Another one people might be interested in is Lapce. Seems to be the same thing as Zed, but has a Linux build available. https://lapce.dev/
An easy going software engineer that casually enjoys programming, playing guitar, and playing MMORPG games. Yadda yadda yadda, my opinions are my own, etc.
Another one people might be interested in is Lapce. Seems to be the same thing as Zed, but has a Linux build available. https://lapce.dev/
World of Warcraft. If your focus is primarily in PvP, then you specifically want to look at Battlegrounds and Arenas in WoW.
Could you please compare WebAuthN to your suggestion? What are the pros and cons as they relate to each other?
Apple added (a while back) what they call a “Neural Engine,” which is hardware dedicated to efficient execution of ML workloads.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apple_A11
They have been refining it ever since. I would not be surprised if they made advancements in both the hardware and software used for local GAI.
My bad, it was meant to be a response to the comment about people switching from macOS to Linux.
I cannot imagine doing this for my work. I need a machine I do not need to worry about breaking or suddenly becoming incompatible with the next update.
I have been looking for a while now. The closest I have ever been was Anytype, but it is not as user friendly or refined as Notion because it is still in active development.
It is.
For me, personally, I would rather pick them up from the points store because of the lower friction to get them loaded on the Deck.
What do you use in its place?
They are, in the form of “diamond batteries”,
I wonder if they will use the voice recordings to train their model.
I am going to watch the VOD later, but I get the feeling I will disappointed. Not sure what others are looking forward to, but there are somethings I really want to see but feel that I won’t (maybe ever):
This will also likely be the last year I am on the iPhone Upgrade Program for a while unless they announce a foldable.
Not the funniest I have played, but I definitely found it funny and fun.
There are people like you, and then there are people who refuse to learn new things.
Pessimistic: Apple lawyers have arguments prepared that DRM’ing individual components does not violate this law.
Less Pessimistic: Apple got a sufficient head start in supporting third-party repairs that it would be beneficial for them to get this law passed so that other manufacturers scramble to catch up.
What will probably happen is that people catch on that the content all reads alike and wonder why they shouldn’t just ask ChatGPT directly. Traffic to these sites die down, they panic, and start hiring writers.
Every credit union I have been a part of had some home brewed security system that did not follow best practices. Really felt like they contracted out to some kid still in college just to have something online.
I’m certain there are better CUs out there, but I think the issue is most can’t afford much better.