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dmos62
Joined 5,556 karma
[ my public key: https://keybase.io/dmos; my proof: https://keybase.io/dmos/sigs/0MQnnz_BHcSv-SL9JWiSjDeb1YK92Fw82rrUxiDC-As ]

meet.hn/city/54.8982139,23.9044817/Kaunas

Socials: - github.com/dmos62

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  1. > Agent Framework offers two primary categories of capabilities:

    > AI agents: Individual agents that use LLMs to process user inputs, call tools and MCP servers to perform actions, and generate responses. Agents support model providers including Azure OpenAI, OpenAI, and Azure AI.

    > Workflows: Graph-based workflows that connect multiple agents and functions to perform complex, multi-step tasks. Workflows support type-based routing, nesting, checkpointing, and request/response patterns for human-in-the-loop scenarios.

  2. His assistant may have used his account to place the order.
  3. I'm sure our viewpoints are more similar than it seems, and we eventually would find a fairly spacious middle-ground, but I'd prefer not to continue: thanks for the conversation.
  4. > I was specifically talking about accidental shootdowns of civilian airliners.

    Maybe you should think twice before dropping offhand comments related to mass killings. If you want to talk about what exactly I said that's "politics" as opposed to history, we can do that.

  5. Had to look up what vm gaming is. What's your motivation? If you don't mind sharing.
  6. You think I think there isn't a difference between bias and prejudice, while I think you think there isn't a difference between prejudice and knowledge.

    What I really care about is guilty-until-proven-innocent masquerading as civilized, or false-until-proven-true masquerading as scientific. The starting position should be I don't know. I may have seen cases that look like this, I might know where to look first, but I don't know what I'll find. Until I do, not before.

  7. Guy, you're the only one here acting like this is a competition. Do you think what Russia does is somehow more acceptable if you can find other criminals? Yeah, just lean into it. Good luck with that.
  8. What makes you think I'm not thinking critically? You're the person here who seems to be thinking in terms of competition, as far as I can tell. And, who's we?

    Not sure if you're being subtly apologetic, so I'll elaborate my point. Russian commanders that led campaigns in Syria got nicknames like Butcher of Aleppo and General Armageddon, for not only using scorched earth tactics, indiscriminate bombing, but actually systemically bombing schools, hospitals, field clinics, bread lines. UN High Commissioner for Human Rights called it "crimes of historic proportions." Aid organizations would actually stonewall the UN, because through UN Russia would find out where the bread lines are and would bomb them. These are not accidents, or freak, isolated occurances: it's doctrine. Look at Mariupol. Or, Ukraine in general.

  9. > Russia is not quite that ballsy over accidentally butchering civilians.

    I don't know about accidental, but if anyone thinks Russia is not ballsy about butchering civilians, they need a refresher on Russia's wars during the last few decades. Last few years would be enough too. It's a principle of their military affairs.

  10. A bias in perception won't help you be perceptive.
  11. It might seem like bias will get you to where you're going faster, but at the end of the day it's just bias.
  12. The biggest advantage of codex variants, for me, is terseness and reduced sicophany. That, and presumably better adherence to requested output formats.
  13. I don't think it's a stretch. I've numerous close friends that work with it daily and I've helped troubleshoot some of the issues. After Effects is quite hated among them, but has to be used, because there aren't viable alternatives. Illustrator crashes randomly. Photoshop has multi-decade bugs in color handling. But, the fact that their resource use baloons yearly and thus forces the industry to waste on constant hardware upgrades would be enough to discredit Adobe software, imo.
  14. What makes it unique?
  15. So it became more straightforward to release games on Linux? Sounds like a positive. Or, is the gripe about distinction of released for vs playable on?
  16. My thoughts exactly, linux gaming really doesn't tell me much, beyond that I might be able to use it if I was using Linux. Could be some controller or a Proton-something for all I can tell reading the phrase.
  17. Here's a thought experiment. What hypothetical piece of technology am I describing?

    > Next generation of construction - gezzite makes construction smoother and simpler across various commercial and residential projects.

  18. Look at Blender. No reason why that success can't be repeated.
  19. Have you seen a change in these attitudes?
  20. And same goes for less technical disciplines too. Adobe, Autodesk, Archicad, etc. It's pretty bad software: expensive, very buggy, poor extensibility, poorly maintained, closed-source, rapid tech debt accumulation requires upgrading your pc every few years. If only a minor percentage of organizations licensing it would instead spend that budget financing an open source project, that would have a very positive effect for everyone. I can somewhat understand private businesses not thinking long-term, but public institutions paying licensing fees instead of financing open-source seems like plain incompetence. Then again, maybe there's a lack of open-source initiatives willing to spearhead this.

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