Ish.
You’ll have assertions that are entirely new or different, other pieces of setup or teardown. It really is one of the best use cases for GH’s Copilot that I’ve run across.
In my day to day the intellij autocomplete is what I prefer.
Ish.
You’ll have assertions that are entirely new or different, other pieces of setup or teardown. It really is one of the best use cases for GH’s Copilot that I’ve run across.
In my day to day the intellij autocomplete is what I prefer.
Yeah my usage of it is similarly limited. But the plagiarism engine is more useful than it is annoying in my experience. Especially in writing kdoc or unit test variations. Write one, write the name of the next, have autocomplete fill it out with the expected conditional variation
The plagiarism engine effect is exactly what you need for a good programming tool. Most problems you’re ever going to encounter are solved and GenAI becomes a very complex code autocomplete.
An LLM constructed only out of open source data could do an excellent job as a tool in this capacity. No theft required.
For writing prose it’s absolutely trash, and everyone using it for that purpose should feel ashamed.
As a programmer my soft skills are as important as my hard skills. I’ve never worked on software alone: coordination, coherent and clear communication, collaboration. It’s all integral to the role.
I believe it is most of what has led to me being promoted up to staff eng level. I’m very good technically but so are many other engineers.
TSMC is an exceptionally high paying job in Taiwan and they can’t go anywhere else.
You’re not abusing extremely high skill workers who can easily get a new job elsewhere. Not if you want high profit margins.
Here is a short list of things that Play Services do:
Even if you remove all telemetry you’d need to have the services running 24/7 in the background maintaining a socket connection to push notification services.
CMV: all Linux files should be case insensitive, displayed as lowercase and mandatory snake_case
.
Tldr: it’s 1.3mm thinner and has worse software experience than the Pixel. The author would rather buy the pixel.
What they’ve done is flattened and encoded every aspect of the doom game into the model which lets you play a very limited amount just by traversing the latent space.
In a tiny and linear game like Doom that’s feasible… And a horrendous use of resources.
ML means you need a beefy GPU. That could always be a secondary addition though - add it in later as an external GPU and call it good.
I bought an expensive chair 8 years ago and it’s as good as the day I bought it. I’ll easily get another 8 out of it and it will likely last 30+ years of heavy use.
Which makes it cheaper than buying a $120 chair every 3 years.
Steam is not a publicly traded company, so they don’t pull this kind of skullduggery in service of the shareholders.
They’re a company full of people who, gasp, like video games: unlike the average navel gazing, brainless, Harvard Business School CEO.
Given their track record they’ve been more consistently “pro gamer” than other companies and are given a lot of leeway for that.
If a device isn’t using a local detection of the wake word it would have a constant stream of data sent back to the developer… Which is super obvious.
It also wouldn’t be able to respond “Your device is offline” when the Internet is down.
It’s not a thing and it doesn’t happen.
I mean how bad can the fabs be - they’ll be running ASML EUV machines right?
Hi! Professional android dev here who has done some work on migrating an app to foldable:
Apps don’t guess. If they’re using XML they make specific layouts for a given width of screen.
If they’re using compose it’s even easier: the entire UI library is built for adaptive layouts. The main issue is a lot of apps are not in compose UI (or not entirely) - and material 3 has excellent components but it’s even less widely used.
Tldr: tech debt
A potential cause of the wonkiness is explicitly setting resizeableActivity="false"
in the app manifest.
Also brake dust is carcinogenic ❤️❤️❤️
Google never dropped that phrase btw - it’s still in the employee manual.
They just act like they dropped it
Paying full price for a phone that was weak when it released 3 years ago that is also missing most US cell bands and is locked to T-Mobile.
Oh and also the parent company doesn’t ship anything to the US, so parts are aftermarket only.
That’s not available in the US: that’s you can hack together a workaround.
Oh I’m 1000% in agreement with you. I think Copilot for programming is more expensive than it’s worth right now, both for my employer and for Microsoft.
OpenAI et al have done nothing to address the fundamental issue of hallucinations. In code hallucinations are pretty quickly evident: your IDE immediately throws up error highlights whenever the code complete fucks up.
The latest open AI model is to chain together a computational centipede to try and create reasoning structures out of stochastic processes. It takes longer and still doesn’t fix the issues. In their own demo video there are clear bugs with the “code” their 4o model writes.