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doikor

2,893 karmajoined 12 tahun yang lalu

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doikor
·kemarin·discuss
> it would say, oh you're right!

This is easily the biggest problem with the current models. The models are just way too eager to please / say yes to the point that the models are happy to lie/make shit up if it means it can say yes.
doikor
·kemarin·discuss
There are some actual removal of feature too (breaking backwards compatibility on purpose). But those come with deprecation warnings for years before the actual feature is removed. And even then quite often it is still possible to enable with some feature flag for a version or two.
doikor
·kemarin·discuss
The council is the prime minister or president (depending on the system). The commission is the government. The government mostly does what the PM/president tells it to do.
doikor
·kemarin·discuss
They moved to a schedule instead of waiting for features to be finished.

Basically we get a new major version release on a schedule. Everything that is finished gets packaged in and everything else pushed to the next release.

The issue before was that they marked beforehand "version X will contain feature Y" and then feature Y got delayed by 3 years which means everything else in version X also got delayed by 3 years even though they were done 6 months ago.
doikor
·4 hari yang lalu·discuss
If you want to learn you just pretend that you don’t speak English and keep on speaking German. They will switch back fast.
doikor
·8 hari yang lalu·discuss
The opponent has usually seen bows before too and has a rough idea of their range.
doikor
·8 hari yang lalu·discuss
It is very tiring to hold back the shot in a position like that. In real life you just wouldn’t do that. And in general your archers know their range and will/should start shooting as soon as they have a target in range without any orders.

The volley fire thing is from black powder musket/rifle days. Basically volleys were used so you can actually seen what you are shooting at (aim) and manuever (hard to move while reloading. Easier if everyone reloads at the same time). Most armies still had small groups sharpshooters/snipers running around the field and taking shots freely.
doikor
·8 hari yang lalu·discuss
One thing I have noticed messed up in a lot of fiction (written/tv/movies/etc) is how loud guns actually are. Scenes of multiple people without any hearing protection emptying their guns that doesn't have any kind of supressors/silencer multiple times in a closed space (usually a single room) and then just casually chatting with each 5 seconds later.

In general the sounds of guns are very bad in most movies/tv shows (Heat from 1995 comes closest for me).
doikor
·11 hari yang lalu·discuss
> These mobile id's are too powerful, signing contracts, transfering all your funds or taking loans, regulation is also papering it over a bit by requiring high-stakes lenders,etc to do additional checks.

Many countries in the EU already have all of that just done though some national equilevant system (for example here in Finland mainly with bank credentials).

And in fact additonal checks are done when enough money is moving. For example when I signed my bank loan for an apartment I had to sign it again after 24 hours just to be really really sure that I wanted to sign it.

For smaller (but still big enough) stuff a second "second factor" usually kicks in usually in the form of a sms verification after the actual proper login with bank credentials (which has a proper 2 factor auth in itself too)
doikor
·11 hari yang lalu·discuss
Pre WW2 Europe was full of (state backed) cartels and monopolies. These were dismantled for the most part.

A lot of these were international. Just read up on "Cartel capitalism".

https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/enterprise-and-socie...

The European Steel and Coal Community (precursor of the EU) was also involved in the effort to stop these. In general this has been something the EU has been involved in since its inception and the best action against monopolies is to not let them form in the first place (why there is so few of them in general in most developed countries. Though that is now slowly changing it seems)
doikor
·17 hari yang lalu·discuss
A lot of places in Europe are around the same.

In Finland forming a non listed stock company is 240€ in fees without any requirement for capital/assets.

I think Estonia is even cheaper.
doikor
·18 hari yang lalu·discuss
They work just fine until -25C or so. (COP around 3). After they they still do work you just fine but work effectively as resistive heaters as you approach COP of 1.

Obviously you need a model they is made for which winters but people use them all over Finland including Lapland without any issues. If you want to save some money on the coldest days you burn some wood in the oven/fireplace if you have one.

edit: heat pumps (both air and ground) have been very popular in the nordics for quite some time now. One big reason is that we have cheap electricity and very expensive oil/gas. Lately also municipal level central heating networks have been slowly moving to heat pumps as their source of heat.
doikor
·18 hari yang lalu·discuss
Electricity and logistics solve the heating just as well. You can use the same device if you want to. Heat pump is just an AC run in reverse, literally all you need is a little valve to reverse the flow.
doikor
·19 hari yang lalu·discuss
Very normal. Here in Europe (well nordics at least) pretty much all the capacity of any wind farm is already sold before construction begins. The PPA (power purchasing agreement) is usually pretty much required to get the loan/funding anyway.

Basically most projects start with the wind company using its own money to find a site and get it approved and then they go and try to find someone to sell the electricity to at a fixed rate before construction begins as selling directly to the spot market has way too much risk for the banks to give loans.

Not sure how different it is in Central Europe with solar as there isn’t much solar up here in the north (just doesn’t make much sense as during the 3 to 4 months in the winter when electricity price is at the yearly maximum you produce effectively nothing)
doikor
·19 hari yang lalu·discuss
Most if not all stock markets are for profit corporations making a lot of profit. They could have api fees at 0 and still make a profit.
doikor
·19 hari yang lalu·discuss
Until nvidia takes legal/financial responsibility for any accident caused by their self driving system it is not really safe.
doikor
·bulan lalu·discuss
There is currently no plan to deprecate V2 manifest in Firefox.

And Firefox version of V3 supports browser.webRequest blocking (the part that adblockers need to work properly)
doikor
·bulan lalu·discuss
Put in the destination before start driving?

CarPlay does not work at all if you have not enabled Siri. As in it won’t even connect.
doikor
·bulan lalu·discuss
The countries in the northern parts of Europe know this is an issue and thus fortify some commonly consumed food items (milk) with vitamin d.

In places like Spain only some “premium” milk gets this treatment.
doikor
·2 bulan yang lalu·discuss
> There’s an entire court system to handle governors who ignore federal law.

And if there wasn’t a federal police force (or national guard put under federal control in the more extreme end) to enforce those decisions of such court would they matter in the more extreme cases?

EU cut Orbans funding and still he kept doing what he was doing and as there is no way to for EU to enforce its decisions beyond that he kept doing it until voted out of office.

That is a massive difference between the 2 systems. In EU the individual states are truly independent in that EU can’t force them to do anything.

For the record EU also has the courts etc but when they rule against a country it is pretty much reliant on the courty going “ok I will pay” as the court doesn’t have any means to actually enforce its decision.

Also there is 9 member states in EU that pay more then they receive from the EU so withholding funds from them will just lead to them not paying their fees. Obviously US has states like this too.