Wikipedia (!?): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megumin?wprov=sfla1
Wikipedia (!?): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megumin?wprov=sfla1
Megumin from a comedy Anime called “Konosuba”
LLMs work by always predicting the next most likely token and LLM detection works by checking how often the next most likely token was chosen. You can tell the LLM to choose less likely tokens more often (turn up the heat parameter) but you will only get gibberish out if you do. So no, there is not.
Not necessarily: If they came out right now and said that games run great, it might build expectations that they can’t meet.
If it’s a well-known artist, looking them up on Wikipedia is a good way to get an idea what genre they make. A website that does this for all songs individually would probably be AI-powered and wrong most of the time.
Supposedly Nvidia has become a lot better on Linux lately. They finally dropped their weird framebuffer API or whatever (the one that was the reason for horrible Wayland compatibility and also caused a heated Linus Torvalds moment), and I think they even made their linux drivers open source.
It better be Greenland or I’ll be disappointed
For most of the code, I don’t think anything special is used.
Compiling the code already obfuscates it enough. Most function, type and variable names are removed, the compiler does some optimizations and what you end up with is already pretty indecipherable code soup.
There are obfuscators that make the resulting binaries even harder to read/decompile, but further obfuscation also makes your code run slower.
player_hand and dealer_hand are only [DECK_SIZE/2] in length, but in initialize_decks you write zeros into them unti [DECK_SIZE -1]. Since the arrays are located next to each other in memory you end up overwriting the deck array.
Yes they are.
Here’s a TED talk on YouTube from “Hide the pain Herold” a guy who was in a stock photo that became a meme: https://youtu.be/FScfGU7rQaM?si=MFVrgwlJQ8DSOfVB
I don’t think money is the real issue here. It’s already budgeted for the military anyways - if it’s used to help other countries that’s a good thing in my book. Well unless it’s “helping” by funding the bombing of civilians, but what do I know.
Sounds like a CIA psyop
Considering MRTs use 1.5-7 Tesla, I can’t imagine microtesla will be doing anything, unless you have a piece of metal in your head. Maybe it’s an ear infection or a migraine or something like that gets worse from the cup pressure. If it’s a problem, ask a doctor.
Can someone give some context why this is so heavily downvoted? Is the content misleading, or is it just that people misread the title as anti-vegan?
The probability of getting a finite number is pretty much zero.
For any range [0; n], where n is finite, there are always infinitely many numbers larger than n, so the probability of getting a number in said range is n/(n+infinity). I feel very confident in saying that something with that probability will never happen.
They sell ad spots based on their data about you - IMHO that’s very different from outright selling your data.
Looks to me like they’re trying to build something like office 365, but open source. Mostly by wiring other open-source components together I think?
This is probably a better starting point, unfortunately the text is in German: https://gitlab.opencode.de/bmi/souveraener_arbeitsplatz/info
If your local branch and the branch on GitHub diverge, they need to be merged. If you pull using the console it will tell you that, apparently VScode does this automatically?
Anyways, nothing to be concerned about. If you’re annoyed by the merge commits, you can configure git to “rebase on pull”, google it, you’ll find instructions pretty quickly.
Alternative title for the articles thumbnail: Philip Morris releases worlds largest cigarette filter in an effort to convince regulators that smoking is not a health risk.