But… but we have LLMs now! They are going to save us and the economy… right?
You can message me via matrix at @zewu:matrix.lemmy.world
But… but we have LLMs now! They are going to save us and the economy… right?
Note that this was an exaggeration of my experience with LaTeX, it’s not like I use these commands everywhere. I think its better to let LaTeX do its job. Nevertheless, looseness=-1 can help to cram a few words in a new line into the previous paragraph, which subjectively looks better sometimes and frees up some space. Negative vspace around figures or tables can also be used to make more space for text and avoid unwanted page breaks. Manual linebreaks can come in handy if you switch TeX engines (e.g. pdfTeX -> LuaTeX) and somehow things don’t look like they are supposed to look. You can do it right or you can add manual linebreaks here and there to get the same results.
LaTeX and the wonderful world of \looseness=-1, manual linebreaks and negative vspace
(but it’s still leagues ahead of word)
Hell yeah
Probably end of the gold standard
Imagine the single USB C port being 40Gbit/s or even 80Gbit/s (USB 4 Version 2). Given a nice docking station and some additional enclosures, you could technically even connect hard drives and run the phone as a low-power NAS. Or/and as a multimedia station for your 4K TV, I mean the integrated GPUs are usually more than capable enough.
A bummer that they stick to USB 2 speeds, even for most high end phones.
The funny thing is that the vast majority of NVIDIA GPUs are probably used in Linux-based systems because of the MLAI hype.
Thank you for the positivity, kind internet stranger.
Haskell is nice. This code style… not so much
Ah yes, blue video mood
It is certainly not full any longer
Breaking: turing-complete system can simulate any turing machine
It would be so funny if washing machines were the first to become sentient
I agree when it comes to average usage, but having >=1Gbps headroom for bursty traffic, e.g., when moving files locally between devices, is awesome.
Wow, nice! I mean it’s not a game changer but a nice little gimmick that I appreciated when playing spider man on PC. Just a bummer that haptic feedback only works when using a wired connection (at this point).
The songs are great but the overall film is rather weak in my opinion. Especially in comparison with masterpieces like Princess Mononoke. To me it felt like a musical with some bits of non-canon fanservice in between. Anyway, it’s nice to see that many others like it!
I switched to vscode a while ago. The remote development extension pack is great.
I don’t know the details but building upon previous research is the foundation of the scientific method. Additionally, the scales were probably not named like that by the authors.