> They were never "purchases" and it's more that the terminology has been faulty and misleading, more so than the business model. They were advertised as purchases. That they were not in actuality has a name: fraud.
They died of it too early for that.
What's ADB?
Prusa, but it's more expensive.
The promise of self driving is what's driving Tesla stock. Two things can happen: The dream is a bust, and Tesla is worthless. Or the dream pans out, and almost all other car companies are worth a lot less. Unless you…
A distinction without a difference.
I don't think we read the same Deep Work book.
You can't protect against _latent bugs_ with phased rollouts.
Before Uber, in France half of the time you got an irascible driver who never had change and whose credit card terminal was non functional.
There are many aspects that point to the text not being completely random or clumsily written. In particular it doesn't fall into many faults you'd expect from some non-expert trying to come up with a fake text. The age…
10% on British Indian Ocean Territories, whose sole inhabitants are US soldiers at the Diego Garcia base.
> That said the ability to describe desires in "fuzzy" ways is a usability value unlock. Ctl-Shift-P does the job where available. Not entirely sure how AI makes it any better.
> An entire generation of women from conservative backgrounds couldn't attend university in Turkiye until the 2000s because of the hijab ban. They could have just removed their hijab. Nobody was forcing them to keep it…
> For European reactors that seems to be either Mali/Niger, or Russia. Both not excellent if the goal is geopolitical independence. Australia, Kazakhstan and Canada are main suppliers.
What's the price of solar power at night?
The solution may already be here, in the form of ceramics already used in aeronautics. A French startup is working on a small reactor for industrial heat with them.
There's just no economic case for fusion. It's useful research, but current fission does the job better, and we already have decades of proven reserves, centuries likely if we kept looking for new reserves ... and then…
The dual stack strategy was criticized 20+ years ago on these grounds, it seemed pretty obvious to me, and as you point out critics were right.
> Keep in mind that for most aircraft the airline can pick and choose between different engines. 737 Max can only have CFM Leap engines. A320 can have either Leap or PW GTF.
Sshfs doesn't pass inotify and other things, so your IDE doesn't know a file has changed (git, compiler output, and so on.) VScode sees file changes immediately.
Is there something similar for Python? I only write the occasional script, and the default time functions are just bad.
Patroni is pretty good at this.
> It's good to interrogate the wallpaper of colonialism Complaining of colonialism in the context of WW2 and implying, if I'm reading you right, that the West is the bad guy is quite ironic. This was a war against…
I'd happily double my risk of being hit by a meteorite for $10000.
> virtual enemy There's nothing virtual about North Korea ...
> They were never "purchases" and it's more that the terminology has been faulty and misleading, more so than the business model. They were advertised as purchases. That they were not in actuality has a name: fraud.
They died of it too early for that.
What's ADB?
Prusa, but it's more expensive.
The promise of self driving is what's driving Tesla stock. Two things can happen: The dream is a bust, and Tesla is worthless. Or the dream pans out, and almost all other car companies are worth a lot less. Unless you…
A distinction without a difference.
I don't think we read the same Deep Work book.
You can't protect against _latent bugs_ with phased rollouts.
Before Uber, in France half of the time you got an irascible driver who never had change and whose credit card terminal was non functional.
There are many aspects that point to the text not being completely random or clumsily written. In particular it doesn't fall into many faults you'd expect from some non-expert trying to come up with a fake text. The age…
10% on British Indian Ocean Territories, whose sole inhabitants are US soldiers at the Diego Garcia base.
> That said the ability to describe desires in "fuzzy" ways is a usability value unlock. Ctl-Shift-P does the job where available. Not entirely sure how AI makes it any better.
> An entire generation of women from conservative backgrounds couldn't attend university in Turkiye until the 2000s because of the hijab ban. They could have just removed their hijab. Nobody was forcing them to keep it…
> For European reactors that seems to be either Mali/Niger, or Russia. Both not excellent if the goal is geopolitical independence. Australia, Kazakhstan and Canada are main suppliers.
What's the price of solar power at night?
The solution may already be here, in the form of ceramics already used in aeronautics. A French startup is working on a small reactor for industrial heat with them.
There's just no economic case for fusion. It's useful research, but current fission does the job better, and we already have decades of proven reserves, centuries likely if we kept looking for new reserves ... and then…
The dual stack strategy was criticized 20+ years ago on these grounds, it seemed pretty obvious to me, and as you point out critics were right.
> Keep in mind that for most aircraft the airline can pick and choose between different engines. 737 Max can only have CFM Leap engines. A320 can have either Leap or PW GTF.
Sshfs doesn't pass inotify and other things, so your IDE doesn't know a file has changed (git, compiler output, and so on.) VScode sees file changes immediately.
Is there something similar for Python? I only write the occasional script, and the default time functions are just bad.
Patroni is pretty good at this.
> It's good to interrogate the wallpaper of colonialism Complaining of colonialism in the context of WW2 and implying, if I'm reading you right, that the West is the bad guy is quite ironic. This was a war against…
I'd happily double my risk of being hit by a meteorite for $10000.
> virtual enemy There's nothing virtual about North Korea ...