Quelle connerie. On peut bien y faire quelque chose, non? Ça commence à faire cruel, là.
Great post. Full of useful tips I always need to remind myself of.
I had one til a few months ago!
I wonder this too, but I'm coming to believe that as long as investors are throwing money at housing and people need it, it might not burst. With enough wealth concentration, maybe it just all gets progressively bought up and rented out at insane prices, with growth coming from speculation among massive institutional investors.
But I haven't really thought of this deeply or looked into whether it's sound.
Tu as le droit de refuser en toute situation à l'intérieur de 30 jours de réception du nouveau bail, je crois bien. Le bail sera donc renouvelé au même loyer et le proprio devra aller au TAL pour argumenter l'augmentation.
The closest thing I've been able to find so far (which seems to have been under slow development by 1-2 contributors for the past couple years) is https://github.com/MPSQUARK/BAVCL which is based on ILGPU. I'll probably be keeping an eye on it though.
Unfortunately I don't believe NumPy has any built in accelerations (other than being a C library which is fast already), though I don't really know the ins and outs. There are Python libraries that use the NumPy API or otherwise do some stuff to accelerate it on e.g. CUDA, but the Numpy.NET library as far as I know uses its own embedded Python + numpy, so as far as I can tell that wouldn't be an option.
Unfortunately not, though I forgot about SIMD! It doesn't seem to support arbitrary-sized matrices or arrays out of the box, though I guess I could index the vector type myself. Still, it doesn't offer the operations I'd like, as far as I can tell.
Thanks though!
Hi!
I'm looking for a C# library for matrix operations and preferably some linear algebra or optimization routines. Basically a NumPy/SciPy or PyTorch.
Ideally there'd be support for various backends (e.g. CPU, CUDA, OpenCL) for operations where possible.
As far as I can tell, there's Math.NET Numerics, Numpy.NET (which binds to Python's numpy), and NumSharp (which hasn't had commits since 2021), which seem to fit the bill mostly, though none are accelerated.
Otherwise, there are some libraries I've forgotten that seem to specifically target CUDA, which is too selective for my purpose. Maybe it was Hybridizer, which seems like its own compiler, which I'm not sure would work for me either.
There's also ComputeSharp which lets you write shaders directly in C#, though targets DirectX if I understand well.
The closest thing I've found is ILGPU, which seems brilliant since it JIT compiles kernels to CPU, CUDA, and OpenCL. The problem is I believe I'd need to write my own operations and kernels and essentially implement my own matrix compute library, though there seems to be some work on it, so maybe what I'm looking for is supported out of the box, minus optimization algorithms and so on.
Basically, does anyone have any pointers?
Got an XPS 13 9350, works fine, bluetooth and all, though I upgraded Ubuntu and the kernel and the integrated webcam hasn't worked since, which I still don't really understand.
This may not be relevant since I have a different gpu and am on Ubuntu, but when I installed proprietary drivers I didn't have display either because I was using a version of the driver that was too recent (whether due to dropped compatibility or a bug I don't know). An older one might work!
Google en passant
There might be some kind of trust system that could work. I have no idea of course but I'm envisioning something like Stack Overflow's system and a bit of community correction and authority à la Wikipedia.
Why can't the government just build it as a public utility?
Indeed. People almost invariably conflate capitalism with free markets, whereas those relatively independent properties.
Hopefully this one makes it through. I've been desperately trying to post to a community on this instance. A spinner appears, and then nothing for a half hour. I tried again, same thing.
Anyone know what's up?
That's actually not true, right? https://www.iea.org/data-and-statistics/charts/global-co2-emissions-from-transport-by-sub-sector-in-the-net-zero-scenario-2000-2030
In 2019 there are 6.08 Gt from road vehicles compared to the 0.87 Gt from shipping. That's just overwhelming.
Yeah, I saw a link to a study that modeled outcomes within the next fre decades where acidification kills enough marine life and favors the reproduction of other microbes. Something about either low oxygen in the oceans and/or the atmosphere, or maybe a dangerous increase in stmospheric toxins resulting from that.
Maybe I'll try and find it to verify.
I had to look this up because I thought it was fake.
What the fuck is wrong with these people?
Nah, I think they're just being mass-created. No one's actually spamming anything so far. You can see so on this directory of instances: https://the-federation.info/platform/73
If you scroll around you'll find some that have like 10k or 20k users and 11 posts at most.
I really like Japanese with Shun (on Spotify, I don't know about other platforms?) and also Comprehensible Japanese (here on youtube) which has lots of free content, also a dedicated site with extra material for Patreon supporters.
Shun's good cause he speaks slow enough without being annoying, and enunciates quite well.
Basically the same for Comprehensible Japanese! Though these are extra nice since there's an extra modality (namely video) which she uses so that you can continue listening with context.
I've been thinking of hosting my own instance for myself, but I was wondering if you'd noticed any oddities! I've heard of some bugs that occur when interacting cross-instance. Also stuff about content being out of sync, which I notice currently with lemmy.ml from my current instance (lemmy.world).
Shamelessly cross-posted from https://lemmy.world/post/390718 since I was looking for a procedural generation community and didn't find one!
> This was something I was toying around with in Godot 3.4 some time back. It uses shaders for generation from simple noise + thresholds.
Shamelessly cross-posted from https://lemmy.world/post/390718 since I was looking for a procedural generation community and didn't find one!
> This was something I was toying around with in Godot 3.4 some time back. It uses shaders for generation from simple noise + thresholds.
I was wondering what people have been doing to share videos! It doesn't seem like uploading locally to the instance is currently an option, right?
Just a random thought experiment. Let's say I have my account on a lemmy instance: userA@mylemmy.com
. One day I decide to stop paying for the domain and move to userA@mynewlemmy.com
, and someone else gains it and also starts up a lemmy instance.
If they make their own userA@mylemmy.com
, how do federated instances distinguish who's who?
Have I misunderstood the role of domain names in this?
China is upgrading its nuclear arsenal even as its relationship to the U.S. is deteriorating. George Yeo, the former foreign minister of Singapore, discusses the ongoing power struggle in the Pacific region.
For years, women in Sierra Leone have been stripped or deprived of property that is rightfully theirs. Recent changes in the law are creating a seismic shift that could create greater equality in the country.
How much natural gas is flowing through pipelines to Europe? How full are gas storage facilities? And how much gas are Germans consuming? Keep your eye on the data with our live tracker.
Two Thai activists have filed a lawsuit accusing the government of using the internationally notorious Pegasus spyware to infiltrate their mobile devices during a period of political unrest almost three years ago. Law reform advocate Yingcheep Atchanont and human rights lawyer Arnon Nampa are accusi...
Nigeria's removal of a subsidy that helped reduce the price of gasoline has increased costs for people already struggling with high inflation. But it also potentially accelerates progress toward reducing emissions in Africa’s largest economy. In a country where only about half of the population has ...
Hi everyone!
I wanted to see if anyone else in the community gets these errors. (Also I suppose I could check the Github issues. If anyone sees these noted there, please link it in a comment!)
It seems to me there are several little UI bugs, usually involving overlapping text or other elements. This seems to happen when there's a dropdown or a dynamically populated list.
As I write this on the /create_post page, the Community dropdown bleeds into the NSFW checkmark, and then is hidden by the "Warning: If you deselect Undetermined, you will not see most content." box.
I also sometimes get this error. I forget when exactly, though I think it's when I refresh a search page.
> 404: TypeError: Cannot read properties of undefined (reading 'send')
Anyone else?
Edit: I'll keep adding things I see here.
I get this bug, where on a minute-old post I've made, it displays over 500 upvotes: !Upvote display bug
Hi! It looks like trying to open links of the form somecommunity@somelemmy.io prompts me to open it with an email client.
I looked through the app settings and the default app settings are as good as can be. Was wondering if this is a user issue or if there's some kind of limitation.