I guess at the 2028 Olympics they’ll be jumping on the AI bandwagon.
I guess at the 2028 Olympics they’ll be jumping on the AI bandwagon.
Why would there be one answer to this? I’d probably use all the available levels depending on the situation, in the same way I’d use --word-diff
or -b
in git
when I need help understanding a complex change.
Have you checked all the ethernet links are actually connected at 1G and not 100M?
I was expecting something in the article to back it up, like sales figures, but I couldn’t find anything.
popular
[citation needed]
Does it actually tell you the results? I’m curious how they score your driving, and how effective it is. The scariest things I see on the road are things like:
I don’t see how they’d measure how safe a driver you are.
Perhaps it’s just that people are more careful when they know they’re being monitored, and safe drivers are more likely to opt in?
I think most orgs would want to own the server and for messages to not be end-to-end encrypted. All connections to the server would still be encrypted.
That would be more in-line with slack or something.
If you’re referring to federation specifically then that’s going to get pretty complicated with security policies.
They would still want kernel level anti-cheat in that case.
I’ve been using orgzly for years and this is the first I’ve heard of revived. Looks promising.
Oh yeah, that was pretty much the point I was trying to make too.
There’s actually not that much autotools jank, really. There’s configure.ac and a few Makefile.am. The CMakeLists.txt in the root is bigger than any of those files.
There’s also some stuff from autotools archive in m4/. IMO that’s a bad practice and we should instead be referencing them as a build dependencies.
I’m not convinced this backdoor would have been significantly more difficult to hide in the cmake code.
Emacs I assume.
cmake compiles to makefiles as well (it just also supports some other backends). I’m not sure why that matters though. In both cases the makefile is generated.
I agree. I think it’s the actual sense of community that you need. It’s the reason I can play rec sports or the pub quiz and it’s not constantly ruined by assholes.
You can’t have a sense of community with hundreds of thousands of people in the same queue to play a game.
Hi, This is a high priority ticket and the FFmpeg version is currently used in a highly visible product in Microsoft. We have customers experience issues with Caption during Teams Live Event. Please help,
Use -data_field first as decoder option in CLI. Default value was changed from first to auto in latest FFmpeg version. Or modify AVOption of same name in API for this decoder.
Thanks @Elon for the reply, This is the command we are currently using: ffmpeg.exe -f lavfi -i movie=flvdecoder_input223.flv[out+subcc] -y -map 0:1 ./output_p.srt
I will be looking to see any updates in the FFmpeg documentation. Can you please elaborate and provide pointers the right decoding options or the right FF command er can use. Thank you!
ffmpeg.exe -data_field first -f lavfi -i movie=flvdecoder_input223.flv[out+subcc] -y -map 0:1 ./output_p.srt
Got that’s fucking brutal. This isn’t even asking them to fix a bug, it’s just basic help-desk shit.
I’m sure Microsoft has some good devs that are a net benefit to the open source projects they use, but this is not one of them.
GrapheneOS + Pixel phone is the only true option if you want any kind of ensure that even of the device is lost your data won’t be accessed.
I think that’s an exaggeration. You don’t need secure boot for your data to be encrypted. What secure boot prevents is someone modifying the device without your knowledge (e.g. to capture your keys).
I feel like AGI might be the furthest away of all those things.
According to the Journal, plaintiff attorneys usually get one-third of a verdict or settlement amount.
This isn’t a an amount awarded in a verdict though, is it?
Plaintiff’s Counsel have not been paid for their work, nor have any of their costs or expenses been reimbursed, and litigating this Action required the allocation of a substantial amount of Plaintiff’s Counsel’s time and resources over six years, including considerable out-of-pocket expenses,
So that’s roughly 100 lawyers working full time for 6 years at $5k per hour. Seems legit.
In any case this is hilarious and exactly the kind of thing Elon would try.
I feel like node’s async model makes it really easy to cause a bug like this, and really difficult to track it down.
It was left to the OS to catch the leak, because the program was written in such a way that it was able to run a gazillion of these tasks concurrently.
Am I just failing to use that site properly, or is it missing a ton of stuff in ‘replays’ that was available live?
I feel like the CBC had a better version of this thing 12 years ago.