I do this sometimes. After I reply, I don't expect another question maybe because I assume it would be in a single question otherwise. Then I return back to whatever I was doing and can often not notice any new messages ¯(ツ)/¯
On the other hand, I'm usually ok if you choose at your own discretion in such a case, I'm not the one to be picky if I failed to choose in the first place
Sounds nice, especially considering how they tried to limit consumer-grade GPU ability to mine cryptocurrency. It may have been a noble effort, but it was both futile and anti-consumer.
U.S. president Donald Trump issued a suite of directives in May aimed at hastening the development of advanced nuclear reactors. The directives, delivered via a set of four executive orders, set ambitious goals, such as having 10 new large reactors under construction by 2030
This unexpectedly sounds like a good idea, albeit I'm a bit afraid of what will become of it in reality
The team systematically collected, organized and vetted millions of public records, used emerging technologies such as generative AI to build the database, and created from scratch a searchable user-interface.
I'm not sure how to feel about the use of AI that is usually quite error-prone, but I guess it allowed them to categorise and process millions of records instead of hundreds.
I agree completely, I still think that for some things Nix is the most convenient thing, e.g. when packaging cross-compiled images of the apps, but I would never be able to build this from ground up, and whenever something breaks it's a pain to fix. Using NixOS on Mac at least taught me how it works more or less, and it mostly does except for when it doesn't and I'm in it deep
If we measure only by the amount of mistakes, there would be much more skilled C developers. Take my pristine skills for example, I've made zero mistakes writing all of my 3 lines of C code over years and years, zero mistakes
Off the top of my head, single-threaded writing to the same memory from different fields of a struct. Not to mention self-referencing like if you want to hold a buffer and have different views into it in the same structure.
Wait, so now you did find it, but refuse to share it...?
I think they meant that this happened yesterday. But posting a link would have been way faster than typing two messages about how they don't want to do it, I think
This. Also reminds me of macbooks for students