A lot of her credibility and name recognition stem from her being popular at the NYT and then being ejected for ideological conflict. "First get famous as an archangel evicted from heaven" is not an easily replicable path to success.
That "entire /64" is already hell of a lot more granular than a single CG-NAT /24 though. Most often it's a single subnet of a single connection, vs everyone on an entire ISP.
Clearly this is a fairly niche application, but all the same I’m surprised no one has built a font identifier in the past few years based on modern machine learning techniques.
That's feels like such a luddite take. 50 years from now AI powered toys will be so ubiquitous and common to people, they will barely blink.
Just imagine how people must've failed against the first electronic toys 80 years ago, or Pokémon 30 years ago. Ask yourself... if this makes you depressed, what exact kind of new technology would make you happy?
You can open up the phone and modify the ESP32. I do that pretty often with IoT devices. It's not as easy as setting a URL, but totally possible if you are determined enough.
I guess I was much more interested in being able to work with an LLM to create good, synergistic Commander decks and less interested in generating custom Magic cards.
I'm sure I can dig up info on how to do this and piece it together, but I thought OP might have a guide specifically for it.
Ehhh I can see it. The right attack at the right time could directly or indirectly kill people, and that’s ignoring the fact it can cause economic havoc.
Having the entire internet function on a “pay or be nuked” threshold that could easily get much worse if companies like cloudflare become less ethical (not that they’re saints).
They ain't called guard rails for nothing! There's a whole world "off-road" but the big names are afraid of letting their superintelligence off the leash. A real shame we're letting brand safety get in the way of performance and creativity, but I guess the first New York Times article about a pervert or terrorist chat bot would doom any big name partnerships.
Put another way: stuff like Electron makes a pretty good case for the "cheap hardware leads to shitty software quality/distribution mechanisms" claim. But does Docker? Containers aren't generally any more expensive in hardware other than disk-space to run than any other app. And disk space was always (at least since the advent of the discrete HDD) one of the cheapest parts of a computer to scale up.
“While it is never safe to affirm that the future of Physical Science has no marvels in store even more astonishing than those of the past, it seems probable that most of the grand underlying principles have been firmly established and that further advances are to be sought chiefly in the rigorous application of these principles to all the phenomena which come under our notice.” Albert A. Michelson (yes, that Michelson, one half of Michelson-Morley), 1894
If it feels like there’s nothing for us engineers to research, that’s probably a sign we need more basic research from the scientists!
Yeah except addition does mean addition in this case - ask anyone what plain old addition means for a vector, and they'll tell you element wise addition. The website you quoted is for a toy example using element wise addition and you made it sound as complex as possible because you are desperate to sound smart.
In the 5 years since giving up a smartphone I started a new generation Linux Distro from 0, started a security consulting company, made hires, traveled the world, and learned several completely new skills, while having a fairly active family and social life.
Having so much more time to do actually useful things means I am present when relaxing, and focused when working, and get a lot more out of both portions of my life.
Anyone telling you that you need a smartphone to survive in the modern world is an apologist gaslighting you. Use cash, and offline tablet or nothing at all, and be digitally invisible and 100% present in the real world.
It's obvious that before SpaceX moved in, 6 permanent residents of that little village weren't damaging that environment more than today's thousands of people working on a huge industrial site built in place of that village (and now 500 people are actually living in Starbase). SpaceX activity in that area obviously has some environmental costs, like every other industrial activity or any human settlement. The cost of human progress.