How many countries has China bombed in, say, the last year, and how does that compare to the other superpower (and the washed out has-been superpower) in the room?
It's difficult to comprehend the gall and hypocrisy requires to kvetch about this when there are four carrier strike groups sitting in the Gulf right now.
let's recap. someone said Samsung feeds of subsidies so it's equally bad, I said no their government isn't as aggressive/imperialist, then multiple whataboutists started to imply I'm wrong because USA (not Samsung's gov by the way) is just as bad, and now you say... what exactly I don't even know.
still waiting for someone to give me an actual argument and not just downvotes.
as some one whose family passed away due to pneumonia, spo2 is a life saving feature if we had that back then. probably 99.9% of the time spo2 number is good enough. but the value is really about the left 0.1% . of course the false positive rate should be low enough.
It's amazing to me how we called "box-product" now has a fancy new name "local-first". "Box product" is quite well understood. It has a lot of benefits, but also the business model is harder to get right comparing to cloud services. For opensource projects, that will not be a problem tho.
We just called them "CDs" and sometimes they didn't even have a box. Those were called "shrink-wrapped CDs" (even though the boxes were usually shrink-wrapped too.)
It reminds me of that joke where young people see a floppy disk for the first time and say, "Oh, you 3D printed the save icon!"
Might be reality very soon.
Will this verdict stop Skiplagged from continuing its business in the future, either legally or financially? Or is it more like a one-time penalty they have to pay
It's 4.7 million each for trademark infringement and "disgorgement from the travel site's revenues"
First one is a "So what, just remove the American Airlines trademarks". They can drop them and say all good, and presumably not get sued again.
Second one is about what Skiplag was doing itself; I.E. cutting into AA's profits. If they continue to do this, the next court case will be much more expensive. Most courts don't like it when you get sued for something and treat it like the cost of doing business, and AA is big enough that I'd count on them bringing suit again.
The trademark infringement recieved no damages, the damages were for copyright infringement. "Jurors declined to award any damages for trademark infringement"
Apologies if this is a dumb question, but PearAI, Continue, and Cursor all seem like different versions of GitHub Copilot to me. Am I understanding that correctly? Why are we funding so many 'GitHub Copilot's?
1) management types who have never coded love the idea that coders can be replaced or minimized by said tooling. hence hey fund any and all projects.
2) coders excited by llms reach out to the nearest projects they can relate to, namely, code assistants, test generation assistants, doc generation, and generally any automation in the coding workflow. so, you will see a lot of me-too tooling.
Venture capital is trying to fund companies that have the potential to grow their valuation many many many times over in a relatively short amount if time.
AI is obviously very powerful and has the potential to change things quickly IF it turns out it can be good at important tasks that people will pay for. If someone finds a really good use case then they can scale that with essentially no problems until the vcs are fat and happy.
Pouring money into AI garbo also feels like a hedge to investors when they see it as just funneling down to their other investments.
Together these things end up looking like an attractive vc target so we see a ton of these "companies" that are a bag of prompts on top of a different company's code/model.
Cursor user and former Copilot user here. The difference is significant. Being able to use Claude alone is worth the switch, but the UI of these newer tools are far better than Microsoft’s implementation.
Because of the hassle of configuring Firefox, I've been using Floorp for quite some time. But it is also not perfect.. This is definitely interesting. If Mozilla can also sync userChrome between machines it will be perfect...
It's still in the early phase where the bubble is building up. This is necessary if we want a prosperous market. Hopefully, after the bubble bursts, some good companies will remain (which is very likely).
I've been watching this project for a long time. It was supposed to be released with Redis 7[1]. But I guess this is not true anymore. And there is no public roadmap saying when it will be production ready.