SG1
Stargate SG-1 is equal parts "Vancouver warehouse sci-fi" and "Vancouver rock quarry sci-fi"
SG1
Stargate SG-1 is equal parts "Vancouver warehouse sci-fi" and "Vancouver rock quarry sci-fi"
Oh well, in practice I'll just continue to enjoy this (possibly forgetful and not-fully-finetunable) model then, that still gives me amazing results 😊
People have been training great Flux LoRAs for a while now, haven't they? Is a LoRA not a finetune, or have I misunderstood something?
Using the Internet Archive like this for streaming and sharing pirated movies is a dick move. They're a really valuable nonprofit organization, but they're already in hot water because of some ebook lending during covid, so this is just wasting their bandwidth and painting another target on them for the big Hollywood rightsholders.
You guys ever heard of torrents?
Nope, doesn't seem like it.
Here's an example of a text object taken from the XML, if you're curious: https://clips.clb92.xyz/2024-09-08_22-27-04_gfxTWDQt13RMnTIS.png
EDIT: And with more complicated strings (like ones havingnumbers or symbols - just regular-ass ASCII symbols, mind you) there will be tens of , because apparently numbers and letters don't even work the same. Even line breaks have their own . And if the number of these and their charLen don't match what's actually in pt:data, it won't open the file.
Lots or file formats are just zipped XML.
I was ~~reverse engineering~~ fucking around with the LBX file format for our Brother label printer's software at work, because I wanted to generate labels programmatically, and they're zipped XML too. Terrible format, LBX, really annoying to work with. The parser in Brother P-Touch Editor is really picky too. A string is 1 character longer or shorter than the length you defined in an attribute earlier in the XML? "I've never seen this file format in my life," says P-Touch Editor.
Ogg was apparently not named after Nanny Ogg, no matter how awesome that'd be.
The Xiph.org foundation themselves say that's where the name came from.
The Vorbis audio codec was also named after Vorbis from Small Gods, the 13th Discworld book.
Yeah, you could get hundreds of cheap nozzles for $70. I've bought packs of 10 nozzles for 74 cents. That's almost a thousand nozzles I could get instead of one $70 tungsten one. Or maybe "only" 800 nozzles if I factor in a pessimistic shipping cost too.
EDIT: Checked the price I paid and it was even cheaper than I remember. Edited my calculations.
I just... I... I can't install a browser that's called "Floorp". I just cant. I wouldn't be able to look another person in the eyes and tell them that "I use floorp". It's probably a perfectly good fork of Firefox, but I just can't.