Could probably replace managers with AI, but being trained on most managers would mean it would be equally bad at its job.
I think the most likely is for the artists jobs to go away as art doesn’t have to be exact, but code does.
Could probably replace managers with AI, but being trained on most managers would mean it would be equally bad at its job.
I think the most likely is for the artists jobs to go away as art doesn’t have to be exact, but code does.
I want to see him American History X go in a shit-heel and come out a better person. Doesn’t seem likely, but here we are.
Finding a good client is hard. Folks recommend the Nvidia Shield Pro. Finding something that plays all the formats and can pass audio through hdmi to a AV receiver. Umcompressed HD audio, HDR/10/DolbyVision. Etc.
If I can just pop a debian machine down, that is great, but a hardware guide would be nice to see.
The Princess Bride
If you have seen it. You are happy to watch again. If you haven’t, you will love it.
That was fun, thank.
Always good to see a bunch of tromboners.
I mean, we are on Lemmy, I figured limux was implied
My current requirements for a vr headset now: Not Meta/Facebook Ability to work with Steam VR Zero-setup (inside out tracking)
Just saw that this was downvoted quite a bit. Not sure what the beef was. I seriously haven’t used an alarm clock in like 10-15 years.
Internet tells me disneyland.
My wife is concerned about getting a hot-enough-dog where the pickle juice then doesnt scortch you mouth-parts.
Where can this beautiful thing be had?
Looks cool. No docker support… yet
Yeah, No Quarter is my top Zeppelin track.
Chip R&D. We only use 1’s, 0’s if management is feeling generous. There are no circles, no need for pi.
I WFH now (thank you covid), but my jobs have been in similarly drab cubes and offices.
The work is dynamic and fast-paced. Having crazy lights and crap on the walls would not improve the work.
Haven’t used an alarm in many years. It is something you can train and get better at, just actively tell yourself when you want to wake up. Boom, magic.
You said you would never forget!
Vic 20 was my first. I watched my dad struggle with and eventually give up on assembly. Something-something and the microbots. I was fearful of it until I took Assembly at Uni. That 2nd/3rd year class was where the final puzzle piece of how computers work fell in place for me.
My first job was writing assembly tests for a DSP hardware design team. Fell in love. Never looked back.