Scary? No, BigCorps love trans gay furry rights!
As long as it stays well contained in a specified month per year, that is. No reason to go overboard.
Also @dnzm@feddit.nl / @dnzm@kbin.social
Scary? No, BigCorps love trans gay furry rights!
As long as it stays well contained in a specified month per year, that is. No reason to go overboard.
fta:
In my opinion, this is a red flag for anyone building applications that rely on GPT-4.
Building something that completely relies on something that you have zero control over, and needs that something to stay good or improve, has always been a shaky proposition at best.
I really don’t understand how this is not obvious to everyone. Yet folks keep doing it, make themselves utterly reliant on whatever, and then act surprised when it inevitably goes to shit.
Spez telling us what his kink is, without telling us what his kink is.
+1 for Tumbleweed, it works so incredibly well. In the very rare case where an update doesn’t work out for you, you can easily roll back to a previous btrfs snapshot.
Fedora is quite nice, too, but I’ve come to prefer rolling distros over a release based one.
Kalpa / Aeon might be interesting, too, if your use case fits an immutable distro.
There’s opi which does the whole search-and-add-repos thing for you, for OBS. Not sure if there’s something similar for COPR.
It’s still separate repositories, though, I’ll grant you that.
OpenSUSE, Tumbleweed on workstations (KDE) and Leap on my server.
It’s so unfortunate that Firefox on Android, for some reason, never worked well with password managers (as I understand it, it doesn’t support the APIs that Android has for them). Sometimes it’ll trigger the manager, more often, it won’t. Infuriating and a deal breaker for me.
I’ll give it another go, maybe this has been improved recently.
Edit gave it another crack, gosh, it actually works now!