

i don’t have any reason to believe it, given the track record.
also, the second half of the problem is of course the information that comes back, what it is based on, and what affects that base.
i don’t have any reason to believe it, given the track record.
also, the second half of the problem is of course the information that comes back, what it is based on, and what affects that base.
yeah but then we’re no longer discussing the topic the thread is about.
it’s still not fine, as per my first point. it’s leaking information to foreign interests.
i’d say it’s still bad because this is the leader of a government consulting with a stochastic parrot instead of experts.
of course you can. why would a career politician who has very visibly been interested only in politics since his teens know how to do that?
here’s my kneejerk reaction: my prime minister is basing his decisions partly on the messages of an unknown foreign actor, and sending information about state internals to that unknown foreign actor.
whether it’s ai or not is a later issue.
there absolutely is something wrong with sending the basis for decisions in matters of state to a foreign actor, though.
neat
isn’t this dead?
personally i quite like the ui improvements of audacity, and since the telemetry is opt-in on first launch i don’t really have any other problems with it either.
yeah they came down hard after someone crossed the line after looking the other way for like 30 years. i’m not surprised.
also, playstation is like the most legally well-tread area for emulators. remember bleem?
how long is a piece of string?
sorry. browsers are insanely complex pieces of software. like, operating system level. the standard has grown enough that the web is it’s own platform. so your definition of “daily use” is what is important; servo can open web pages, render html and css, and store cookies. it can also do some javascript. that’s enough to deal with like 80% of all websites ever written… but not the ones non-technical people use like facebook and twitter.
there’s also the matter of what features you actually require: tabs were not a standard feature for the first fifteen or so years of the web. search in the url bar was seen as an antipattern at first and wasn’t included. credential storage (like password autofill) wasn’t added until like 20 years in.
the big thing that caused nintendo to take action against the switch emulators was that the creators were taking money for it, and explicitly pirating games. like, they set up a patreon where you could pay for early access to builds specifically tailored to games that were not released yet.
a blog
it’s crazy, we’we had no issue with matrix even though i was sceptical at first and there was some teething issues, but we’ve onboarded non-technical users no problem.
the main thing is, we don’t federate.
did we not tell you that this is exactly what would happen?
because that’s how they are sold.
well, that too
you say that, but have you ever tried fixing bugs only based on end-user reports?
there’s a reason firefox has open tickets that are 25 years old.
i just run everything in the same prefix to save space. i tried bottles don’t really understand why i need it.