

I don’t see any comments when viewing the Lemmy links, am I missing something?
I joined Lemmy back in 2020 and have been using it as qaz@lemmy.ml until somewhere in 2023 when I switched to lemmy.world. I’m interested in systemd/Linux, FOSS, and Selfhosting.
I don’t see any comments when viewing the Lemmy links, am I missing something?
It’s not like they have to choose between killing them and letting them go, they could just lock them up for life too.
Good, I don’t get why so many people still use mailing lists. I don’t like Discourse that much, but it’s a big improvement nonetheless.
Do you think they were paid for mentioning spiderman?
…and now its owned by google so thats shit as well.
Google acquired it back in 2021, this move to open source it is a good thing.
And without the unnecessary www.
. This article could be shared with the authors name as user like jason-koebler@404media.co
and the category (in this case generative-ai
) as a moderator-only community like generative-ai@404media.co
.
Which provider did you use? Also, Hetzner costs the same but with 8GB RAM.
Google Search - Syartpage
Do you mean startpage?
I did see that he was featured in the majority of the videos about Pinot on YouTube, but wasn’t aware that he was well known outside of that. What also do you recognize him from?
Old PC’s and especially laptops (make sure to consider removing the battery though) make great homeservers. You can run dozens of services on old hardware.
Yes, but if you care about power efficiency then they really aren’t a great option. Most professional server hardware that you can get for a decent price uses significantly more power than an old mini computer or a cheap N100 PC. I own a proliant but rarely power it on due to the fact that I could rent an similarly performant VPS for 2x the power bill. Besides that many server CPU’s don’t have integrated GPU’s and will require additional hardware if you want to run something like Jellyfin.
If grants are tied to the “score” there is an incentive to abuse the system.
Score could be kept with citations. You’d be required to list the work you built on, as we do today, and the authors would receive credit. No citation would be worth more than another. If you published something useful for a particular field or made a major discovery that opened a new field, then your citation count would reflect it.
Wouldn’t you be able to game that by having 2 entities spamming citations for each other?
I assume not, but we didn’t discuss that
My grandmother lived through the hunger winter and she remained adamant about not wasting any food. Those things have a big impact.
It’s further than you think. I spoke to someone today about and he told me it produced a basic SaaS app for him. He said that it looked surprisingly okay and the basic functionalities actually worked too. He did note that it kept using deprecated code, consistently made a few basic mistakes despite being told how to avoid it, and failed to produce nontrivial functionalies.
He did say that it used very common libraries and we hypothesized that it functioned well because a lot of relevant code could be found on GitHub and that it might function significantly worse when encountering less popular frameworks.
Still it’s quite impressive, although not surprising considering it was a matter of time before people would start to feed the feedback of an IDE back into it.
It feels like it