Even in the US, state-level representation hardly counts as local. Neighborhoods, towns, counties, etc. all have people representing them.
It's cool to care about and build up your community.
Even in the US, state-level representation hardly counts as local. Neighborhoods, towns, counties, etc. all have people representing them.
It's cool to care about and build up your community.
Even faster -- tailscale. For a cheeky way to play with your friends make a burner account with a shared login to get on the same tailnet for free. On the endpoints, turn off tailscale-ssh and any of their other "features" you don't need.
I immediately thought this was salt. Maybe I'm the monster.
GrapheneOS! I've been using it for a few years. Never going back.
Is this some Network Allowed
problem that I'm too Network Not Allowed
to understand?
I'm a big fan of buying power tools twice. I happen to go Ryobi for the first round but Harbor Freight / Northern Tool are probably similar.
If you can stand the fuss, buy corded tools and skip the brand loyalty that comes with batteries.
The biggest killer of cheaper power tools is generally heat. There are plastic components in the drive train. They hold up great to short jobs, but heat is their kryptonite. If you let a Ryobi tool cool down whenever you notice it getting warm to the touch it'll last a long time. If you need to run a tool for hours at a time then skip the fuss and go straight to a more brand with a good reputation like DeWalt, Makita, Bosch, or Milwaukee.
Red boxes fit all brands :)
assuming you mean *can't
if cordless: batteries
else: brand cuckery
Second this ^
I have one and it's fine, but not directly supported by OpenWRT. Looks like Beryl and Slate are though
Well that's odd!
Here you go:
Please don't assume anything, it's not healthy.
Explicitly stating assumptions is necessary for good communication. That's why we do it in research. :)
it depends on the license of that binary
It doesn't, actually. A binary alone, by definition, is not open source as the binary is the product of the source, much like a model is the product of training and refinement processes.
You can't just automatically consider something open source
On this we agree :) which is why saying a model is open source or slapping a license on it doesn't make it open source.
the main point is that you can put closed source license on a model trained from open source data
"Chuff" in the context of rock climbing = bad, made an effort but didn't get very far / fell a lot