Comment Good luck. (Score 2) 21
Google's Gemini AI Is Coming To Your TV
I wish all the luck to Google - to locate my TV in a landfill (or a recycling yard) where I have sent it to several years ago.
Google's Gemini AI Is Coming To Your TV
I wish all the luck to Google - to locate my TV in a landfill (or a recycling yard) where I have sent it to several years ago.
The other angle/question I had for some time: How much closed source software is really "closed", when one could try to brute-guess the prompt that was used to generate it?
How much security benefits closed source software would still have remaining?
P.S. AI-powered reverse-engineer (to automate all those tedious repetitive 99% of work) may be a fun topic too.
I'm happy that the USB-A is being phased out. Mainly because there are still too many fancy over-beautified USB-A plugs that are (a) large and (b) block neighboring USB ports.
So far, this wasn't a problem with USB-C, since it's too small to be f*cked up by the marketing.
P.S. But I guess it's only matter of time before they find a way to screw over USB-C too. "Progress."
P.P.S. Let's not forget that some companies still insist on using "USB 2.0 Mini" connector. In the past we had to stack Serial<->PS2<->USB adapters for the mice and the keyboards. In future we might need to stack adapters to connect those few remaining USB-Whatever oddballs.
My personal experience with charts for long sets of data: Excel starts going slow after I cross the magic 16K lines threshold - LO Calc basically becomes unusable when I cross the magic 10K lines threshold. Delete few hundred lines - and performance is back. Put them back - and the slowness (Excel)/the unusableness (LO Calc) is back.
... OMG. Great idea for a MCU movie: avengers & co as congressmen and senators try to pass a bill.
Iron Man can filibuster as long as it takes!* while Tony sleeps in the suit and Jarvis speaks for him.
Movie goers are the alpha testers.
I haven't even had a mac in decade+ now, but from my vague recollections MacOS images are generally come with their own file systems. (I've tried to recall an image format for MacOS that is a plain dumb block device - and couldn't. There is no
And from this follows: there is a ton of ways one could fuck up performance with a shoddily implemented custom file system for a particular disk image format.
All of medtech has hard "expiry date". At the very least, accounts for mechanical/etc wear. Device may not be deployed after the expiry date.
If it were only to prop up the sales, the manuf could have simply shortened the "expiration" of their devices. They could have even installed some cheaper non-critical elements to justify the shorter life cycle.
I'd guess they done that already, but now want to extract even more from system.
 
			
		
		
	
    
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