How would this help against someone submitting an actual, non-compromised version bump, then adding malware once it's accepted?
Question is if this would be thorough enough for this attack? A package with a slightly more involved build process, maybe some patches because it was made to build on a different distro. Maybe you've already installed…
> ultrasonic chirp authentication Source? Can't find any good source on this.
I suppose using an LLM-powered autocomplete might be something for you then? Then you can be writing the code, with the LLM doing the "boring" parts, in chunks small enough you can review them on the fly.
Local/open LLMs are a thing though. You can build a server for hosting decent sized (100-200B) models at home for a few k$. They may not be Opus-level, but hopefully we can get something matching current SOTA, but that…
The 2.13 level ("hex racer") is kind of pain. Apparently I'm not fast enough at dividing/multiplying by 16... when I get something like "convert 0xB3 to decimal"
You may wanna see if openrgb isn't able to configure the RGB. Could even do some fun stuff like changing the color once done with a training run or something
Sad to see the quality of the content from Lumafield slowly going down. Feels like the content got less technical after they moved it from "scan of the month" to their blog, and now it feels like the descriptions are…
The problem with the "your life objectively sucks" option is when you end up too depressed to actually bother doing anything and just give up. That's another case where drugs can help.
I don't fully agree with the "if something isn’t worth consuming at 1x, it’s not worth consuming at all" part. Sometimes you find a great video or podcast, but the person speaking simply speaks slowly. Or you've just…
> they are all reactive such that they must be given a task before they will do anything. Isn't that just because that's what they're being trained on though? Wonder what you would get if the training data, instead of…
Neither this nor the blog post explains what this feature is actually supposed to do?
Also interested in this, but haven't tried it myself. Apparently NSF (Nano Silver Fluoride) is more commonly in non-western countries. They have a video with some more info here:…
This one? https://youtu.be/_goIYP3FfO8
...or you can just give someone a "smart" device that requires then to install an app with lots of unnecessary permissions to use it.
> Tastes like bullshit to me. Does it really? In my opinion, if it stops working and it's under warranty, why not send it out for repair? They did no changes to the actual device, and apparently it was working fine for…
You can always put some extra protection on the external interfaces. Won't make it impossible to fry if you really do something stupid but would reduce the risk significantly.
Hasn't stopped a lot of companies from selling out and then being ran into the ground by their new owners.
Seedboxes often have TBs of storage for relatively cheap.
Roon seems great but the pricing is really steep in my opinion... Costs practically as much as a streaming service, but you still need to get your own music. At least they have a lifetime purchase option, though it…
Technically that's four cores, two of which that can be active at once
NVIDIA's stance on Linux aside, from a practical point of view the one thing I've had the most issues with in practice while using them together was the abomination that is Optimus. Considering they mention a mux for…
Like the Cosmo Communicator? https://www.www3.planetcom.co.uk/cosmo-communicator
Many of the cars with regenerative braking already do apply the brakes once in a while to prevent them from rusting.
For normal VR/AR, definitely, since you want to have objects moving in the Z direction. For this usecase it should be enough to show the "flat" virtual screen at the focal distance.
How would this help against someone submitting an actual, non-compromised version bump, then adding malware once it's accepted?
Question is if this would be thorough enough for this attack? A package with a slightly more involved build process, maybe some patches because it was made to build on a different distro. Maybe you've already installed…
> ultrasonic chirp authentication Source? Can't find any good source on this.
I suppose using an LLM-powered autocomplete might be something for you then? Then you can be writing the code, with the LLM doing the "boring" parts, in chunks small enough you can review them on the fly.
Local/open LLMs are a thing though. You can build a server for hosting decent sized (100-200B) models at home for a few k$. They may not be Opus-level, but hopefully we can get something matching current SOTA, but that…
The 2.13 level ("hex racer") is kind of pain. Apparently I'm not fast enough at dividing/multiplying by 16... when I get something like "convert 0xB3 to decimal"
You may wanna see if openrgb isn't able to configure the RGB. Could even do some fun stuff like changing the color once done with a training run or something
Sad to see the quality of the content from Lumafield slowly going down. Feels like the content got less technical after they moved it from "scan of the month" to their blog, and now it feels like the descriptions are…
The problem with the "your life objectively sucks" option is when you end up too depressed to actually bother doing anything and just give up. That's another case where drugs can help.
I don't fully agree with the "if something isn’t worth consuming at 1x, it’s not worth consuming at all" part. Sometimes you find a great video or podcast, but the person speaking simply speaks slowly. Or you've just…
> they are all reactive such that they must be given a task before they will do anything. Isn't that just because that's what they're being trained on though? Wonder what you would get if the training data, instead of…
Neither this nor the blog post explains what this feature is actually supposed to do?
Also interested in this, but haven't tried it myself. Apparently NSF (Nano Silver Fluoride) is more commonly in non-western countries. They have a video with some more info here:…
This one? https://youtu.be/_goIYP3FfO8
...or you can just give someone a "smart" device that requires then to install an app with lots of unnecessary permissions to use it.
> Tastes like bullshit to me. Does it really? In my opinion, if it stops working and it's under warranty, why not send it out for repair? They did no changes to the actual device, and apparently it was working fine for…
You can always put some extra protection on the external interfaces. Won't make it impossible to fry if you really do something stupid but would reduce the risk significantly.
Hasn't stopped a lot of companies from selling out and then being ran into the ground by their new owners.
Seedboxes often have TBs of storage for relatively cheap.
Roon seems great but the pricing is really steep in my opinion... Costs practically as much as a streaming service, but you still need to get your own music. At least they have a lifetime purchase option, though it…
Technically that's four cores, two of which that can be active at once
NVIDIA's stance on Linux aside, from a practical point of view the one thing I've had the most issues with in practice while using them together was the abomination that is Optimus. Considering they mention a mux for…
Like the Cosmo Communicator? https://www.www3.planetcom.co.uk/cosmo-communicator
Many of the cars with regenerative braking already do apply the brakes once in a while to prevent them from rusting.
For normal VR/AR, definitely, since you want to have objects moving in the Z direction. For this usecase it should be enough to show the "flat" virtual screen at the focal distance.