reject humanity, become toaster | she/they | experimenting with names
I have not had a need to seriously use flatpaks so far. The software i use is either available as a system package, or is a selfcontained binary i can manage myself.
fundamentally, an llm doesn’t “use” individual sources for any answer. it is just a function approximator, and as such every datapoint influences the result, just more if it closely aligns with the input.
it was forbidden before?
when you say /home/(removed)/...
is that verbatim, or is (removed) supposed to indicate you redacted that part?
have you tried opening a shell inside the container and looking around if anything is mounted where it’s supposed to?
Yes, but why would you want to? We have enough addresses for the foreseeable future.
AFAIK, they only offer the opt-out form in the EU and UK
There’s about 70 episodes 1-3 minutes each
Perhaps the Arch Linux repo has a “preview” version then, because I was able to add scribbles and text anywhere for many months by now…
Call me crazy, but hasn’t this been a feature for a while now?
Reverse Polish Notation works almost like you describe. You put the operands first, then the operation. For example:
Probably the reason why we are not using it is because most tools today use algebraic notation, and it would be a lot of effort to switch
additionally, have fire alarms and change the batteries when they are low. If you have gas heating, get yourself a good carbon monoxide detector as well!
For me it doesn’t let me pass if i have changed my user agent
each commit points to the one before. additionally a commit stores which lines in which files changed compared to the previous commit. a branch points to a particular commit.
it’s just linked lists of commits (except when merging)
no love for godot?
Except here, it’s just summer all around the clock
From a grid stability point, you can’t produce more than is used, else you get higher frequencies and/or voltages until the automatics shut down. It’s already a somewhat frequent occurence in germany for the grid operator to shut down big solar plants during peak hours because they produce way more power than they can dump (because of low demand or the infrastructure limiting transfer to somewhere else)
Negative prices are the grid operator encouraging more demand so it can balance out the increased production.