

I was more meaning “on what scale?”. I assume he wasn’t a few hundred short.
I was more meaning “on what scale?”. I assume he wasn’t a few hundred short.
He was fined €240M? What had he done?
I’ve put on a bit of weight since then, but I wouldn’t say that I’m giant.
You spent a few evenings downloading a hundred or so 1.44MB floppy imges over a 56kbps modem. You then booted the installer off one of those floppies, selected what software you wanted installed and started feeding your machine the stack of floppies one by one.
Once that was complete you needed to install the Linux boot loader “LiLo” to allow you the boot it (or your other OS) at power on.
All of that would get you to the point where you had a text mode login prompt. To get anything more you needed to gather together a lot of detailed information about your hardware and start configuring software to tell it about it. For example, to get XFree86 running you needed to know
This level of detail was needed with every little thing
The advent of PCI and USB made things a lot better. Now things were discoverable, and software could auto-configure itself a lot of the time because there were standard ways to ask for information about what was connected.
So far it’s been contained by hitting supply routes between the two. The rail line in particular is vulnerable due to the terrain it runs through.
I suspect the China is quite happy to sell arms, but doesn’t want to actually enter the war.
I think it’s a bit reductionist to say “similar mentalities”. They’re both authoritarian states, but that’s pretty much where it ends.
Putin’s Russia is all about reviving the Russian Empire and reliving past glories. China is capitalist through and through. They want to own world trade. As such they do not share goals, and if there is an alliance it will be a utilitarian one and probably short lived after it’s usefulness has ended.
No, which is why people saying “Buy it and don’t connect it to the internet” isn’t helping. More people need to not buy it and tell other people not to buy it.
To get them to stop they need to lose both the original sale and the additional advertising revenue. Right now their thinking is:
There is no downside for them. Only upside. The equation needs to change for them to stop doing it.
They’re industrial boxes with a screen. Not aesthetically what I want in my living room. The displays are chosen for their longevity, not their picture quality. They’re often actively cooled with fans, so adding a noise level to their operation.
Have you asked an LLM to translate anything bigger than a few sentences? It doesn’t have enough contextual storage to keep a whole paper “in mind” and soon wanders off into nonsense.
Google translate is a different beast.
You’re still rewarding bad behaviour. They still put all the crap on and made the sale anyway.
I agree, but with TVs (or large displays" we’re at the point where there are no good options. Commercial displays are over engineered for the home and lag in technology Vs home TVs. So they’re not an option. Lg and Samsung are the display technology leaders, but their TVs are full of crap— so no. Monitors don’t go large enough for the living room.
Guess I’m stuck with what I have.
The US has an export ban from Taiwan?
Translating is the process of rewriting the paper in another language. The paper has been written (in English) by an LLM.
Check the results though. Google translate is far far better at translation than a generic LLM.
Adding extra polish like nonsense phrases. Nobody is supervising it then.
Translating them…otherwise know as rewriting the whole paper.
Obviously. How much?