

So right now, I assume, the store content is based on your apple account country not your geolocation?


So right now, I assume, the store content is based on your apple account country not your geolocation?


This is an interesting idea:
The “at least one” in the prompt is deliberately aggressive, and seems likely to force hallucinations in case an article is definitely error-free. So, while the sample here (running the prompt only once against a small set of articles) would still be too small for it, it might be interesting to investigate using this prompt to produce a kind of article quality metric: If it repeatedly results only in invalid error findings (i.e. what a human reviewer
Disagrees with), that should indicate that the article is less likely to contain factual errors


I see you’ve also purchased a new scratching post


Is the project current? I see an archived repository.


How was he different when they were together?
/gen


The example that the other commenter gave did not require the user to input the flags. As far as I understand, they mean there would be a number of secondary functions that will call the other with the correct parameter.


What pattern should be used instead?


I don’t mean to question the sincerity of your post when I ask this. Did you use a LLM, like chatgpt, to edit/phrase your question? This style of writing is also used by humans, so I absolutely could be wrong. I am just checking my AI detection calibration.


I’ve not used this, so I can’t promise anything, but I bookmarked it from another thread. Maybe it has some pertinent info?


A standardized magnetic pogo pin connector
That’s something I hadn’t considered before. What a neat idea.


A lot overboard, really. There is a long way to go for truth and reconciliation.
As for data safety, its not looking too great: https://tuta.com/blog/canada-bill-c2-surveillance


I’m not sure it’s alarmist; I think this is all a breaking change is.
Anybody updating needs to know their existing config may not longer be supported. Even if the consequences are small, even if not every user will be affected, this update will break some previously acceptable configs. I think that warrants a heads up and a reminder to read the release notes.
I was bracing myself for some level of absurdity after this disclaimer.
Instead it seemed to be pretty reasonably complicated. They didn’t flash some custom firmware or even mess with the hardware at all.
Sure, it is complicated, but in terms of hacks it seems to be par for the course.
Instead you are a choose-your-own-adventure author


TIL I might be in a maze


I really can’t tell if this is satire? It has to be, right?
Theyre not saying anything about reading the key off the phone. Brute force the key by trying every key against the encrypted data dump.




I think the point is that we are not what we think, we are not our first thoughts.
How we choose to act despite our initial impressions is what defines us, not the thoughts themselves.
Or for expats who buy a phone in their new country and cant access their apps anymore. Even worse as more businesses require the use of their app for certain things and don’t offer a web app.