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Here is a queueing api server for self hosted inference backends: https://github.com/aime-team/aime-api-server from a friend of mine. Very light weight and easy to use. You can even serve models from Jupyter Notebooks with it without needing to worry about overwhelming the server. It just gets slower the more load you send to it.


Really cool! I like that they have live demos to prove it out. Thanks for sharing


I would add a sixth rule: Gamify walking away from games or at least randomly walk away from them. Maybe it‘s time for me to try using a feature phone and a dumb watch.


This reminds me of Gunter Sachs‘ apartment in St Moritz which Roy Lichtenstein decorated, and Cesar Manriques lava bubble house on Lanzarote, and Salvador Dalis beach house in Portlligat. I think living in art is amazing and livable art worth preserving. If you have a chance, you can visit them, unfortunately not Gunter Sachs‘ apartment.


I wonder if the artist renting the apartment can get their decoration acknowledged as an 'improvement' to the apartment in which case they could require the next tenant (or property owner) to pay the artist some amount when signing the rental contract (in some EU countries at least.)


That's not a thing in the UK. The bulk of tenancies here are ASTs, which make most sense over a period of a few years (rather than decades). Our society is predicated on buying your own home while you're young, so a culture of tenancies where the tenant owns the fixtures and fittings doesn't really make sense here.


Also the artist is dead, his heirs were far more interested in preserving it than extracting money from it, the art is of the type a landlord is more likely to cover with white gloss paint than market as an enhancement, and an apartment in Birkenhead now apparently destined to be a community creative studio probably had very little value both before and after the outsider art was added.


Don't know the others but we visited Cesar Manriques' place 2 weeks ago and we all enjoyed it very much, including small kids (not in theme park way just to be clear).

Yeah its not visit of classics in Louvre but that guy sure knew how to build artistically pleasing gardens and surroundings, the design just 'clicked' with all of us immediately.



I think the most actionable summary is this:

For the AMOC and other climate tipping points, the only action we can take to minimize the risk is to phase out fossil fuel use and stop deforestation as fast as possible. If we can reach zero emissions, further global warming will stop within years, and the sooner this happens the smaller the risk of passing devastating tipping points. It would also minimize many other losses, damages, and human suffering from “regular” global warming impacts (e.g., heatwaves, floods, droughts, harvest failures, wildfires, sea level rise), which are already happening all around us even without the passing of major climate tipping points.

I think they are right and still feel the urge to pretend it’s not happening or not affecting us so much so I can go on with life. This is probably the main problem. When we will finally feel enough pressure that it hurts so bad that we cannot ignore it anymore, it might be too late. Those tipping point frighten me even more than the gradual warming.


It's quite scary that a lot of people don't take the risks of climate change seriously and instead wring their hands about the disruption that the phasing out of oil will cause. That's nothing compared to the disruption, famine, deaths and wars that will result from climate changes - just imagine a world where North America is in severe drought and most of Europe becomes unable to grow food or to live in without air conditioning.


They're convinced it's a hoax. They don't have to worry about trade offs. Burning more fossil fuels is all upside and no downside.

We can publish all the articles we want on the magnitude of the problem. As far as they're concerned it's all evidence of the conspiracy.


Confidential Computing is used when you want to protect data and processes against the platform. The platform owner has basically full control and visibility of what is happening around the Secure Enclave.


I have heard good things about the Notion AI addon although I haven’t tried it myself.


have never found it powerful enough - or I'm just setting too high a bar?

I have a ton of databases on Notion (with all my teams conversation transcripts, meeting to-dos, etc.) and global AI search just isn't there.

I haven't found a way there (but have elsewhere using open source) to create a kick-ass search.


In IT infrastructure outsourcing, running the old infrastructure unchanged but cheaper is sometimes called „mess for less“. Now, we can also generate new mess for less.


If it was not fulltime work I wonder what else they have been working on with different accounts.


I use GPTs like bookmarks. If I find an interesting or useful prompt, I bookmark / GPT it, maybe add a tool, later, and sometimes I share it, too. For me, Custom GPT is just a flashy term for bookmark and the GPT Store is just a social bookmark site.


The Caddy Docker Proxy Module enables Caddy to act as reverse proxy for docker containers via labels: https://github.com/lucaslorentz/caddy-docker-proxy


Whoa, thanks. I had my eye on Caddy for a local reverse proxy but can't be doing with maintaining another big config file. With the labels method the reverse proxy becomes "set and forget" and you're probably going to be editing bundled compose files to get rid of port conflicts anyway (or using override like https://blog.gpkb.org/posts/multiple-web-projects-traefik/)


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