

That would work if you were rich and friends with government officials. I don’t like your chances otherwise.
That would work if you were rich and friends with government officials. I don’t like your chances otherwise.
Many of those apps were built on things produced and distributed for free. I would say they are, usually, just a fancy front end on some OSS library. That’s not without value, good interfaces are hard, but lets not pretend they’re doing all the work themselves, and they certainly aren’t eager to reinvest any of that money into the free software that made their shit possible.
It’s kinda funny that just stacking rocks is an efficient energy storage solution.
Few, if any, people posting shit to that site have the rights to what they’re posting but I guess copyright doesn’t matter unless youre pirating media.
np glad it worked.
sounds like contentEditable
got triggered on one of the elements on the page. if you want to try and get around this before they fix it you can press F12 and paste this into your console:
document.querySelectorAll("[contentEditable]").forEach(x=>x.contentEditable=false);
The article mentions specific deterministic algorithms so I don’t think it’s AI in the way youre thinking.
JavaScript: a language for mutants.
deleted by creator
would the bomb also kill javascript and C++ or would I have to keep throwing trolleys at it until I get both silicon valley and the JS/C++ devs?
If they bundled the item with a pack of batteries in a retail store and sold it for 39.99, would you still consider it cheaper?
How? You cannot buy this “cheaper” version without spending more money. It’s 39.99 with free shipping other places. It’s $39.99 on Amazon because you have to pay for shipping. You’re not saving money, you’re just getting more stuff from Amazon.
Cheaper on Amazon, or anywhere else?
How have you ‘saved’ money that you spent, exactly?
Why not? Seems pretty straightforward
OpenAI o1 costs $15 per million input tokens and $60 per million output tokens, DeepSeek Reasoner, which is based on the R1 model, costs $0.55 per million input and $2.19 per million output tokens.
So they’re getting you to buy more than you wanted or pull the trigger on something you were waiting on. Sounds like this is still a win for Amazon.
if i had money to pay for a VPN i’d just use something like real debrid. and if my ISP is middlemanning my https certs then a VPN probably isn’t going to help much.
also, your own code after you’ve spent time away from it.
The best is unironically to pirate and use something like Kodi on a SBC that can run libreElec.