Phew, agreed. I mean of course the company "can" read the message. If it does, I would love to see that shown by the app upfront, so I can avoid using it.
Is the implication of violence/aggression in said speech is a justified consequence?
> Said commenter has _completely_ missed the point
I'm I understanding this correctly, this is because it is against the principle of free speech, and people might conflate it with 1A? Isn't it preconditioned on everyone being on the same page about free speech? We've seen people having extreme opinions being shunned by the the rest of the cohort. How does this group then maintain cohesion, rather is it even possible to do so?
I just Ctrl+F'd Google Meet and no one seems to be really talking about it. We've been using it for our meetings for a long time and it works really well. I'm wondering why it doesn't have widespread adoption. You can call-in via phone, can log the minutes of the meeting and seems to "just work" too
I just want to take a moment to thanks folks over at memfault for bringing us in depth content from the world of embdedded systems. Be sure to check out their articles on ARM, RTOS etx.
One way is to obviously go all out Java - definitely makes things streamlined. But not all team members are familiar with Java. Especially not ones formally trained on data science - who tend to work with R/python etc. Atleast that has been my experience.
Did you have the two systems talking to each other through HTTP endpoints? I mean the ML system receiving data from a source API and sending back a result? Is this where AWS lambdas jumps in? Are there any formal tools that facilitate making these endpoints?
I imagine I will be breaking down into different services as well. An ML "blackbox" that makes a call to the back-end for data and returns a result/prediction. This could happen through an API. What kind of API to choose is still open.
I'm not very sure what you mean when you say the ML results were pre-computed?
How do you source/buy these different kinds? I've mostly had Californian pistachios, and I think they're amazing. But I keep hearing about the Iranian/Turkish varieties which is probably where the pistachio plant is native to.