

deleted by creator
deleted by creator
You don’t even need to go at a low level. Lots of programmers forget that their applications are not running in a piece of paper in general.
My team at work once had an app running Kubernetes and it had a memory leak, so its pod would get terminated every few hours. Since there were multiple pods, this had effectively no effect on the clients.
The app in question was otherwise “done”, there were no new features needed, and we hadn’t seen another bug in years.
When we transferred the ownership of the app to another team, they insisted on finding and fixing the memory leak. They spent almost one month to find the leak and refactor the app. The practical effect was none - in fact due to the normal pod scheduling they didn’t even buy that much lifetime to each individual pod.
Look, Kim had a busy day, one his best pals has been trying to start WW3 for 3 years, and the other just got attacked by someone trying to start WW3 too. He had to check if the bunker was adequately supplied with an assortment of snacks and energy drinks.
Next time just shoot an movie industry exec, the sentence will be the same. /s (mandatory: don’t actually shoot anyone please)
The same legal terms might mean vastly different things in Germany and the US. This is often the case in arbitration and warranty clauses.
EFF’s lawyers don’t have the legal expertise to help a company based in Germany.
x11 doesn’t support HDR at all, so even with HDR support still not being fully mature in KDE and GNOME that’s a argument for wayland.
The main limitation is the VRAM, but I doubt any model is going to be particularly fast.
I think phi3:mini
on ollama might be an okish fit for python, since it’s a small model, but was trained on python codebases.
Is it so surprising that the mindset that makes people unable to face changes in one area of their lives also makes them unable to face changes in other areas?