Ad hominem dodging of the question. Classic.
That’s true for any conversation that isn’t a DM, though. All popular search engines let you enter a string in quotes and find pages that matches exactly. But if someone wanted to make fun of me on the internet, I would prefer if they censored my name.
We all checked.
I chose Xamarin in the early days of Bitwarden because it was a technology that I was proficient at (.NET and C#) and it afforded me the time to maintain a mobile app along with all the other apps I was building for Bitwarden. Xamarin is a real time saver, for sure and it has served us well over the past 8 years, but it comes with some downsides as well: …
Workers are just obstacles to their labour
I traced this baby back to January 19th, 2004: https://craphound.com/spamsolutions.txt
I’m the person you responded to. I never brought up masculinity.
Web browsers facilitate piracy too
emaciated
I guess that’s my word of the day.
Not sure why you brought up masculinity, though — I’d argue that getting your balls cut off doesn’t make you any less of a man. It certainly does expand your repertoire of safe and comfortable seating positions, though.
Making art and writing just happens to be easy to automate with neural networks and machine learning, neither of which was originally researched for the purpose of replacing artists and writers.
Good luck disassembling a ship with a neural network. And maybe do some research about the difficulties of application-specific robotics.
I learned about this yesterday from a TheOdd1sOut video. The frequency illusion is real.
Base-3: 15 bits
Legal states only: 13 bits
Redundancy due to symmetry eliminated: 12 bits
Combining the previous two: I estimate 10 bits
15 bits is possible if you encode the state in base-3, where each digit represents one of the cells
property
That’s an interesting way to spell proprietary
How dare you not close your trololo’s