We can keep our amateur radio antennas pointed at the ISS for their entire pass. This would be harder but feels doable. We have directional wifi antennas on AZ/EL rotators to track drones and extend their range.
I have markdown files in ~/.claude/guides that I refer to, my subagents have instructions about, and my claude.md in several projects reference them when relevant.
This seems like it wouldn't accomplish much more than those methods. It knows my stack preferences, what I want commit messages to look like, etc.
But, it isn't running locally. It uses tools locally but the LLM is still shipping the output of those tools to Anthropic and running the inference there.
A compromise to this would be Bedrock but that still ships the data to Amazon to execute the LLM on their processors.
Yes, in fact, lots of the area that is warehouses to the south, and where the larger run way to the east and some buffer zone to the east used to be neighborhoods and they were bought and torn down to make room around the airport.
It's a few blocks of fire. I was on Tanker 4565 standing by as a backfill for units on scene. It's no where near "All of Louisville", that's a ridiculous thing to say.
It was around 250k gallons of fuel. Our CAD notes on the initial dispatch said 250k, one press briefing said 280k, and then it was changed to 220k which I think is the actual number.
Well, yeah, the pictures they included with the articles is a sim farm with devices available on a TOR site the same way you lease space on a server with EC2.
So, it maybe could have been used to initiate a TDoS attack if someone rented the capacity but that's not what it was there for. They caught a subcontractor and they want us to think they caught a kingpin.
I think you can remove most of the bloatware with autoattend.xml installation:
reg delete HKU\default\software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run /v OneDriveSetup /f