Put a page on your website saying that scrapping your website costs [insert amount] and block the bots otherwise.
Put a page on your website saying that scrapping your website costs [insert amount] and block the bots otherwise.
Yeah, it can do other stuff, I was simply stating a use-case I consider valid. Doesn’t matter that others have come up with the feature before. This is presumably better at detecting the object and removing / replacing it.
I can see a few useful use-cases, mainly deleting unwanted stuff / people from a photo.
Welcome! Both to Lemmy and lemmings.world!
We use .lh, short for localhost. For local network services I use service discovery and .local. And for internal stuff we just use a subdomain of our domain.
I personally only turn it off when someone’s visiting over night and the noise disturbs them, otherwise I just leave it on nonstop. Mainly because it would annoy me to try to open whatever and find out I have to turn on the server first. I don’t have a UPS and never even thought about getting one (for the server, I’m thinking of getting one for my 3D printer).
1.46 billions of iOS users as of 2023. And 100 million MacOS users.
What the hell is the fella smoking if he thinks Apple would ever let others use their on-device LLM? Like, the company that deems it too dangerous if apps could change a wallpaper?
Hey, I love my kernel processes! Especially my LLM kernel processes.
Until someone makes a frontend for syncthing that’s significantly dumbed down, it’s not elitist.
That’s very different, they want you to either pay or not have access. This would be you still having access, but being paid for giving them data voluntarily.
That’s perfectly legal and employed across many European business entities.
For my use case Revolut mostly replaced it.
They’ll give you $2 or something like that if you give them consent. You would be surprised how well that works.
And it feels wrong for this comic.
But a decade from now, there will be AI trained on data that will no longer exist. And many websites that GPT trained on probably don’t exist anymore.
Well, I was comparing to my experience with both Windows and MacOS or whatever is the thing called.
Windows PC gets slow and laggy after around half a year, it goes slowly so you don’t notice at first, but around half a year later it’s shitty. No matter the hardware. Sure, your $2k laptop won’t be as slow as a random $300 laptop, but the ratio of new/half-a-year-later is more or less the same.
With Macs I have limited experience, but my partner’s Mac was shitting itself all the time, weird issues with login screen being stuck and needing hard reboot, the thing generally being laggy when you try to do more than two things (neither of which necessarily needs to be a demanding task), Finder is pretty much an abomination that no one really knows how to use well and so on.
Sure, Linux is fucked up all the time as well, but my point is it’s not worse than the other two systems, both are broken all the time as well. And the argument that you need terminal to work - have you actually fixed any problem on Windows? Unless a reboot of the system or of some service solves the problem, within 10 minutes you’re either running PowerShell or you’re deep in the registry.
Well, at least Windows seems to be a problem that’s solving itself (albeit very slowly) with how shitty it’s become.
Gaming is no longer a reason, really. 99% of the time it works out of the box.
Isn’t it? I think it’s quite there, unless you get unlucky with hardware.
I’ve been there, now it’s been over two years where I’m pretty much Gmail free. It’s hard but it’s worth it.
I did this with a suitcase lock once, luckily only 3 digits. The code was 587. I remembered the code at around 540.