

Also a reason not to use ollama: https://sleepingrobots.com/dreams/stop-using-ollama/


Also a reason not to use ollama: https://sleepingrobots.com/dreams/stop-using-ollama/
Totally fair. I also started with Debian for a Minecraft server, at the request of my partner. I might try out Icarus, is it cross platform?
Hehe tbh I only run 5 😅 I found it useful when I had to diagnose some cpu hogging off one of the containers and the ease of backups. Even though have not needed it yet.


Maybe a bit irrelevant but why is the article calling it “China’s battery“? I feel like if the researchers were from any other countries academy of science, say France, the title would have simply been something like “scientists discover new ways for fireproof battery”. Maybe it’d say French scientists or so, but not simply “France’s battery”?
Have you thought about running proxmox rather than Debian? I found it to be useful for managing/tracking/backups of containers.


Tbh all programmers have been copy pasting from each other forever. The middle step of searching stack overflow or GitHub for the code you want is simply removed


Tbh I agree, if the code is appropriate why care if it’s generated by an LLM


Without realizing why it was rejected. I don’t get it, why care so much about 3 lines of code where one np command was replaced by another…


I have no experience with it, but this promises local storage of health records: https://github.com/fastenhealth/fasten-onprem
Ooooh now I see why you linked the other news story
Why does the article not have a picture of the winner?


Generally is extra competition not a good thing for customers?
How to get your kids to practice safe sex: talk at length about anything sex so they will abstain because yucky.


I think it’s worrisome because if hobbyist can do this, imagine what professionals with more time and money can do


The paper I showed earlier disagrees


I think the use case is not people doing potato study but people that want to lose weight and need to know the amount of calories in the piece of cake that’s offered at the office cafeteria.


It needn’t be exact. A ballpark calorie/sugar that’s 90% accurate would be sufficient. There’s some research that suggests that’s possible: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2011.01082.pdf


No paywall: https://archive.ph/2023.11.12-212740/https://www.ft.com/content/8fde56b7-2515-441a-9472-30c8aedcc200
Tbh, the article doesn’t really talk about the headline. Just some history and talk about Elon musk and Twitter. Not a convincing argument about social media in general.
I completely forgot about this one!