What they don’t do is open their keynotes with announcements of the tweaks. This isn’t like the other situations.
I recall the A500 series as being thought of as 16-bit in the UK -- the 32-bit marketing started with the A1200, and devices based on it, like the CD32 (hence the name).
The human in the loop here said “no”, though. Not sure where you’d expect another layer of HITL to resolve this.
This team really have been thinking about weather a lot, and it makes me very curious about what they’ve created this time. It’s that depth of thought and expertise that feels missing from most of the vibe-coded…
The law might be a bad one (and probably is) but on balance better that police investigate suspected illegality than don’t. Overall I’d rather be somewhere where even a former royal can be arrested than somewhere the…
He was arrested for refusing to allow officers to enter his home on a pre-agreed return visit to discuss the complaints: https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/arrest_of_mr_darren_b... This is why the Daily Mail causes…
This doesn't feel like good-faith. There are leagues of difference between "what you typed out" when that's in a highly structured compiler-specific codified syntax *expressly designed* as the input to a compiler that…
Fastmail is the way. These are people for whom email is their job and focus and you get everything that comes with that, including good and responsive customer service.
Because we exist within a market, where the choices of others end up affecting us - if the market "votes" for a competing thing, that might affect the market for the things you care about. Your car analogy isn't great,…
This is like "HTML isn't code" again. For non-technical readers, there is their own language, and there is "code" - a bespoke language used solely to instruct machines. If you can't type to the machine in your own…
> Tesonet initially assisted Proton with HR, payroll, and local regulation Entirely normal behaviour for a competitor to provide “HR assistance”.
This is being blocked by my corp on the grounds of "newly seen domains". What a world.
I could really really use something that would OCR and classify all the screenshots I take of stuff to remember. Have an enormous folder of the damn things.
What they don’t do is open their keynotes with announcements of the tweaks. This isn’t like the other situations.
I recall the A500 series as being thought of as 16-bit in the UK -- the 32-bit marketing started with the A1200, and devices based on it, like the CD32 (hence the name).
The human in the loop here said “no”, though. Not sure where you’d expect another layer of HITL to resolve this.
This team really have been thinking about weather a lot, and it makes me very curious about what they’ve created this time. It’s that depth of thought and expertise that feels missing from most of the vibe-coded…
The law might be a bad one (and probably is) but on balance better that police investigate suspected illegality than don’t. Overall I’d rather be somewhere where even a former royal can be arrested than somewhere the…
He was arrested for refusing to allow officers to enter his home on a pre-agreed return visit to discuss the complaints: https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/arrest_of_mr_darren_b... This is why the Daily Mail causes…
This doesn't feel like good-faith. There are leagues of difference between "what you typed out" when that's in a highly structured compiler-specific codified syntax *expressly designed* as the input to a compiler that…
Fastmail is the way. These are people for whom email is their job and focus and you get everything that comes with that, including good and responsive customer service.
Because we exist within a market, where the choices of others end up affecting us - if the market "votes" for a competing thing, that might affect the market for the things you care about. Your car analogy isn't great,…
This is like "HTML isn't code" again. For non-technical readers, there is their own language, and there is "code" - a bespoke language used solely to instruct machines. If you can't type to the machine in your own…
> Tesonet initially assisted Proton with HR, payroll, and local regulation Entirely normal behaviour for a competitor to provide “HR assistance”.
This is being blocked by my corp on the grounds of "newly seen domains". What a world.
I could really really use something that would OCR and classify all the screenshots I take of stuff to remember. Have an enormous folder of the damn things.