I only know how to type my passwords at normal speed correctly. Like, I have to walk through the muscle memory step by step to get a text version of the password and even that’s iffy.
I only know how to type my passwords at normal speed correctly. Like, I have to walk through the muscle memory step by step to get a text version of the password and even that’s iffy.
figma balls
My pandoc scripts are fairly easy to use, I think…
nginx is mature and has a lot of support online. A lot of server projects assume you’re using nginx, as well. I’ve only ever seen caddy instructions on newer projects and even then, they usually also have nginx instructions.
Plus, I already know how to use it.
You’re part of the way there by setting the token count higher. Context will make the model “remember” more, so that’s helpful for generating responses up to the token count.
If you haven’t already, go into the settings menu and make sure “Continue bot responses” is turned on. If it is, pressing the submit button with no input should make the bot add onto what it output before.
When the API returns UTC, but the system insists on giving you local time… but there’s an extension method that accepts DateTimeOffset?
My first thought while reading this post was “emoji analysis”
Maybe sudo apt upgrade package-name
I hardly ever have to upgrade just one package. Otherwise, you’ll need an updated .deb package and use dpkg
Can I self-host selfh.st?
If you don’t hold the keys, your data may as well not be encrypted.
I think this is good. Adobe doesn’t need to get bigger, it needs to let go of some of its parts.
Also figma balls
Sure, we can just assume it’s ASCII, but it seems a bit disingenuous to not tell us what encoding to use and to just let those who don’t know better continue to think that binary is sone kind of language.
It’s not Chrome or Chromium derived. Google has incentives to mine me for data. Mozilla, not so much. I don’t trust Mozilla completely, but I certainly trust them more than Google to have my best interest at heart.
I use both, NFS for domain and hosting for my personal website and namecheap for everything else. NFS has no BS and I’ve had zero problems with them. Namecheap’s interface and tools are more sophisticated.
Funny, I couldn’t even get pict-rs working on my instance. I don’t need it, either. I just upload to an FTP server when I need to share something.
Functionally useless. With the web standardized, we shouldn’t need user agents anyway. It would be more beneficial to ask “do you support X, Y, and Z?”