- techsystemsIn 3.1, rejecting (R) fraudulent (F) goods resulting in 0 for the seller is a strong assumption. There are all kinds of possible negatives (typically risks of legal fees) for storage costs of fraudulent goods in the game of hot potato. It might be worth your time to look into the literature a bit more.
- Thanks for the share, but I'm having a hard time understanding this.
On step 2, it's only jailing VS Code. Shouldn't it also jail the Git repo you're working on (and disable `git push` somehow), as well as all the env libs?
Also, isn't the point of this to auto approve everything?
- Useful! It would be amazing if the catalogue was much bigger
- I'm really loving this!
'Responsibility chain' will become a trendy phrase.
- He did say 'any known' back in the year 1969 though, so judging it to today's knowns would still not be a justification to the idea's age.
- >All these drying oils create a layer of polymerised material, which can be classed as plastic anyway.
No, that is absolutely not the case.
- I used this in NL with the government. What can I do?
- Hah! How exact
- Dutch products in general are low quality. So glad I got out.
- Cool! I can't find it on the read me, but can it run Qwen locally?
- Use tidytable Much faster, exact same syntax, much smaller member usage
- https://counterpointresearch.com/en/insights/global-smartpho...
So every quarter this year except the last quarter, Samsung outsold Apple. So they're predicting that Q42025 for Samsung will be miserable sales or Apple will have skyrocketed sales?
- Floorp is a fork by Japanese developer, though his English is not perfect. It removes all backwards compatibility to speed things up, competing vs. Thorium to be best performing browser, if anyone's interested.
- Any article you recommend on this?
- Very nice collection, thanks for the share
- So just reword it to 'check'
- The reason why Nvidia is buying now does not have to do anything with Arc or GPU competition. There are mainly two reasons.
1) This year, Intel, TSMC, and Samsung announced their latest factories' yields. Intel was the earliest, with 18A, while Samsung was the most recent. TSMC yieled above 60%, Intel below 60%, and Samsung around 50% (but Samsung's tech is basically a generation ahead and technically more precise), and Samsung could improve their yields the most due to the way set up the processes, where 70% is the target. Until last year, Samsung was in the second place, and with the idea that Intel caught up so fast and taking Samsung's position at least for this year, Nvidia bought Intel's stock since it's been getting cheaper since COVID.
2) It's just generally good to diversify into your competitors. Every company does this, especially when the price is cheap.
- > ndarray = "0.16.1" rand = "0.9.0" rand_distr = "0.5.0"
Looking good!
- 11 points