Watched it for the first time following Furiosa. I’ve seen fewer seeders on new releases.
Watched it for the first time following Furiosa. I’ve seen fewer seeders on new releases.
I was pretty miffed when I realised “gas town”'s primary export was petrol and not, you know, gas.
Simulink has a concept called Test Harnesses which are models that isolate individual blocks for testing. The tests themselves are then driven programmatically from MATLAB
Have you got concurrency and parallelism swapped around?
Australia has ABC Vote Compass, but it has some oddities based on issues with our political/media landscape:
Oh god you reminded me of this gem
https://serverfault.com/questions/780150/how-to-cache-contents-in-haproxy#780155
Someone asks how to do http caching in HAproxy.
The one answer:
don’t use the wrong tool
haproxy is a wonderful tool. It does not provide caching. A quick scan of the fine docs can verify this. Unless you want to patch
haproxy
you need to use a tool that does what you’re looking to do.don’t create impossible problems
By asking for haproxy to do something that it doesn’t and excluding the tool that seems to do what you want to do you’ve create an impossible situation. There is no technical solution for this. Don’t make choices that box you into a corner.
try varnish or anything that actually caches
If you get over that you might find this tutorial on using varnish with haproxy useful or try varnish by itself. Maybe squid or memcached would be more your speed.
In the comments to this ludicrous tirade we get this simple comment:
This was true and valid back then. Nowadays HAProxy does this.
And just in case someone found this looking for an answer, here’s the example from that link
backend bck1
mode http
http-request cache-use foobar
http-response cache-store foobar
server srv1 127.0.0.1:80
cache foobar
total-max-size 4
max-age 240
fucking bone
Is that what they’re calling it these days?
That’s a completely different statement
There’s something wrong with this data.
The fraction of asses should be way higher.
For technical purposes that need to handle both you can just disambiguate it with “Letter (new)” and “Letter (work or school)”
A right not being reserved does not mean it is waived, only that it is not exclusive. The last person to commit still has the right to commit, as does everyone else.
If anyone is considering how to avoid this on their own site: https://indieweb.org/URL_design
Netflix baited me into a “new” sci-fi horror show. When it got to the end I looked up when the next season would be out.
Not only was it cancelled, it was cancelled without conclusion ten years ago.
Apparently it was only “new” to Netflix, but that didn’t stop them pushing it as new content.
I still have Netflix, the streaming landscape is marginally less fragmented here. But fucking hell is it a bizarre chore just trying to find where on the home page “continue watching” and “my list” are today.
AI isn’t being watered down, quite the opposite.
Path finding, computer vision, optical character recognition, machine learning and large language models were all unambiguously considered to be vAI technology before they were widespread, and now the media and general public tend to avoid the term for all but the most recent developments.
It’s called The AI Effect
I suspect my local bookshop would stock most of those under “society and politics”
I don’t have an answer for you that would help you find more good books, sorry.
I read Shock Doctrine by Naomi Klein right after Manufacturing Consent and I think that worked really well. It’s got some overlap in content that helps solidify concepts, but it’s a bit more modern and a much easier read (less dry)
Other recommendations
If you have any interest in economics:
If you have interest in digital freedoms and copyright law:
The ones near me don’t have buttons of any kind
HBO Max doesn’t exist in Australia. It’s on Stan, Foxtel Now and Amazon Prime here.