I think the Swiss have the best Europlug-based system. Their three-conductor plugs have the same footprint as basic Europlugs, which makes for very dense plug arrangements. Unlike e.g. the German Schuko plug they only fit in one orientation so you get no polarity issues.
Further limit infrastructure spending because limiting state debt must surely be the number one topic for everyone by a wide margin and everyone must want to see it achieved at all costs.
Take a harder stance on immigrants, asylum seekers, and other foreign-looking people because adopting AfD policies must surely lead to their voters bleeding over.
Keep talking about how the intended means of defending the country against extremist parties are not valid means of defending the country against extremist parties.
Continue fully collaborating on the regional level.
Conception begins at meiosis. If you don't want to procreate, don't produce ova/sperm. Produce a million sperm cells and only make one child? Off to death row with you, mass murderer!
I took my phone charger on a business trip instead of the laptop's power brick since is actually rated for a higher power draw while being a quarter the size. Worked perfectly well.
They'll investigate the Israeli government for several years and then conclude they can't pass judgement because they accidentally replaced 2/3rds of the government with their own moles and can't prove that the atrocities weren't done by the moles.
(Explanation for those unfamiliar with German politics: That's precisely what happened with an earlier extreme-right party.)
Well, the camera needs to talk to your onsite storage in order to store video. A simple consumer device like a Ring isn't going to be hardwired; it just uses Wi-Fi (which every household can be assumed to have) to connect to your LAN and talk to the storage device.
The question is why the Wi-Fi could be turned off on the first place. Probably an ISP-managed router; I doubt they'd go and jam the entire spectrum between 2.4 and 7 GHz.
That's one reason why people should use their own router and/or access point whenever possible.
We've been productively using AI for decades now – just not the AI you think of when you hear the term. Fuzzy logic, expert systems, basic automatic translation... Those are all things that were researched as artificial intelligence. We've been using neural nets (aka the current hotness) to recognize hand-written zip codes since the 90s.
Of course that's an expert definition of artificial intelligence. You might expect something different. But saying that AI isn't AI unless it's sentient is like saying that space travel doesn't count if it doesn't go faster than light. It'd be cool if we had that but the steps we're actually taking are significant.
Even if the current wave of AI is massively overhyped, as usual.
Presumably, they're trying to build for Windows and according to llama.cpp's documentation this might require the MSVC toolchain. Honestly, a lot of applications use the MSVC toolchain so it's not that special. Besides, CUDA (but not HIP) is available in WSL2 so depending on GPU they could just use that.
Also, apparently they can't log into GitHub without the Microsoft Authenticator app. Now, I haven't logged into GitHub in a long time but I do deal with Microsoft's SSO for my job and a generic TOTP app works just fine there. (And when I checked GitHub's documentation on the issue it said "download a TOTP app of your choice" so I don't see how Microsoft's app is supposed to be required.)
And Paul Fisher really just wanted to make a cool pen that can reliably write upside down. Congress and The Party agreed that the pen was cool and bought a couple hundred each.
Of course you wouldn't use an existing database engine as the foundation of a new database engine. But you would use an existing database engine as the foundation of an ERP software, which is a vastly different use case even if the software does spend a lot of time dealing with data.
If I want to build an application I don't want to reimplement everything. That's what middleware is for. The use case of my application is most likely not to speak a certain protocol; the protocol is just the means to what I actually want to do. There's no reason for me to roll my own implementation from scratch and keep up with current developments except if I'm unhappy with all current implementations of that protocol.
Of course one can overdo it with middleware (the JS world is rife with this) but implementing a communication protocol is one of the classic cases where it makes sense.
He should go on vacation with the CEO of Nestlé and publicly endorse single-use plastics.