It's not like junk was a part of the name right?
> even when not needed Examples? Every time I see kubernetes pop up it's because of better performance or lesser costs.
Well understood? I doubt many organizations had a pandemic SOP/DRP before 2020.
> The laws are indeed strict but seldom enforced. This is true of most strict rules elsewhere: they're there but seldom enforced. Take speed limits, they're strict, but good luck enforcing them. All we do is we monitor…
> Born and raised in China. The OP made a good point that applies to all poor countries I've lived in: those jobs are the only (even the best) way out for most people to get out of poverty, which they do to help their…
Exactly, but why do so many people seem to have a problem with this? Sounds like a political problem to me instead of a scientific one.
> from a zero-comprehension state is more likely to get you to a goal than an evolution from a state that has at least some correctness. I get that starting from a point with "some correctness" makes sense if you want…
The problem with preconceptions about your parameters is that you might be missing some crazy cool path to your goal, which you might find by randomly exploring your sample space. I remember seeing this same principle…
> would be a massive improvement at the expense of inconveniencing a small minority of people (while improving the convenience for everyone else). Wasn't this the same kind of argument we used in the past to justify…
> more to me like "suck it up or get out, princess". Different wording, but same message though. It sounds like the two options are fundamentally the same, regardless of the wording.
Do you mind to elaborate a bit?
Great advice! Where do you see more opportunities in the near future, ML?
> Burning it produces all kinds of toxins from impurities and carbon. Which can be trapped/filtered to avoid pollution. > if plastics ever become sufficiently valuable - or recycling sufficiently viable. If that was…
I've got a set of sand timers (1 to 30 min) to handle such interruptions. Depending on how long it'll take me to finish what I'm working on, I'll just use one of those timers as currency to buy me the couple minutes I…
Seems like a communication issue though, just explain to them how important it is for you to focus uninterrupted and hopefully they'll respect you.
Yeah I forgot this is my workaround whenever I use vim through wsl2 to avoid handling the never ending display issues.
Funny, I use tmux all day long because it allows me to navigate out of vim without a mouse. So far I can handle most of my pane resizing needs with prefix + space bar. Otherwise I'll just launch a new window. Maybe I'm…
> leaving the other hand free for sipping coffee and taking notes. That explains why my coffee ends up cold and abandoned most of the time!
I've been using nvim for around 5 years for everything I do on a computer other than web browsing. It feels like I'm missing something here, but why would you ever need a mouse within your terminal? I don't recall never…
I didn't think deeply about this back then since my parameter estimates where close/better than the literature I compared to, but now I'm interested in checking the distribution of those NaN/inf. If I recall correctly…
When building a mcmc sampler I was too lazy to properly code a matrix approximation needed to avoid some mathematical black hole and the corresponding underflow. It was cheaper to just ignore the faulty simulations.…
> The market cap is now $100M. In your dreams only. Good luck finding any serious (aka "smart") money willing to take your valuation seriously. With such due diligence you're likely to be the only one hodling $FOO ;)
I agree, I rather wake up earlier to work on side projects/study than working late at night. This way it's the job that feels like an extra and not the other way around.
It does though. Once a new money-making strategy is found to work by a market participant, others will try that same path (it's a competition). The fact that so many companies are moving to the subscription model shows…
I agree, isn't it way easier to switch vendors when running on the cloud? I'd say that encourages competition, since we can literally move the infrastructure using keystrokes instead of muscles. This makes me think…
It's not like junk was a part of the name right?
> even when not needed Examples? Every time I see kubernetes pop up it's because of better performance or lesser costs.
Well understood? I doubt many organizations had a pandemic SOP/DRP before 2020.
> The laws are indeed strict but seldom enforced. This is true of most strict rules elsewhere: they're there but seldom enforced. Take speed limits, they're strict, but good luck enforcing them. All we do is we monitor…
> Born and raised in China. The OP made a good point that applies to all poor countries I've lived in: those jobs are the only (even the best) way out for most people to get out of poverty, which they do to help their…
Exactly, but why do so many people seem to have a problem with this? Sounds like a political problem to me instead of a scientific one.
> from a zero-comprehension state is more likely to get you to a goal than an evolution from a state that has at least some correctness. I get that starting from a point with "some correctness" makes sense if you want…
The problem with preconceptions about your parameters is that you might be missing some crazy cool path to your goal, which you might find by randomly exploring your sample space. I remember seeing this same principle…
> would be a massive improvement at the expense of inconveniencing a small minority of people (while improving the convenience for everyone else). Wasn't this the same kind of argument we used in the past to justify…
> more to me like "suck it up or get out, princess". Different wording, but same message though. It sounds like the two options are fundamentally the same, regardless of the wording.
Do you mind to elaborate a bit?
Great advice! Where do you see more opportunities in the near future, ML?
> Burning it produces all kinds of toxins from impurities and carbon. Which can be trapped/filtered to avoid pollution. > if plastics ever become sufficiently valuable - or recycling sufficiently viable. If that was…
I've got a set of sand timers (1 to 30 min) to handle such interruptions. Depending on how long it'll take me to finish what I'm working on, I'll just use one of those timers as currency to buy me the couple minutes I…
Seems like a communication issue though, just explain to them how important it is for you to focus uninterrupted and hopefully they'll respect you.
Yeah I forgot this is my workaround whenever I use vim through wsl2 to avoid handling the never ending display issues.
Funny, I use tmux all day long because it allows me to navigate out of vim without a mouse. So far I can handle most of my pane resizing needs with prefix + space bar. Otherwise I'll just launch a new window. Maybe I'm…
> leaving the other hand free for sipping coffee and taking notes. That explains why my coffee ends up cold and abandoned most of the time!
I've been using nvim for around 5 years for everything I do on a computer other than web browsing. It feels like I'm missing something here, but why would you ever need a mouse within your terminal? I don't recall never…
I didn't think deeply about this back then since my parameter estimates where close/better than the literature I compared to, but now I'm interested in checking the distribution of those NaN/inf. If I recall correctly…
When building a mcmc sampler I was too lazy to properly code a matrix approximation needed to avoid some mathematical black hole and the corresponding underflow. It was cheaper to just ignore the faulty simulations.…
> The market cap is now $100M. In your dreams only. Good luck finding any serious (aka "smart") money willing to take your valuation seriously. With such due diligence you're likely to be the only one hodling $FOO ;)
I agree, I rather wake up earlier to work on side projects/study than working late at night. This way it's the job that feels like an extra and not the other way around.
It does though. Once a new money-making strategy is found to work by a market participant, others will try that same path (it's a competition). The fact that so many companies are moving to the subscription model shows…
I agree, isn't it way easier to switch vendors when running on the cloud? I'd say that encourages competition, since we can literally move the infrastructure using keystrokes instead of muscles. This makes me think…