I think it was more of the realization and actually labeling it as a practice. Naming things only come after people go (we should give this thing we are doing a name)
A lot of focus is on how llms are severing connection between the user and the source of info. something I would say is equally if not more concerning is the fact that public services and websites that offer free public access to information are being obliterated by llm agents scraping with absolutely no regard to the site. It’s not just little operations either. Meta takes an approach that I would consider malicious and a threat to anyone hosting anything on the open web as a whole.
This is delusional. As if a org running Linux is going to have to support anything more than just kde or gnome. Also I would say as a systems admin I would push to have someone fired for installing X11 or a de or any of that on my servers. Typically now a days systems admins do not do things adhoc though a gui application streamed over ssh. You use automation tools like ansible or salt or orchestration tools in order to maintain consistency.
This highway is the single worst thing about San Antonio. It genuinely feels like surviving instead of driving.
I skimmed and the video is years old. The exits were bad at the junctions at around 2:10 around that time still but major construction has been the theme of that stretch for years. It is actually the most terrifying stretch of road I have experienced in the entire country now. I am sure it was nice then.
Devs hate when a program hides what it is doing? Wow.. I can’t imagine anyone likes when a rouge program is loose on their system doing whatever it likes.
This feels like bait. But really the answer is encrypt your disks or use something fully ephemeral if you are that paranoid about your hardware physically being compromised. Disabling all of your system logs which do not leave your system and removing any visibility you have is quite honestly the best way to screw yourself over. How are supposed to know if a system is compromised if you are covering your eyes and ears for the sake of obscurity?
It’s been pretty decent overall. I haven’t done a proper comparison or anything though. On the pro I haven’t even really used macOS as I bought it to put Asahi on. That reminds me that I should test the battery cap.
It’s pretty serviceable at this point. Fan and temperature monitoring in the kernel just made its way in too. I’ve been using Nixos with the Asahi kernel on a 64gb M1 Max MacBook Pro for the past few months and it’s been a pretty fantastic experience overall. Before that I was using it on a 8gb m1 air and it was decent enough. I wouldn’t say it’s perfect by any means but it is capable enough that I could not see switching it back to macOS for much of anything outside of some production stuff.
The head might be too close to the bed. You could potentially compensate with either additional top layers in the slicer or just give it some more room to lay down layer one. Another possible cause is potentially too much heat. I am going by the slight elephants foot at the bottom of the cube and the slight droop at the top of the X and Y.
Damn. Your take on fall saddens me. Where I come from fall is the driest season of the year. The chill finally starts to settle in the air and the leaves start to change and a steady light breeze starts in due to the leaves dropping from the trees.
I think it was more of the realization and actually labeling it as a practice. Naming things only come after people go (we should give this thing we are doing a name)