What on earth is this video from; I’ve never seen it before.
What on earth is this video from; I’ve never seen it before.
Given that anyone can access the posts, I would say that anyone (AI companies) can access the posts.
Voyager works great for me.
“The plane is here, everyone get on” (random order) is actually faster than the method they use now, so it wouldn’t take some complex system to increase speeds.
I find your point about renting compelling, is there anything that could be done to improve the situation?
If low density is the worst for housing cost-effectiveness, why is living in large cities so much more expensive?
Because they are selecting proposals for the program, which includes a stipend (https://developers.google.com/open-source/gsoc/help/student-stipends) of $1,500-$6,000 for the summer. So the process looks a little more like the process for applying for an internship.
No, the heat would kill any yeast that could ferment it. Also it’s usually pasteurized so it won’t ferment.
It’s still under the Mozilla foundation though, which is what people who are talking about Mozilla usually mean (they’re the ones collecting donations and the parent organization).
That’s not true, the latest release was two weeks ago.
Thanks for the recommendations! FlightGear looks very interesting to me, I’ll definitely check it out.
I just mean games that feel a little more polished and less like a toy project; games that have a stable release separate from development would be one example of a more mature polished project.
Yeah I saw a recent post about that one and am trying it out. It seems pretty good so far, and that’s what got me to ask this (most open source games I’ve tried have felt really unpolished, whereas with other software I primary use open source). But because the creative aspect of games I’m perfectly fine with using closed source games (they aren’t really as fungible as other software).
I’ve never really had issues with Fedora (has more up to date software vs Debian stable) or Debian, they generally just work. Back when I used arch there were a couple of times in about a year and a half where it stopped booting (mobile nvidia graphics forced me to do weird things that lead to issues), but that’s a less stable OS on top of a bad hardware setup for Linux (obligatory fuck Nvidia).
Maybe a setting for each tag for whether it qualifies as NSFW? That way you could have multiple tags that would be filtered as NSFW for different classes of content, which could enable individual users to only filter one of the tags if they only want to avoid something specific.
I just save them (I use Voyager) and look back later at my saved posts (or comments).
Or since scores aren’t really even tracked across all of your posts and comments, we could just care a little less about how people are voting on our posts. If one isn’t well received it’s really not the end of the world.
Yeah the exponent just allows you to represent lots of magnitudes, but it wouldn’t contribute to the accuracy because you basically have 1.xyz * 2exponent. So the xyz significand is the only part that counts for significant digits. Although I guess in some sense you are partially right, because the exponent exists it is assumed that the first bit is always one, since otherwise you would just adjust the exponent to the first one, so only 52 bits have to be stored.
I would round up to 16.
Bitwarden is free and easy to use. They also encrypt more metadata to prevent the kind of breach that lastpass recently had (see https://community.bitwarden.com/t/lastpass-breach-and-implications-for-bitwarden/47214).