- Wouldn't that violate GDPR regulations?
- AI could, on the other hand, replace lobbyists.
- It's never "doing nothing" - you just need more visibility into your running tasks.
Turning off nearly everything iCloud- or Spotlight-related is a pretty good start; disable network access and you may find even more pearls of wisdom.
- It may be an error on the part of the writer.
- Random to third parties, yet not random to the nation in question nor the crew of the ship....
- Somewhat tongue-in-cheek, there will be three or four development tiers left: 1. model development and optimization, 2. data pool management, 3. downstream consumers of item 1, and 4. everything else
- "From scratch" implies that you're building from language primitives on up, at the level you'd typically use for any maintainable project.
I'd focus on the underlying service provider APIs first, in the same manner as any other cloud resource.
- There is a risk of overeating this delicious irony.
- This is an (organizational) tooling problem, not a language problem - and is no less complicated when musl libc enters the discussion.
- I do wonder whether the announcement regarding Intel manufacturing low-end SoCs is triggering this dissatisfaction.
Setting aside the political side-effects of throwing support behind Intel and its US government-backed investment, we've seen movement on modem chip development and low-end SoCs for sub-MacBook Air and iPhone Air / SE / other models.
Perhaps this is the classic low-end / high-performance bifurcation problem (i.e., Srouji is focused on high-performance chips while the greater executive class is focused on service of the Walmart demographic, e.g., Made-In-USA, inexpensive, wider market acceptance).
- It would be great to have a full Snapdragon X Elite-based box, with working Wi-Fi drivers.
That said, it feels as if the fragmentation in the non-Windows space ends up being worse for non-Intel/AMD platforms, both commercially and from a devrel perspective. Qualcomm and Apple still have the best arm64 platforms above a Raspberry Pi.
- There's deeper Windows-specific platform integration (including audio) that makes it a better option - and on macOS, it's actually faster than stock Chrome.
- I have consistently rejected rental vehicles without CarPlay support.
- Claude is better. End of.
- I've been using the Core i7-1165G7 mainboard for the 13, which works well enough with a large amount of RAM and has mature OS support.
- People skills are far more valuable than hoarded technical skillsets. Learn to work top-down as well as bottom-up.
- As far as I can tell, these upgrades (aside from the discrete graphics) bring the 16-inch in line with the 13-inch.
I'd be more concerned about what I'd be able to do with an older 16-inch mainboard, as the 13-inch has the Cooler Master case options.
Still rocking the Intel Tiger Lake 13-inch here, mixed Windows / Ubuntu workflow, loads of RAM.
- How is it costing the ecosystem? And why is this any different than Windows, for example?
And - if you cannot afford a $99 / yr developer ID, how could you possibly afford a signing key for Windows or other platforms?
My factory-seconds F13 (using 11th-gen Intel, still the best in terms of power savings) shipped with the older glossy display, which had a known, disclosed-as-cheaper LUT issue at lower brightness settings. After a couple of calibration rounds, it is spot-on and my go-to PC laptop.
Decent keyboard, too.
Of course, things are often more expensive in Europe (compared to the US) for zero good reason, so the F16 will always be at a proportional disadvantage compared to the F13. You may find that a much better fit.