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Please read the attached terms. Accept the virtual interview invitation if and only if you meet our requirements.
Talk soon 😘
It is rare that a backdoor remains undetected for 6 years, but is even stranger that actual abuse has only started now.
I’m not sure what you mean that the client is responsible for federating an upvote, that should be up to the instance.
I am not sure what you are saying. I see an upvote on both of your comments.
Maybe it depends on the client? I have a default upvote for anything I post or comment.
Edit: Ive heard it’s different for kbin


also, I know yours.
Some info on each for the uninitiated: https://daftdev.blog/2024/04/01/chocolatey-vs-scoop-vs-winget---which-windows-package-manager-to-use/
I think the average IQ would remain at 100


Please take my endorsement of your criticism.


I’ve not been a parent, but I think it actually sounds pretty nice to be able to check where your kid is, before a certain age.
For a young kid, who cant advocate for themselves or otherwise be trusted to know when to seek help from an adult, theres really not much expectation of privacy? You should probably know where your 6 y/o is at all times, I don’t find that particularly creepy.
The peace of mind having access to a findmy network for my keys and other devices saves me an embarrassing amount of anxiety. These are inanimate objects that are at most an inconvenience to lose, and they cant wander off on their own. Given how I’m willing to essentially track myself for keys, I can see how parents justify tracking their kids to and from school.
The sheer terror that they must sometimes feel if the bus is late or their kid decides to follow a friend home must be pretty unbearable. When they’re old enough for a phone or to otherwise access a trusted adult when needed, then I can see an argument to be made for their autonomy.


its paywalled; tldr?
Maybe what you’re claiming is true, I don’t know whether is ‘probable’.
I poked fun at this before, but I don’t think it came across. If I’m not mistaken, millennials were the subject of a lot of boomer complaints about “kids these days”, being called lazy or entitled etc…
Maybe zoomers are dumber, maybe they’re full of microplastics and entitlement. Or maybe this thread is an example of the “chastise the next generation” history repeating. One generation is lumped together and shat on by older generations, some of which then make similar claims about the next generation(s) all backed up with nothing but anecdotes and confirmation bias.
I’m not trying to take dig at you, but I do want to highlight the similarities between claims like these and when a boomer might’ve said “I know a millennial who spends more on coffee than I would, so millennials are bad with their money. Millennials, who are bad with their money, cant afford houses. Yet they act entitled to homeownership, and so, they are lazy.” It’s a claim that assumes something about the integrity and intelligence of a swath of people and ignores the systemic issues that made homeownership hard for many millennials compared to past generations.
Again, maybe you are right, I do not know. I don’t think, though, that boomer rhetoric that shat on millennials as a whole was particularly accurate or productive.
I’m sure LLMs can get it right, but if I was going to use a tool for something like that, I’d want one that was more deterministic like the linked tool claims to be.
I agree that regex is an important thing to learn. Not sure any old LLM would do a very good job, and I hope that no tool replaces people actually learning how to write regex.
I’m not sure what you mean about the average person outside the millennial generation not understanding them, though. Maybe I’m mistaken, but I don’t think the ‘average’ person in any generation knows what regex is. Unless there is some reason the average millennial was actually exposed to them and forced to understand them?
As for being doubtful that anyone could understand them aside from a millennial, I assume you’re being hyperbolic? Sort of sounds like “Kids these days can never learn what I learned!” (I’m teasing).
Anyway I’m in agreement with you. This thread did remind me of a pretty neat project that, while still requiring domain knowledge, could save some time and be a good learning tool without being as fallible of a crutch as an LLM.
Have not tried it, and am not an experienced developer, so I am curious to your thoughts/criticisms: https://github.com/pemistahl/grex


Are worms like fish in that they’re not really a specific category of animal? More like an umbrella term or a broad classification?

Or even a photo?
Most keys are of a standard proportion, but you could throw a ruler or a measuring grid in the shot too.


Source/examples?


Glass would be very interesting, might actually confuse lidar also.
I really do get why it’s being called out, its silly and annoying.
8/10 of the top comments in my client are complaining about this, though.
It’s easy for me to ignore and move on from the censored text, but its harder to ignore the comments when they are taking up so much space.
Again, I get why, and I understand that each commenter probably didn’t see eachothers comments at the time of posting. And again, I get that this censoring is ridiculous.
I am not really offering a solution, and I’m not sure that people should stop calling it out but… theres got to be a better way? Maybe such posts should just be banned? Deleted by mods? If it is so frustrating for so many people.