It performs well on Mandarin audio transcription, considering it's an European company. It's weird though that it keeps adding spaces between single Chinese characters, and mixing traditional & simplified characters.
At least it's better than sending peasants into the mountains and building solar panels on the flat field that has been growing crops for thousands of years.
US-designed iPhones have at least 2 cameras, some microphones, and biometric sensors. From this point, everyone outside the US should stop using iPhones to prevent surveillance from the American empire.
From another angle, the iPhones are primarily made in China AND India via third-party factories, so no one should ever use iPhones any more.
You have the right to concern about privacy, but that's not how it works.
Human always have thoughts, ideas, and experiences. Writing them down is already a cool thing. If AI has those too, then it should start its own blog :)
My Gitea instance also encountered aggressive scraping some days ago, but with highly distributed IP & ASN & geolocation, each of which is well below the rate of a human visitor. I assume Anubis will not stop the massively funded AI companies, so I'm considering poisoning the scrapers with garbage code, only targeting blind scrapers, of course.
The freedom of installing whatever you want indeed brings more opportunity to come across malware, but as long as you lose the freedom, it's up to Google to decide which apps are "safe", which are not. Google will be the only, sole source of apps, they control everything.
It's not about immediate safety, it's about safety in the long run.
- the affected battery pack is usually replaced free of charge
- many of the cases are from Chinese in North America, and even one case is about imported Model 3
Considering Chinese media prefer reporting Tesla defects to gain more clicks, I would assume this is not a Shanghai-specific, broadly affecting problem.
I loved typesetting my bachelor thesis with Typst (but with LaTeX math formula), and now it's even more promising after being able to embed PDF figures this July (see issue #145).
Chinese coordinates definitely can be converted to WGS-84 - it's Google that did not do that. Look at Shenzhen River in OpenStreetMap, the streets of Hong Kong and Shenzhen align with each other perfectly.
With a little search you can find it's a laboratory within the CS department of THU. It's a fairly large lab though, not those led by just one or two professors.