Comment Re:How disabled is disabled? (Score 1) 41
They're hardware vendors, so it's likely disabled in either the hardware or the firmware.
They're hardware vendors, so it's likely disabled in either the hardware or the firmware.
1) "give me liberty or give me death" was always a minority position.
2) Things that work well when people live in rural areas with slow communication don't necessarily work well when people live in dense clusters (i.e. cities) and conversely.
3) It is always the job of the individual to assign weights to his Bayesian priors. The state may control the costs of your actions, but should not be allowed to control your beliefs.
I hope I've covered what you were asking, but it was a bit unclear.
That there is no evidence to support it does not mean it cannot be true. But it should inform your assessment of probabilities.
Bingo. That is an absolutely correct factually true statement.
What you left out is that the job of the individual is to correctly assign probabilities.
Odd, I thought he was working for Putin.
Insulting people doesn't help convince them.
Be careful. It has not been absolutely proven that vaccines never cause XXX. It probably can't be. It's just that there is no valid evidence that vaccines do cause autism. (At least that I know of.)
The original claim was a deliberate fraud, but many people believed it, and their part in it was not a "deliberate fraud", at least not on their part. But they *did* believe it because they wanted to, in the face of contrary evidence.
China has a history of not caring about people outside it's borders. This long predates the CCP.
Compared to what was available before, it is quite impressive.
The negative feedback is prompted by the fact that AI is constantly being shoved into every one of our orifices 24/7 by every vaguely tech-related company as if it was the second coming of Jesus. To justify that amount of social pressure, it would indeed have to be quite a bit better than it actually is, and that's why people aren't impressed.
It depends on the precise definition. But teleportation of sizeable objects is probably impossible. In the use of the term in quantum experiments it means something like "moving the state of one particle to the state of another without determining what the state is that you moved". And it's "moved" rather than communicating because the residual state has been changed. I.e., for a macroscopic analogy, if I "communicate" something to you, it doesn't make me forget it, but if I teleport (say a book) to you, I no longer have it.
Yeah, the word was chosen because it sounded catchy, but it *does* describe a legitimate effect that has no macroscopic counterpart.
Why does he keep doing this?
You mean, why does Linus keep agreeing to be interviewed, and then reply to straightforward questions with the obvious answers?
What would you rather he do? Refuse to be interviewed, or maybe make up unexpected answers just to be edgy?
I rather suspect that it means "valid under the WIPO" treaty.
To be fair, there are lots of negatives about the Chinese approach. And we're so used to the negatives of the US approach that we almost don't see them...but other people do.
As "dominant world power"s go, the US has been quite lenient. This is known as damning with faint praise. OTOH, China shows every sign of being going to be worse...but probably not worse than Britain was.
Don't get suckered in by the comments -- they can be terribly misleading. Debug only code. -- Dave Storer