

Looks pretty interesting, thanks for sharing it
Looks pretty interesting, thanks for sharing it
A website with zero information, and barely anything on their huggingface page. What’s exciting about this?
Ahh, you should link to the model
I have and as nice as it might be can’t really justify it right now. Might be good to see more reviews and experiences over the next year.
Original 64G is showing ~84% health. Almost always plugged in to the dock.
Totally agree that it’s a sound strategy to keep their latest and greatest on home soil. At the same time they are starting to implement tooling for important parts of clients designs like
Core chiplets for Ryzen
iPhone SOCs
I wouldn’t say 5nm and 3nm are low end
There’s not much hardware to emulate rather the software. X86 is probably the target.
Your response clearly states publicly accessible DNS. A CA does not require anything public for local SSL and can work in conjunction with whatever service they want for that which is public.
That is how it works, infinite budget and student resources
Even intel is using TSMC for their latest 200 series chips. Technology is one thing, doing it at scale is another. Samsung is close but still behind.
https://www.tomshardware.com/news/samsung-says-it-will-beat-tsmc-to-4nm-production-in-the-us
Linux is really good at sandboxing and containerizing things. Not to mention the display manager/server changes from system to system and is optional.
+1 to laser for light usage. I have an HP cheapo laser setup with a cups server; everyone just hits the print server instead of needing to install drivers.
Dyson Sphere doesn’t support cloud saves, not an issue with the Steam Deck.
I’ve also had some issues with Fez but find it works better now
Copilot and ads taking up development cycles
Passkeys are a replacement for passwords, not a second factor like requiring a physical key.
Why would I reduce the number of factors and also entrust what should be something I know to a vulnerable key store.
Do I need a subscription service for this passkey supported password manager? Or I can just buy a hardware key that can be used on my phone or any device, password manager supported or not. Seems like the freedom and portability of a physical key, like a key to your home or car makes a ton of sense.
Passkeys are based on and supported by the FIDO alliance.
What options are there for migrating passkeys to a new device? Easy to lock you into that iPhone and you must use their migration tool when you upgrade. Or I just carry it on my keychain, no vendor lock in.
This might help
https://blog.pishop.co.za/using-a-raspberry-pi-as-a-bluetooth-speaker-with-pipewire/