

Made me think of this scene lol
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Made me think of this scene lol
One of the main reasons many people purchased a Kobo was to run quill. Those morons just cut off that market segment. A small segment, I know, but still a segment they just amputated.
Blank white screen on the personal profile (woot).
Outlook only on the work profile (only has notification access and nothing else). I’m actually surprised Teams isn’t on that list, but ok.
Yes. A previous version. It works pretty well for books you don’t need voice actors. If all you need is a reading voice, this will work relatively well. Just… don’t be me, and actual read the docs.
I use raid5 on an HP server, and am dealing with 2 drive failures, because HP’s qc is garbage. Raid6 would have saved me here, but it’s not really likely to have 2 drives fail simultaneously, so… yeah.
I recommend looking into 321 backup, too. Raid isn’t a backup solution, but it seems you already understand that and are trying to do that.
I see this is using OpenAI. Any plans to add support for local models, instead of cloud ones? Some companies, especially those dealing with government contracts, can’t use cloud AI. However, your tool looks pretty dope, and would be a perfect addition to our arsenal, if it had support for local models.
Edit: I say “our”, but I’m a company of one lol
Pretty sure china won’t be the only one…
Trained on 19,000 hours of video content from undisclosed sources
I’m gathering their “undisclosed sources” are social media (YouTube, Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, etc.) and copyrighted content (DVDs, BRDs, etc.), all without permission or legal rights. I wonder when pirating becomes just another brick in the wall…
I read about this DM. What’s the purpose of those messages?
Cool! Never heard of it, but looks super helpful
I believe a-shell has ssh, but I’m not 100%.
Edit: added link
Sounds like a good use for asset management. I’ve used SnipeIT for asset management, and it works amazingly well for this.
Not an April fools, but it might have been a plan they (whoever it was) chose to later not follow through with.
I vaguely remember the Sony fiasco.
Both of these were in the USA. The first was with a friend’s purchase, the latter was an article he sent me. It’s been a little while, but I know one was Samsung, but can’t remember the other brand or which was which.
Not all tvs allow you to do that. Some require you to be online. Some took it a step further and are equipped with 4/5G modems to bypass your network restrictions.
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The smart ones are sold at cost or at a loss, and your privacy is then sold to subsidize the profits. A dumb tv costs more money up front (since it’s not subsidized by your privacy), but it costs far less in overall value. It’s a tradeoff that the consumer needs to make. The lovely thing, is that (for now, at least) it is still a choice we can make.
I haven’t finished going through all of it yet, but it seems pretty extensive and inclusive. This is great!
I’ve found out the hard way: Running the script during startup, and running it using the proper user authorization, are two different things.
It sounds a bit off. But if you’re not looking for it, you won’t find it. That, I believe, is enough to fool most everyone, which is arguably a bad thing.