“These hills are being bombed”?
“These hills are being bombed”?
It would. But it’s a good option when you have computationally heavy tasks and communication is relatively light.
Once configured, Tor Hidden Services also just work (you may need to use some fresh bridges in certain countries if ISPs block Tor there though). You don’t have to trust any specific third party in this case.
Discounting temporary tech issues, I haven’t browsed internet without an adblocker for a single day in my entire life. Nobody is entitled to abuse my attention; no guilt, no exceptions.
If config prompt = system prompt, its hijacking works more often than not. The creators of a prompt injection game (https://tensortrust.ai/) have discovered that system/user roles don’t matter too much in determining the final behaviour: see appendix H in https://arxiv.org/abs/2311.01011.
Like Firefox ScreenshotGo? (I think it only supports English though)
The temperature here was very interesting for a second or two until I remembered some people use °F.
xkcd.com is best viewed with Netscape Navigator 4.0 or below on a Pentium 3±1 emulated in Javascript on an Apple IIGS at a screen resolution of 1024x1. Please enable your ad blockers, disable high-heat drying, and remove your device from Airplane Mode and set it to Boat Mode. For security reasons, please leave caps lock on while browsing.
CVEs are constantly found in complex software, that’s why security updates are important. If not these, it’d have been other ones a couple of weeks or months later. And government users can’t exactly opt out of security updates, even if they come with feature regressions.
You also shouldn’t keep using software with known vulnerabilities. You can find a maintained fork of Chromium with continued Manifest V2 support or choose another browser like Firefox.
Have been using llama.cpp, whisper.cpp, Stable Diffusion for a long while (most often the first one). My “hub” is a collection of bash scripts and a ssh server running.
I typically use LLMs for translation, interactive technical troubleshooting, advice on obscure topics, sometimes coding, sometimes mathematics (though local models are mostly terrible for this), sometimes just talking. Also music generation with ChatMusician.
I use the hardware I already have - a 16GB AMD card (using ROCm) and some DDR5 RAM. ROCm might be tricky to set up for various libraries and inference engines, but then it just works. I don’t rent hardware - don’t want any data to leave my machine.
My use isn’t intensive enough to warrant measuring energy costs.
In my mind, it’s more of digital hygiene than victim-blaming. The core issue remains: even seemingly innocent ads (“we sell bananas”) are manipulative in their intent, and they introduce interruptions into your flow of thought. That’s already abusive.
I just saw a Youtube ad
I’d say you’re doing something wrong then already. There’s no reason to tolerate any deliberate assault on your mental integrity, e.g. ads. At least when there’re solutions as simple as configuring adblockers / using alternative apps. It’s harder with ads in your city.
Disabling root login and password auth, using a non-standard port and updating regularly works for me for this exact use case.
I’ve never encountered a keyboard app with UI/UX comparable to Fleksy, so that’s what I use (and UI/UX is everything for a keyboard).
The settings became a bit silly in terms of UI in the course of updates though, I mean specifically the keyboard itself.
Does it? I set its $PREFIX/etc/resolv.conf
to Cloudflare and dig
uses it fine.
I don’t usually edit PDFs on my phone. On the PC, I use pdftk+qpdf+img2pdf+ocrmypdf (all command-line apps). Some of those can be found in the default Termux repos once you install the terminal emulator; some, perhaps, could be compiled and used as well.
Some updates might be restricted to certain architectures, Android versions &c. Some could be beta versions. Or your repositories simply need to be synchronised.
If it isn’t the latter, check the following settings: “Include incompatible versions”, “Include anti-feature apps” and “Unstable updates”.
When I see a book mentioned enough times in contexts generally aligning with my tastes (also depends on how much I trust the context: an ad will have near-zero impact, a direct recommendation from a close friend will have high impact, for a review it depends), I decide to give it a try.
As for your situation, you’d benefit from having a reviewer with good taste and solid reputation. It might be quite a challenge, but it’s probably worth it once you’ve made sure your book doesn’t suffer from trivial flaws. Or, if it’s just a hobby, you might choose not to bother, or to have more practice first.
Music helps me keep doing something if I can’t focus at the moment; when I can, I always prefer silence when reading.
I usually read before sleep and sometimes randomly during the day. Seasonally, I find myself reading more in periods of increased stress, e.g. exam sessions.
While I like the feel of paper books, they’re rarely as practical as a mobile app (on Android, I’m using PocketBook), especially when you can make unlimited notes in your books and search them quickly.
I enjoy xenharmonic music and modern academic music the most, but I’m not familiar with everything there, so any recommendations are welcome if you, reader, have something in your mind.