You realize the models you’re running locally had to be trained the same way as the proprietary ones, right?
You realize the models you’re running locally had to be trained the same way as the proprietary ones, right?
No, GDPR is exactly what allows anyone to sue corporations with any chance of success and impact.
I bet I could come up with some contenders… I won’t though, because I hate that M$ controls the major open-source repository.
While “technically true is the best kind of true”, I really would recommend anyone already facing anxiety to avoid Hellblade.
I don’t get your point… Facrorio is as great in singleplayer as it is in multiplayer.
I know how it works and I’ve seen coffee plants in real life. I didn’t know the fruit is called a cherry in English. They don’t look much like cherries apart from being red…
I guess you mean “berries”
There are only a few mouse models that fulfill my requirements and software support for them is bad even on windows. I’m currently on Razer and Roccat, the software is slow, heavy and convoluted, but it’s the only way to use the devices to their full potential. There’s no way to get the drivers for Linux and that’s a deal breaker for me.
I switched from Fusion to Onshape and it’s been a treat. The option to use it on an Android tablet is a great bonus.
What would be the impact on everyday life if a nuclear EMP destroyed all electronics in our lives instantly? First there are a lot of dead from car / plane crashes, then most patients in hospitals, then many due to running out of water and food. And what’s left of the society then collapses into barbarism, violence and fighting for resources.
It’s possible something like this would happen should the nuclear weapons of today be used. The book is hard to stomach, but everyone should be aware of the possibility and be at least knowledgeable in survival without modern technology (if not outright stocked up in a doomsday vault).
One Second After - W. R. Forstchen
Please everyone, read this book. It’s sad, disgusting and heavy, but it’s probably a documentary for events that may happen one day. It’s very well researched and the plausibility and realism make it even scarier. It hasn’t turned me into a prepper, but in part motivated me to make our house as self-sufficient as possible. Also it made me aware of small useful things in my surroundings that I used to be blind to.
I’ll do one better: UniGetUI. It handles Chocolatey, Winget, Python system packages and even other managers. All in a neat UI, nice search, auto updates.
Standing desk (electric, not crank operated) + tiny under-desk stationary bike. Sitting the whole day working/gaming and still getting to do some physical activity is great.
3D printer (I’ve got Prusa MK4+MMU3). It’s an amazing versatile utility, great skill to have, and a fun hobby. Don’t buy cheap chinese clones, it’s not worth the hassle.
The original Peggle. There’s a free APK available on speedrun.com. Works flawlessly even on modern Android.
I took up online tutoring and teaching programming for kids. It has great benefits:
All in all, teaching after work makes for a great hobby and a strong barrier for my day job so I don’t find myself working late anymore.
The requirement for Recall is a neural coprocessor with substantial performance, specifically to be able to run the model locally.
SAO / Matrix level immersive VR
Do I have a game for you! https://www.euclidea.xyz/
I collect unfinished projects.
The best source I know: https://betterexplained.com/
Also plenty of youtube channels, like Numberphile (many of the featured hosts have their own channels), 3Blue1Brown, Mathologer, Wrath of Math and many more. They have vast libraries covering pretty much any topic imaginable. It’s all top tier presentation, so intersting they made me study math for fun - I’d rather watch Numberphile than Netflix.