> The reason we haven't is because in reality we don't care much about that risk relative to the costs of addressing it (even with the cheapest possible solutions, which are not "colonize another planet"). You’re making…
We have to figure out interplanetary travel first. Crawl before you walk.
Why do Java developers still have to tune stuff like that?
What makes the economics better in space? Are there any unique use-cases waiting to be unleashed?
Desktops probably will stop existing before we’re gone.
Doesn’t this also mean that if you transform the work created by Midjourney, you now have a copyright on the transformed work? I wonder what counts for transformed, is a filter enough or does it have to be more than…
That’s silly, ice isn’t cold enough. Carbon ice might work better.
> Take Canonical's microK8s distribution. Do a snap install to get a Kubernetes node up and running, and run a command to register it in a cluster. Does this pass nowadays as rocket science? That’s only after you…
If the supply line is blown up at the beginning of the war then what was the point of switching gauges.
Someone needs to have data to validate a feature has value. Otherwise the company is just operating on the GIGO principle. I’ll admit, companies like that do exist and somehow survive!
Then how can you know if building the feature made any sense?
> There may be drastic differences in syntax and semantics between the massive matrix of terraform version + provider version(s) and they've shown to be absolutely terrible at navigating that, even if you specify…
If reviewing and merging your PR puts me on the hook for fixing anything that breaks, I just won’t review your PR. If I had time to write it myself I wouldn’t need your PR in the first place.
> vs the opportunity to license the content to an aggregator Isn’t this what Netflix used to be
> But in politics it does, which is that the right says yes and the left says no. That’s not accurate, tax deductions for the poor is an obvious example. How many on the left would oppose expanding the EITC and how many…
> Because the federal government was meant to be extremely limited and mostly serve to mediate _actual_ interstate commerce and foreign affairs. The oft ignored 10th amendment left most everything else to states or the…
> Personally, I think we should simply fine the heck out of all websites until they all feature a "Reject all" button. Personally I’m tired of cookie pop-ups on websites, a reject all button does nothing to solve the…
When has capitalism been about maintaining key infrastructure? That’s what government is for!
> We are reliant on the US as only 2 companies can make the x86/64 chips. The x86-64 architecture is on its way out globally thanks to Arm. RISC V is not needed for decoupling from the US.
> it's not actually possible without destroying the internet as we know it Looking around at all the neo nazis, Russian disinformation and just the general populace turning more and more insane I’m getting pretty tired…
Maybe it does but the poster was still engaging in behavior similar to someone who has stolen the phone. That said, Apple should add some controls that prevent legitimate users from triggering security checks by…
> What workflow can have occasional catastrophic lapses of reasoning, non factuality, no memory and hallucinations etc? LLMs might enable some completely new things to be automated that made no sense to automate before,…
> There is certainly some merit to that Any source for that? The profit margin has to come from somewhere.
> Also DI, which is arguably not necessary at all in Go given how elegantly interfaces work. > I spent quite a lot of time using wire for DI in go only to really study the code it was generating and realizing it truly…
> It actually might kinda look like the "economy" of Starcraft: you gather resources, decide what to build with them, and order it all around according to your whim. There will be a handful of guys playing, and everyone…
> The reason we haven't is because in reality we don't care much about that risk relative to the costs of addressing it (even with the cheapest possible solutions, which are not "colonize another planet"). You’re making…
We have to figure out interplanetary travel first. Crawl before you walk.
Why do Java developers still have to tune stuff like that?
What makes the economics better in space? Are there any unique use-cases waiting to be unleashed?
Desktops probably will stop existing before we’re gone.
Doesn’t this also mean that if you transform the work created by Midjourney, you now have a copyright on the transformed work? I wonder what counts for transformed, is a filter enough or does it have to be more than…
That’s silly, ice isn’t cold enough. Carbon ice might work better.
> Take Canonical's microK8s distribution. Do a snap install to get a Kubernetes node up and running, and run a command to register it in a cluster. Does this pass nowadays as rocket science? That’s only after you…
If the supply line is blown up at the beginning of the war then what was the point of switching gauges.
Someone needs to have data to validate a feature has value. Otherwise the company is just operating on the GIGO principle. I’ll admit, companies like that do exist and somehow survive!
Then how can you know if building the feature made any sense?
> There may be drastic differences in syntax and semantics between the massive matrix of terraform version + provider version(s) and they've shown to be absolutely terrible at navigating that, even if you specify…
If reviewing and merging your PR puts me on the hook for fixing anything that breaks, I just won’t review your PR. If I had time to write it myself I wouldn’t need your PR in the first place.
> vs the opportunity to license the content to an aggregator Isn’t this what Netflix used to be
> But in politics it does, which is that the right says yes and the left says no. That’s not accurate, tax deductions for the poor is an obvious example. How many on the left would oppose expanding the EITC and how many…
> Because the federal government was meant to be extremely limited and mostly serve to mediate _actual_ interstate commerce and foreign affairs. The oft ignored 10th amendment left most everything else to states or the…
> Personally, I think we should simply fine the heck out of all websites until they all feature a "Reject all" button. Personally I’m tired of cookie pop-ups on websites, a reject all button does nothing to solve the…
When has capitalism been about maintaining key infrastructure? That’s what government is for!
> We are reliant on the US as only 2 companies can make the x86/64 chips. The x86-64 architecture is on its way out globally thanks to Arm. RISC V is not needed for decoupling from the US.
> it's not actually possible without destroying the internet as we know it Looking around at all the neo nazis, Russian disinformation and just the general populace turning more and more insane I’m getting pretty tired…
Maybe it does but the poster was still engaging in behavior similar to someone who has stolen the phone. That said, Apple should add some controls that prevent legitimate users from triggering security checks by…
> What workflow can have occasional catastrophic lapses of reasoning, non factuality, no memory and hallucinations etc? LLMs might enable some completely new things to be automated that made no sense to automate before,…
> There is certainly some merit to that Any source for that? The profit margin has to come from somewhere.
> Also DI, which is arguably not necessary at all in Go given how elegantly interfaces work. > I spent quite a lot of time using wire for DI in go only to really study the code it was generating and realizing it truly…
> It actually might kinda look like the "economy" of Starcraft: you gather resources, decide what to build with them, and order it all around according to your whim. There will be a handful of guys playing, and everyone…