Between every surface being a link and the needless redacted text flourishes, this site is kind of awful to navigate on mobile.
The fact that we're calling $500 GPUs "midrange" is proof that Nvidia's strategy is working.
AMD cards are fine from a raw performance perspective, but Nvidia has built themselves a moat of software/hardware features like ray-tracing, video encoding, CUDA, DLSS, etc where AMD's equivalents have simply not been…
I used to use a similar extension in Chrome called wasavi, but I got burned once too many times by bugs in extension causing me to lose all of the text I had been writing.
Flexbox was designed for these kinds of layouts, so that would also be an option here.
There is LosslessCut[1], though it's only designed to handle trimming and not general re-encoding. [1]: https://github.com/mifi/lossless-cut
I was thinking about this the other day; it would be really interesting to have big corporations whose profits depend on public-domain data. We might actually see lobbying to decrease copyright terms, to counter…
As someone with a YouTube channel, from looking at my metrics it's pretty clear that YouTube is being held afloat by a) the fact that non-technical users can't easily block YouTube ads on mobile devices, and b) YouTube…
I think if you're going to show off and do clever impractical things, a personal site is a pretty good place for it. That being said, scrolling that page with a regular mouse is incredibly frustrating.
> a bunch of traits that simply can’t be tested I think there's a lot more that could be tested that what current implementation-centric interviews measure. At my company for example, I feel like we've gotten a lot of…
It's funny, I made the same analogy the other day: https://twitter.com/gramofdata/status/1736838023940112523 I think something interesting to note is that once we stopped atmospheric nuclear testing steel radiation…
In my experience, it genuinely lowers the activation (and total) energy for certain tasks, since LLMs are great at writing repetitive code that would otherwise be tedious to write by hand. For instance, writing a bunch…
People absolutely flowchart fighting games at a high level. Combos are, unsurprisingly, completely non-interactive in most games, but there's also a term specifically for non-interactive offense: setplay…
Teleport is now just 3 punches or 3 kicks (no motion), so TK teleports are actually very easy.
I didn't realize Slate was that old! I've only been using it for about... 8 years... Jokes aside, I love Slate's programmability. I configured mine to behave like WinSplit Revolution, since that's what I was used to.
> What's even more rare is a UX designer that also thinks about these things, who are worth a million bucks. Tell me about it. I've been struggling for years to get our designers to think of their designs as more than…
That may be your experience, but I assure you that there are plenty of companies where it's not like that. Where I work, our product team is pretty receptive to us taking time to fix tech debt, since: - Engineering is…
I assume it's to stop people from generating revenge porn.
The fundamental differences in scale between manual recreation by a human and automated replication by a machine are what led to the creation of copyright law in the first place.
The author is tactically avoiding discussions that she considers unproductive and does not want to participate in, hence the title of the blog post. > Is it just me or is this post screaming with self-consciousness and…
I don't think it's that simple. In order to have a claim to fair use, you would have to argue that the derivative work doesn't negatively affect the market for the original. When Google got sued for scanning copyrighted…
I don't think we really even need to dive that deep into the philosophical aspect of this. I think that it's fine to simply treat humans and machines differently, the same way we decided that animals cannot hold…
As far as I'm aware, photocopying an entire book does in fact violate copyright law and librarians will refuse to help you do it: https://guides.cuny.edu/cunyfairuse/librarians
> You can't style it with CSS. Unfortunately, I suspect that this is 100% intentional. datalists can draw outside of the browser window, which is fantastic, but also probably means that there are security considerations…
There's already companies working on this: https://axiom.ai/ I would guess that it's just a matter of converting the DOM accessibility tree into text descriptions, e.g. "There is a button that says 'Start'" And then…
Between every surface being a link and the needless redacted text flourishes, this site is kind of awful to navigate on mobile.
The fact that we're calling $500 GPUs "midrange" is proof that Nvidia's strategy is working.
AMD cards are fine from a raw performance perspective, but Nvidia has built themselves a moat of software/hardware features like ray-tracing, video encoding, CUDA, DLSS, etc where AMD's equivalents have simply not been…
I used to use a similar extension in Chrome called wasavi, but I got burned once too many times by bugs in extension causing me to lose all of the text I had been writing.
Flexbox was designed for these kinds of layouts, so that would also be an option here.
There is LosslessCut[1], though it's only designed to handle trimming and not general re-encoding. [1]: https://github.com/mifi/lossless-cut
I was thinking about this the other day; it would be really interesting to have big corporations whose profits depend on public-domain data. We might actually see lobbying to decrease copyright terms, to counter…
As someone with a YouTube channel, from looking at my metrics it's pretty clear that YouTube is being held afloat by a) the fact that non-technical users can't easily block YouTube ads on mobile devices, and b) YouTube…
I think if you're going to show off and do clever impractical things, a personal site is a pretty good place for it. That being said, scrolling that page with a regular mouse is incredibly frustrating.
> a bunch of traits that simply can’t be tested I think there's a lot more that could be tested that what current implementation-centric interviews measure. At my company for example, I feel like we've gotten a lot of…
It's funny, I made the same analogy the other day: https://twitter.com/gramofdata/status/1736838023940112523 I think something interesting to note is that once we stopped atmospheric nuclear testing steel radiation…
In my experience, it genuinely lowers the activation (and total) energy for certain tasks, since LLMs are great at writing repetitive code that would otherwise be tedious to write by hand. For instance, writing a bunch…
People absolutely flowchart fighting games at a high level. Combos are, unsurprisingly, completely non-interactive in most games, but there's also a term specifically for non-interactive offense: setplay…
Teleport is now just 3 punches or 3 kicks (no motion), so TK teleports are actually very easy.
I didn't realize Slate was that old! I've only been using it for about... 8 years... Jokes aside, I love Slate's programmability. I configured mine to behave like WinSplit Revolution, since that's what I was used to.
> What's even more rare is a UX designer that also thinks about these things, who are worth a million bucks. Tell me about it. I've been struggling for years to get our designers to think of their designs as more than…
That may be your experience, but I assure you that there are plenty of companies where it's not like that. Where I work, our product team is pretty receptive to us taking time to fix tech debt, since: - Engineering is…
I assume it's to stop people from generating revenge porn.
The fundamental differences in scale between manual recreation by a human and automated replication by a machine are what led to the creation of copyright law in the first place.
The author is tactically avoiding discussions that she considers unproductive and does not want to participate in, hence the title of the blog post. > Is it just me or is this post screaming with self-consciousness and…
I don't think it's that simple. In order to have a claim to fair use, you would have to argue that the derivative work doesn't negatively affect the market for the original. When Google got sued for scanning copyrighted…
I don't think we really even need to dive that deep into the philosophical aspect of this. I think that it's fine to simply treat humans and machines differently, the same way we decided that animals cannot hold…
As far as I'm aware, photocopying an entire book does in fact violate copyright law and librarians will refuse to help you do it: https://guides.cuny.edu/cunyfairuse/librarians
> You can't style it with CSS. Unfortunately, I suspect that this is 100% intentional. datalists can draw outside of the browser window, which is fantastic, but also probably means that there are security considerations…
There's already companies working on this: https://axiom.ai/ I would guess that it's just a matter of converting the DOM accessibility tree into text descriptions, e.g. "There is a button that says 'Start'" And then…