I wouldn’t doubt that LLMs got some special input to deal with the specific examples of this paper, or similar enough.
I wouldn’t doubt that LLMs got some special input to deal with the specific examples of this paper, or similar enough.
Probably good to add a /s somewhere here.
I suspect people are down voting without checking the piece.
I know I would, but I saw it shared on Mastodon in a cheeky way first.
Made me think this was the good news community.
I had it initially setup to run on Wi-Fi too, battery or charging.
Then I had my battery drain to 30-40% during afternoons, when I’m used to reaching evenings above 60%. Check app usage on settings: Syncthing.
Since I use it mostly for backing up photos, I found it better to enable it only when charging.
Just configure it to only run while plugged to the wall, so you’re not surprised by the rare bug of it randomly turning your phone into a pocket warmer.
That is great news!
Now I might be able to uninstall Google Drive from my phone.
People, shall we read the full article first?
Meanwhile, this is not the case with the Ryzen 9000 series desktop parts as the spec sheet of that says:
OS Support
Windows 11 - 64-Bit Edition , Windows 10 - 64-Bit Edition , RHEL x86 64-Bit , Ubuntu x86 64-Bit
So the new Ryzen AI chips that most people don’t care about won’t support Win 10, but Ryzen 9000 (the real deal desktop chips) will.
To be frank, the article title is misleading at best.
Same for the teenager part.
The Podcast (Dialogues instead of Monologues) is content for the older audience, though: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLet00UQnlQoUKqSB5-oFmrwpnnVc4C4A8
L. O. L.
Seriously though, reasonable discussion of its usefulness aside, how can’t people see that outrageous statements like that without any scientific or practical backing, clearly made to inspire devotion and/or fear, keeping the hype and the money and resources drain on, are the telltale of a tech hype?
We are discontinuing Workplace from Meta so we can focus on building AI and metaverse technologies that we believe will fundamentally reshape the way we work,
Lol, can’t make this shit up!
It this actually true? For real?!
Can’t wait to go back from my parental leave and not be the last one to hear about important announcements because they were posted on FB. F that.
Everything runs locally, OCR, ML, etc, which can be a bit taxing on lower end hardware, but there are ways to disable the more advanced and computationally expensive features, like NLTK for advanced Natural Language processing.
Your data is stored locally on your server and is never transmitted or shared in any way.
There seems to be a huge overlap in functionality. But a major difference is that Paperwork is a local application that runs on Windows and Linux, while Paperless has a web front end that makes it accessible anywhere (it also has some independently native apps for mobile).
Paperless-ngx that allows you to self host an easily browseable archive of your documents. Fully featured with OCR, ML-powered categorization and the works.
KeepassXC replied on that thread that it wasn’t just the privacy problematic networking that was removed:
that bug report is bunk. He removed ALL features, not just networking. That includes yubikey support, auto-type and browser integration.
Every 4-5 seconds? Yeah, logging.
You can either move the system dataset to your boot drive/pool or syslog to /var/log:
https://www.truenas.com/docs/core/coretutorials/systemconfiguration/settingthesystemdataset/
I’ve seem many users recommend a reboot after changing those settings.
Boy, are the example story and picture bad.
“cheat”, “lie”, “cover up”… Assigning human behavior to Stochastic Parrots again, aren’t we Jimmy?
OC so it drops frames less often?
I mean it, Zelda BotW and TotK both benefit a lot from some OC. Specially yours being a V1 Switch.
Even simple games like Sea of Stars drop less frames with a simple CPU OC.
You can also get the device keys to be able to run a Switch emulator (but I heard that if one really wants, they can find that kind of stuff online).
I’ve heard about running homebrew software but never looked into it.
Now, you can always go full tilt and start sailing the high seas.
Blame Altman on that one, from the article: