Business continuity plan testing day.
Just chilling
Business continuity plan testing day.
If it makes the people paying taxes feel happy then I don’t see why not.
I wish this wasn’t so true.
Better yet you can configure gitignore globally for git. I do this mostly to avoid polluting repo ignore files with my editor specific junk but *.key and similar can help prevent accidents.
Right, but AI is not the only way they’re doing the data collection.
I use Linux because of compiz fusion cube desktop. We are not the same.
It probably won’t be profitable in rural areas to begin with.
But not from a knowledge engine. It makes sense if some rando just spouted off a date from the top of their head but this is the former world leader in knowledge capture and search.
Fair enough! I definitely read this around the time 5g was coming around but apparently I was misinformed.
IIRC, 5g is a much nicer generation for the carriers than for consumers. It can be more easily deployed with microcells on light poles vs requiring the tall cell towers. There’s ultra-wideband, which is definitely faster, but plain 5g is roughly the same, just easier to roll out.
I microwaved my phone and the battery level hasn’t gone down at all since.
LMAO we really have Lemmy cliques?
These situations are almost always self-inflicted. If someone else hacked Google Cloud this badly then you’d likely have heard it from them first. And they probably would have done something significantly more destructive if their goal was harming Google reputation.
Unprecedented only means there’s no precedent. This just hasn’t happened before at this scale.
But here, the API is open and I can run my own copy and train my own LLM same as anyone else. It’s not one asshole who decides to whom and for how much he’ll sell the content we all gave him for free, so he can justify his $193 million paycheck.
I’ve had exactly that in my personal slack space since OpenAI announced gpt3. He’s helpful and hilariously accurate.
Samsung will add extra AI so their next ad will be employees being crushed into single device.
Plus you have plenty of time to tumble once or twice while your large codebase compiles.
Is there a language that anyone would say really does fare well for continued development or is it just that few people enjoy maintaining code? I’ve maintained some pretty old Go programs I wrote and didn’t mind it at all. I’ve inherited some brand new ones and wanted to rage quit immediately. I’ve also hated my own code too, so it’s not just whether or not I wrote it.
I have found maintainability is vastly more about the abstractions and architecture (modules and cohesive design etc) chosen than it is about the language.
200G of packages is 200G I can’t use for games and media.