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Well, thanks actually, that helps a bit.
Well, thanks actually, that helps a bit.
This is the approach I try to also follow. It also makes the process of restoration from the backups or migrating to different server much easier.
Draw.io is also totally open and is able to be integrated into many different tools - so chances are your tool of choice already has a plug in for it. For example, nextcloud does.
He was careful not to mention AI…
Aren’t the meetings pushed as one of the basic function of these? But I guess it only makes sense if most of the participants use them and software has the support.
No LLMs were involved, as far as the available information goes.
Voice recognition is “AI“*, it even uses the same technical architecture as the most popular applications of AI - Artificial neural networks.
* - depending on the definition of course.
That’s “crowdsourced”, i.e. manually done by volunteers on per-video basis.
This is just freaking adorable!
Got uses Git repositories to store versioned data. Git can be used for any functionality which has not yet been implemented in Got. It will always remain possible to work with both Got and Git on the same repository.
Very smart move!
Unfortunately?
NY Times has a freaking great data visualisations, they are (were?) employing a wizard in this space, doing custom extensions on d3.js.
Well, the open source code is less likely to commit “security through obscurity” than closed one.
The scanning part is definitely automated by many different actors (for the gains or the “lulz”), but being this fast, also automated key usage (account draining) must have been implemented which is a bit more impressive…
Or they go the WhatsApp way and offer users a free “online backup” of the data, unencrypted, turned on by default.
“lacking podcasts” is a plus for most people, I think. But Tidal’s interface is a bit worse for me in one thing: it lacks the “remote control” Spotify has: controlling playback from any device on any device (e.g. playing on the computer and using the phone as a remote) and also the ability to transfer the playback from one device to another - like pausing it on the computer, picking up the phone, connecting it to car and resuming playback.
“ADHD training”, that’s the perfect way to put it.
Yea well while I successfully live without most of them - like you say some don’t need replacement at all - I find it hard to avoid them all. Some are hard to replace, some are forced on me.
edit: without most of them!
It should be audiobooks this time, if I heard correctly.
This is by revenue, so whales succumbing to mobile bullshit may distort it - a lot.