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How is it a "mysterious" model? It's Tencent's Hy3?

My question as well. Isn't Tencent a very well-known company? Maybe the mystery is in the model itself?

That depends on the perspective. If you're on the Sun, the wheels rotate around you.

Home is not the same thing as a house. Owning an apartment is way better than renting.

> The US has no laws on the books

Correct. They come up on Twitter daily. Pardon, this other truth bullshit.


Yes, and the Russians are still coming!

> or cool mountain areas

Absolutely f'ing not


Compared with KeePassXC and Syncthing, it is infinitely more expensive!


Oh yeah, I love having to manage sync conflicts in my password database because I was dumb enough to edit it on two separate computers that weren't both online at the same time.


Works best if you have an always on client. Easy if you have a VPS or a home lab, even a small one, a nuisance if you don't.


I have that and still have regular sync conflicts. :(


Yeah, my main reason to stay away from Keepass, everything is in a single versioned binary file. I like 'passwordstore.org', where every secret is it's own gpg-encrypted textfile in a git repo. Every change is a commit, easy to see history, easy to revert or know which version is newest. And easy to selfhost, you just need a place to git push/pull from.


What's to manage? A merge does the job.

What is wrong with using LLMs to analyze and explain code? Am I missing something? Before writing code, this is an even easier task to accomplish using AI.


In the early 2000's I've read about the "next wave", after BRICS, where Poland and Turkey were leading the pack. It was mainly due to the population tree. Both countries did relatively well, as expected. Turkey a bit worse, probably due to politics, changing geostrategic pivots, and strained relations with the big EU market.


Wonderful. My unpaid bills will be so happy waiting for that to complete.


If you're using a computer from any time in the past 20 years or so it's probably capable of multitasking so you can open another browser to pay your bills in the meantime.

I'll give myself as an example, between writing that first comment and replying to you, I downloaded and built ladybird on MacOS - it took 25 minutes, most of which was me fixing build dependencies - and here I am replying to you from an alternative browser. Text navigation is a little weird and text boxes are weird, but so far it works.

Of course, if building in the background is more effort than you're willing/able to expend, then continue using Chrome or Firefox until others finish the alternative, and then decide if the time required to download, install and get used to a packaged browser is also going to be a hindrance to you paying your bills.


My laptop runs Windows.


That’s ok, you can install Linux on it free of charge. Open source, baby!


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