Why was Web 2.0 a mistake and what does that have to do with centralization?
Why was Web 2.0 a mistake and what does that have to do with centralization?
The marginal extra disk spaces used by flatpak really isn’t a concern for most users, much less valve. If you do everything in flatpak and your apps only use current runtime versions, the additional space used by flatpak is in the megabytes, since libraries like libc are going to be on your host no matter what.
Maybe that’s what you believe, but allowing commercial use has been a core tenant of free and open source software
This is one of the funnier things I see frequently on here. People both champion free and open source code and data that can be used for anything… until it is used for anything they even mildly dislike.
Sure but the model is already trained. I’m not talking about using any sort of specialized model.
Why is it idiotic? Your tests will let you know if it is correct. Suppose I have 100 interface functions to implement, I let the AI write the boilerplate and implementations and get a 90% pass rate after a revision loops where errors are fed back into the LLM to fix. Then I spend a small amount of time sorting out the last 10%. This is a viable workflow today.
This sounds pretty typical for a hobbyist project but is not the case in many industries, especially regulated ones. It is not uncommon to have engineers whose entire job is reading specifications and implementing them. In those cases, it’s often the case that you already have compliance tests that can be used as a starting point for your public interfaces. You’ll need to supplement those compliance tests with lower level tests specific to your implementation.
Is almost as if their goal isn’t security within their borders, but just regular conquest.
Owning a current gen Apple TV, there really isn’t that much more to shrink before it is in the stick format.
This guy in 1944: “Those Jews really had it coming for them, the savages deserved it”
Time to go stock up on chargers
Even then I think we’ve been proving a foreign government can fuck up another country from the other side of the world since at least 1492.
Yeah this doesn’t hold up against the $200+ options but it’s also not priced that way.
Wide area network. It’s basically the “internet” side of the router.
Yeah actually that makes more sense than what I originally said. The US is one of the main buyers of gray-market zero day bugs, way cheaper and less risk than trying to covertly implement bugs.
That would be too obvious and thus ineffective. In reality it is more likely that they have inserted bugs into various open source software covertly, like we saw with xz.
States don’t have rights, people have rights.
This implies TikTok would have some incentive to propagandize their users that Google wouldn’t also have. Google does corporate American propaganda, which many Americans have been acclimated to and thus don’t perceive as propaganda.
Palestine, Syria
Does anyone actually believe Israel has any intent to give up land once they’ve occupied it?