

that’s also a good reason to not have the screen fully close. less danger of stuff getting inside.
that’s also a good reason to not have the screen fully close. less danger of stuff getting inside.
yeah but you’re not folding it 100 times a day. if you’re an avid reader, you’re opening and closing it 10-20 times a day tops.
insisting on calling all tissues kleenex is how the company loses the rights to the name
CLIP isn’t an llm either. point being, the pattern recognition argument doesn’t hold. they’re feature detectors, which is basically a giant grid of classifiers. that’s not what llms do.
image generators are not llms.
we do have the submarine thing but i didn’t feel like doing that many conjugations
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i used to have a phone with the “charging hole” on the left side near the top. your tricks don’t work on me.
that’s what the other side wants them to do, yes.
servers are probably to tightly integrated into ubi’s infra to publish but they don’t want to say that.
font sizes and alignment are a big hint. usually you want punchy slogans to be the same or bigger than the surrounding text, and text on posters is usually centered.
can we not with the ai signs, the text is so annoying
i’d even be okay with making the graphic with an image generator if you would just fix the text
hdcp-capable dongles usually turn the TV on by themselves. just try casting, see what happens.
the story is much better in jc2 but it’s so hard to go back to with how well executed the movement was in 3. it’s a shame they skimped on the writing.
like, the final boss in 2 is a fist fight on a flying cluster of ICBMs. the final boss in 3 is… a helicopter.
very welcome, if not particularly surprising. Chung uses the quake 3 engine pretty exclusively and has gpled his earlier games. i am definitely looking forward to the next installment of Cubehead Chronicles
in swedish, being accused of having a stick (or, rather, a pole) up your ass means you don’t close doors behind you
really? sounds like a weird span of systems considering they share so little code. i’d like to read on how they did that.
the part that’s safe is in the browser. it’s a basic fact of how http requests work that you can just request data and then not read it.
also, “task managering the popups”? unless i’ve missed some very weird development that has literally never worked, because popup windows are part of the parent process.
yeah.
it feels kinda like “what’s the point”. i’ve been doing this for 10 years and i love the problem solving parts, but the stuff around it takes more and more effort to do, especially when an llm could do boilerplate in a quarter of the time with some manual checking. if it can do that, why can’t it just do all of it.
i have absolutely been called over to laugh at a circuit board. hell, i’ve done it myself