Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | davidcollantes's comments login

Really, really well done! GitHub starred, and playing with it. Thank you for sharing!


Thank you.


Yes, but it costs $100 (currently on discount, original $200).


True, and it is perpetually "discounted". A free trial would be neat.


Hack (https://apps.apple.com/us/app/hack-for-yc-hacker-news-reader...) is absolutely amazing, but competition is always a good thing.

Alternatively, creating a good Fediverse (aka Mastodon) client would also be great!


The website is perfectly functional on mobile though. And fast. And the data is the latest.


Vote buttons are too small. "Perfectly functional" for mobile app to me means input methods that can be reached consistently with little effort, like swiping to vote.


At least the buttons scale with the text size, and so to an limited extent this is within your control.


Who could've imagined that you don't need 150MB of JavaScript to create an easily usable mobile UI?


I use Harmonic on android for HN and can highly recommend it


Ice Cubes is OSS and it’s amazing. Alternatively, I hear that Ivory rocks too.


Octal is another great ios app


I played, more than once, a few of the sound snippets. I think the Shazam "findings" are highly inaccurate. Fun project nonetheless!

walz, could you write more about the setup, maybe to propitiate others to replicate it in other cities?


I've listened to a bunch of the snippets and you can usually just barely hear the sound in the background. Which makes me think Shazam is very accurate. I really should read more about how Shazam's algorithm works, because it feels like magic.

The phone records 10 minute chunks of audio at a time, in airplane mode. Every 10 minutes, airplane mode is turned off and the audio is uploaded to a server. The server then splits the audio into 15 second overlapping chunks, and each is passed to Shazam's API (no official API, but someone reverse engineered it and made a great Python package). This setup is super power efficient! The phone dips down to a minimum 70% percent battery by the early morning.


> I really should read more about how Shazam's algorithm works, because it feels like magic.

https://www.ee.columbia.edu/~dpwe/papers/Wang03-shazam.pdf


Also, if you’re more visual, algorithm inventor Avery Wang delivered an accessible and detailed lecture at DAFx several years back:

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=YVTnj3OIhwI

I found it especially insightful because he started from the beginning and traced the thought process as the algorithm developed and became more sophisticated.


Holy cow.

Just clicked around and you're right: the Sep 29 5:19pm snippet detected "Celebration" by Kool and the Gang, and there's almost nothing there. But it's in there.

Had I not known what I was listening for, and been intentionally listening, there's zero chance I'd have picked up on it.

It does feel like magic.


The battery will live much longer if you run it from 80% down to 50%. There are some clever plugs you can get off the shelf if your phone doesn’t support setting this in software.


I doubt the "design brief" for this involves ensuring it's got thousands or days worth of expected battery charging lifetime.

There's already people here discussing the best way to locate it. Sooner or later someone's gonna find a "free phone" and trade it for a point of meth somewhere just off 16th and Mission...


will be interesting to see how it fares in the winter!


A San Francisco winter? The mean daily minimum is something like 45F, it's more likely to have trouble overheating during the summer.


"The coldest winter I ever spent was a summer in San Francisco." -- Mark Twain

I suspect moisture damage from Karl The Fog rolling in every afternoon is more likely to kill it.


Less daily solar radiation to power/recharge the phone.


Same, although I know Shazam does most of its work on very high frequencies so it’s possible we’re not able to hear the part that got matched.

The “Not Like Us” snippet (09/29 2:43pm) is easily recognizable though. And “Rockabye” can be heard at 3:05pm.


> I know Shazam does most of its work on very high frequencies

Are you sure about that? High frequencies don't propagate as well (and, beyond a point, aren't reproduced at all by cheap speakers), so that would seem to limit its effectiveness pretty severely.


The “About” is not “Who we are” at the time I am typing this. Please add information about the company, founders, etc.

It looks good, thought!


This is pretty neat! I am using it, and it does scratch an itch I had as well. So simple!

What would the risk of using it be? Will it be inherited from age itself, or something else?



Wow, Quartz looks really good. Thank you for sharing!


The sunlight is free. :-)


Landing page is pretty close to that of Hello (https://hello.com/).



Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: