Only if it comes with a cooling fan, though. My face gets really sweaty when I wear a VR headset.
Only if it comes with a cooling fan, though. My face gets really sweaty when I wear a VR headset.
There’s no rule against using active cooling for tablets and phones, only practicality. This technology seems like it might be practical enough to use in compact devices such as those, but we’ll see if that’s true.
If you did all the work and potentially criminal collection of data, but everyone else gets the benefit as well, that is not an incentive. You underestimate how selfish corporations can be.
OpenAI wouldn’t stay at the forefront of LLM if every competitor gets to use the model they spent money on training.
It does discourages the use of unauthorised data. If stealing doesn’t give you competitive advantage, it’s not really worth the risk and cost of stealing it in the first place.
How easy are we talking about here? Also, making the model public domain doesn’t mean making the output public domain. The output of an LLM should still abide by copyright laws, as they should be.
That is how LLM works, they don’t store the data as data, but as weight values.
No, you’re unhinged because I only asked for a proper explanation of the things you listed in your initial comment, but you keep spouting stuff that doesn’t seem related to it at all.
Now I see you were talking about his policies regarding Israel, but neither Biden’s support for Israel’s atrocity or his banning of Chinese products makes him a fascist. A supporter of genocide and a racist, maybe, but I don’t see what relation that has with calling him the most fascist president.
Bro, stop spouting off about unrelated things and explain the ones you mentioned in first comment already. You’re just making yourself look unhinged at this point.
No, we’re saying we need more explanation for the things you’ve listed. I can’t connect them to anything I’ve heard off the top of my head.
Any 8 years old hard drive is a concern. Don’t get sucked into thinking Seagate is a bad brand because of anecdotal evidence. He might’ve bought a Seagate hard drive with manufacturing defect, but actual data don’t really show any particular brand with worse reliability, IIRC. What you should do is research whether the particular model of your drive is known to have reliability problems or not. That’s a better indicator than the brand.
Did you know that correcting grammar mistakes does not make you a grammar nazi? If the guy was being condescending when providing the correction, then he is one. Simply giving the correct word to use in a simple and concise way is completely fine. Your over-reaction to his comment is the unreasonable one in this case.
How small has that list become at this point?
You also need the right Bluray drive that can be re-flashed before you can extract the contents. If only it was as easy as DVDs.
IF it exists in their country. It also requires enough people to buy the new ones first for it to be available for the second hand market.
Yeah, that’s a good point.
So it would still be a bar graph. I thought your argument was that it wasn’t the right type of graph for this dataset, not that you disagreed with the dataset used in the first place. I agree that the one you proposed is easier to understood, but I don’t really agree that using it like they did is improper. It is certainly useful if you want to save space.
What graph works better to show relative percentage change?
Well, let’s hope the second part of you is right.
Would that change anything in a country where Trump is re-elected?
Why are you assuming he’s trying to bring the guy down? He could genuinely have a problem parsing the comment and you’re here just dismissing his experience.
I didn’t know that assuming your experience applies to everyone is generally accepted in Lemmy nowadays, considering the voting ratio.
I don’t agree with his point that there are too many commas, but implying that his experience is faked and his comment is made due to malicious intent is just particularly stupid.