com)
140 points by fogus on March 29, 2013 | 46 comments

Interesting post by a redditor about the bee collapse:

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Ok, beekeeper, non-vegan here. I've got no horse in the vegan race, but I do know my bees and here is the sad truth: beekeeping is responsible for the decline of world-wide bee population for the last (roughly) 150 years, and for the precipitous decline since 1947.

Beekeeping as it has been done since the widespread adoption of the Langstroth hive has been bad for bees. This is mostly because the hive design has movable frames and opens from the top. These innovations led to highly interventionist beekeeping, and copious fucking with the bees.

The movable frame allows the beekeeper to easily remove, inspect, replace, and swap comb, and led to migratory beekeeping. Bees are now trucked by the tens of thousands of hives across the country with the seasons for the pollination business (which is a bigger than the honey business). The results is that diseases and bee pests move too. The biggest colony killer in the US right now is the Varroa mite, introduced from Asia by humans in 1988, and spread by humans to hives across the country.

The opening from the top destroys the bees' carefully maintained nestduftwarmebingdung, the nest atmosphere. Bees maintain a anti-microbial sauna inside the hive, at a contant tempurature with a complex scent. They can go into fever-mode, raising the temp to kill off infection. The scent helps maintain communication and defenses. Opening the hive destroys the atmosphere. It takes the bees days to reestablish, and is a costly expense of energy they need for foraging, building, and preparing for winter. This weakens the bees, compromising their immune system and leaving them susceptible to infection and invaders.

Then there's honey. Bees spend all season making honey stores so that they can survive the winter. The beekeeper comes along and takes it, then feeds the bees sugar syrup in the winter. This also weakens the bees. Honey is a complex, nutritious bee food. Sugar water is a simple, inadequate food. This is something like you farming all season and stocking up for the winter. You've canned and preserved your veg, and filled your freezer with meat, ready for the hard, unproductive winter. Then someone comes along, takes all your food, and replaces it with Twinkies. You'll survive the winter on Twinkies, but you'll be in pretty bad health come spring. (Although, like the bees with sugar, you'll happily eat the Twinkies, because, yum.)

In the pursuit of larger honey harvest, beekeepers have been artificially increasing the size if the bee's comb cell for about 100 years, by using comb foundation. Bigger cells is thought to mean more honey. So the bees you see today (with some exceptions) are "large-cell" bees, bigger than nature made them. Bigger cells means the workers are too big and the drones are too small (bees left on their own will make different sized cells for each type of bee). This weakens the bees. Some bees bred generations on foundation have lost their ability to create comb on their own.

These weak, immuno-compromised bees are then protected by the beekeepers with pesticides and anti-biotics placed in the hive to deal with the disease and pests that the bees can no longer fight off. This poisons the honey (yum!) and the bees, and breeds resistant pests.

Beekeeping is also dominated by artificial breeding of queens, which eliminates the Darwinian battle of the queens which nature uses to find the strongest queen. This weakens the genetics of the bees, for thousands of generations. Most, in fact almost all, beekeeping is industrial farming, equivalent to factory farming chickens or cattle. And it has devastated the bees.

There are exceptions: look into vertical top bar hives (which open from the bottom except once a year); chemical-free beekeeping; and spring-harvest honey (taken from the surplus after winter is over).

A note about honey: most of the honey you buy at the grocery store is not. It is heated and filtered and pollen-free, removing the extraordinary health benefits of honey, cut eith corn syrup, beet syrup or other sweeteners, and laced with pesticides and anti-biotics. If you want honey, buy unfiltered, unheated honey, from a beekeeper you know. If you want honey and are concerned about the bees, buy from a beekeeper using Warré topbar hives, doing a surplus harvest. A note about Colony Collapse Disorder: CCD is not a mystery, as is often reported. CCD is caused by industrial farming pesticides, which destroy bees' navigational abilities, and they can't find their way back to the hive. The whole "it's mysterious" thing is a lie promoted by the chemical companies, primarily Bayer. But in the context of bees weakened by generations of industrial beekeeping, trying to forage on thousands of acres of monoculture crops, having been trucked thousands of miles from their home territory, it is an easy lie to sell.

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http://www.reddit.com/r/AskReddit/comments/wsx2q/after_midni...

16.“My bank account's got robbed by European Commission. Over 700k is lost.” (bitcointalk.org)
135 points by heelhook on March 29, 2013 | 164 comments
17..NET and Node.JS – Performance Comparison (salmanq.com)
123 points by bencxr on March 29, 2013 | 109 comments
18.No, ZFS really doesn't need an fsck tool (c0t0d0s0.org)
112 points by antonios on March 29, 2013 | 58 comments
19.Boston Police use fake social media accounts to phish indie rock show info (slate.com)
108 points by morisy on March 29, 2013 | 107 comments
20.Want to Help People? Just Give Them Money (hbr.org)
109 points by iProject on March 29, 2013 | 129 comments
21.Firebase bindings for AngularJS (firebase.com)
110 points by jamest on March 29, 2013 | 21 comments
22.India as a great power (economist.com)
105 points by JumpCrisscross on March 29, 2013 | 58 comments
23.When Things Don't Work Out (avc.com)
101 points by ssclafani on March 29, 2013 | 34 comments

I love web pages like this. The top of it reads:

"tmux is a terminal multiplexer"

"What is a terminal multiplexer? It lets you switch easily between several programs in one terminal, detach them (they keep running in the background) and reattach them to a different terminal. And do a lot more. See the manual."

That's awesome. So many times someone posts on HN "CaffBook.ly.errr 0.98 now released" and I have no idea what it is or why I would want it.

25.Bitcoin: The Cyberpunk Cryptocurrency (slideshare.net)
103 points by kyledrake on March 29, 2013 | 97 comments
26.Let's Go Back to Grouping Students by Ability (theatlantic.com)
102 points by JumpCrisscross on March 29, 2013 | 95 comments
27.Create your next conference poster with LaTeX (latextemplates.com)
99 points by VelNZ on March 29, 2013 | 41 comments
28.The Setup: Joe Armstrong (usesthis.com)
87 points by lispython on March 29, 2013 | 20 comments
29.Musk: SpaceX to Attempt Falcon 9 First Stage Water Landing (parabolicarc.com)
83 points by someperson on March 29, 2013 | 23 comments
30.Titan 0.3.0 Released: Geo, full-text, edge indexing on billion edge graphs (github.com/thinkaurelius)
76 points by okram on March 29, 2013 | 29 comments

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