> Zip code 94107 is located in San Francisco, California, specifically in the Potrero Hill neighborhood. It is part of San Francisco County. There are approximately 163 homes for sale in this zip code, with prices…
[flagged]
No. It goes back to the 1990s when we used Data Entry Operators to key mail details that could not be read by OCR. This is all so the mail goes into the truck sorted. That is the most important part of the mail delivery…
Why didn't they just rewrite it in Rust?
People who pay Anthropic you mean. There is no benefit. And only the owner can make more books. Fake altruistic mindset. Super sociopathic.
> then everyone benefits from cheaper widgets and you get paid for it. Ah, but the original widget manufacturer bought a Senator, and so now there are onerous widget regulations that specifically target me while leaving…
More directly if the game engine only updates player state every 60 seconds (tick rate) then is this 4ms advantage actually present for the 240Hz case? Further if your network has more than 4ms of jitter then I don't…
really missed a chance to write this up into "three acts."
In two months they've doubled MAUs? Without an explanation of that specific outcome I don't believe it. Also: > As per SimilarWeb data 61.05% of ChatGPT's traffic comes from YouTube, which means from all the social…
You have "social anxiety." You are not in a "moat of low status." The status is purely in your own mind and not something calculated and assigned to you by the world. Another CEO flying at 30,000' missing the forest for…
> I don't think so? The disk is going to report an uncorrected error for one of them.
How would they know to volunteer? Are you saying I can perform a hostile volunteering to take over for a maintainer who does not want to give up the project? I don't think you understood what was meant.
Is that raw error rate or uncorrected error rate?
> a lot of our technology is sheer accident , serendipity, the way the cards happened to fall What an absurd ahistorical fallacy. > but thanks to mindwarping science fictional yellow-covered literature Thanks to this…
> some sort of data error detection (and ideally correction). That's pretty much built into most mass storage devices already. > If a disk bitflips one of my files The likelihood and consequence of this occurring is in…
Presumably there would be an open call where people would nominate themselves for consideration. These are problems that have come up and been solved in human organizations for hundreds of years before the kernel even…
Corruption has been compounding. Malicious business interests don't actually care which party has power. Just that they have access. It's telling that you have to reach back 30 years to find an example where the budget…
> the dollar has been insanely overvalued post-COVID. That's an odd way of saying the US doubled it's federal budget from $3T to $6T in response to COVID and has now ensconced this pork further into law. Under a…
So when someone is actively losing their rights you feel the need to go out of your way to say you're unsympathetic. What did you /intend/ to convey with this? You support them, but at this dark moment, you felt the…
If our rights are contingent on taste then we have no rights at all.
> are these passive cables acting like antenna With both ends connected to a device? No. Aside from that you've got a linear scrambler into balanced drivers into twisted pair. It's about as noise immune as you can get.…
> I've always been told that caching is a tool to make software faster. Who told you that? > you don't have to go all the way back to some backend database or API server or SSD [...] Caching is thus a tool to improve…
I've only ever seen linear increases. When did Moore's law even _start_?
> immediately transforms into Minor quibble, "can only be resolved as". The runtime absolutely holds Promise<Promise<T>>'s.
> Zip code 94107 is located in San Francisco, California, specifically in the Potrero Hill neighborhood. It is part of San Francisco County. There are approximately 163 homes for sale in this zip code, with prices…
[flagged]
No. It goes back to the 1990s when we used Data Entry Operators to key mail details that could not be read by OCR. This is all so the mail goes into the truck sorted. That is the most important part of the mail delivery…
Why didn't they just rewrite it in Rust?
People who pay Anthropic you mean. There is no benefit. And only the owner can make more books. Fake altruistic mindset. Super sociopathic.
[flagged]
> then everyone benefits from cheaper widgets and you get paid for it. Ah, but the original widget manufacturer bought a Senator, and so now there are onerous widget regulations that specifically target me while leaving…
More directly if the game engine only updates player state every 60 seconds (tick rate) then is this 4ms advantage actually present for the 240Hz case? Further if your network has more than 4ms of jitter then I don't…
really missed a chance to write this up into "three acts."
In two months they've doubled MAUs? Without an explanation of that specific outcome I don't believe it. Also: > As per SimilarWeb data 61.05% of ChatGPT's traffic comes from YouTube, which means from all the social…
You have "social anxiety." You are not in a "moat of low status." The status is purely in your own mind and not something calculated and assigned to you by the world. Another CEO flying at 30,000' missing the forest for…
> I don't think so? The disk is going to report an uncorrected error for one of them.
How would they know to volunteer? Are you saying I can perform a hostile volunteering to take over for a maintainer who does not want to give up the project? I don't think you understood what was meant.
Is that raw error rate or uncorrected error rate?
> a lot of our technology is sheer accident , serendipity, the way the cards happened to fall What an absurd ahistorical fallacy. > but thanks to mindwarping science fictional yellow-covered literature Thanks to this…
> some sort of data error detection (and ideally correction). That's pretty much built into most mass storage devices already. > If a disk bitflips one of my files The likelihood and consequence of this occurring is in…
Presumably there would be an open call where people would nominate themselves for consideration. These are problems that have come up and been solved in human organizations for hundreds of years before the kernel even…
Corruption has been compounding. Malicious business interests don't actually care which party has power. Just that they have access. It's telling that you have to reach back 30 years to find an example where the budget…
> the dollar has been insanely overvalued post-COVID. That's an odd way of saying the US doubled it's federal budget from $3T to $6T in response to COVID and has now ensconced this pork further into law. Under a…
So when someone is actively losing their rights you feel the need to go out of your way to say you're unsympathetic. What did you /intend/ to convey with this? You support them, but at this dark moment, you felt the…
If our rights are contingent on taste then we have no rights at all.
> are these passive cables acting like antenna With both ends connected to a device? No. Aside from that you've got a linear scrambler into balanced drivers into twisted pair. It's about as noise immune as you can get.…
> I've always been told that caching is a tool to make software faster. Who told you that? > you don't have to go all the way back to some backend database or API server or SSD [...] Caching is thus a tool to improve…
I've only ever seen linear increases. When did Moore's law even _start_?
> immediately transforms into Minor quibble, "can only be resolved as". The runtime absolutely holds Promise<Promise<T>>'s.