I’m quite partial to 74 series logic chips personally.
I’m quite partial to 74 series logic chips personally.
I worked for a small software company for 6 years after finishing uni. I was the first person the founders hired. It was a great time and I learnt a lot and got to make a lot of decisions and had a lot of freedom.
But they didn’t pay anywhere near as much as a corporate job so when I got offered significantly more money to work for a very large company the small company couldn’t match it and pushed me to take it as a huge career and development opportunity.
It’s been great working at the big company but I really miss the culture and involvement I had at the small company.
+1 for namecheap. I’m happy with them as a registrar. Their support has always been fast and helpful if I have an issue. I use CloudFlare for DNS as they were easier to setup something for dynamic IP.
Yes it runs on Linux, my laptop is running Manjaro and I installed it from the AUR. I’m not sure if the scripting is possible, there is an openAI compliant web API you can turn on so maybe possible through that, you would probably have to feed in the content of the site with the prompt though, I’m not sure there is a better way but I guess that sort of behaviour is a bit out of scope for GPT4All.
There is a local documents feature that allows it to access text files on your machine that you give it specific access to but I think it’s fairly limited in its ability.
I’ve been using GPT4All on my laptop and using mostly 7B models due to my RAM limitations and I am amazed how good some of them are.
It’s been really easy to use. There are models you can download from within the UI or you can get adventurous and download them from elsewhere, they just need to be in the .gguf format. I get most from TheBloke on hugging face.
So far my favourite has been solar-10.7B-instruct-v1.0-uncensored, it has been astonishingly good.
I just use nginx alpine, if freenginx proves to be the better option later it should be fairly trivial to switch the base image.
I’m Australian, I hate the way our government treats our healthcare system and continues to make decisions in favour of companies and to the detriment of the Australian people, but holy hell is our system better than in the US.
Each time I read an article like this I’m glad to live here. This is never a decision we would need to make, we wouldn’t even question going to the ER in a case like this.
Look up Pickle Crisp.
My favourite feature is that you can host it yourself, you can even set it up to search over tor or VPN if you’re super privacy conscious.
If I can add to this list because you listed most people I would mention.
The Skeptics Guide to the Universe was my top for this year.
Same here but with Lidarr to simplify the searching.
I used to use Plex running in an LXC in Proxmox but when I switched to Jellyfin I did it through docker and I haven’t looked back. The setup was easier, maintenance is easier (updates can be scripted to be automatic really easily) and it works in a reliable predictable way like the rest of my docker containers.
I just have a VM in Proxmox that has docker installed and that contains all of my containers.
I used to run it on an old PC I got for free from a school made circa 2007 with a core 2 duo and 2gb of RAM and it ran remarkably well for such an old machine.
I’ve seen it with GoDaddy but not namecheap.
I’m with namecheap, they are considerably better than my last registrar.
There is someone selling a bucyrus cable hoe (think antique excavator) not far from me but the price they want is outrageous.
To piggyback off this, hobby machining in general. You can buy a small lathe pretty cheap but add some decent tooling and oh you need a very fancy tool you don’t have? Hand over more cash. You want to make a part that won’t fit in your small beginner lathe? Time to fork out for a bigger more expensive one. Oh a mill would be better for that part? Those kidneys could get a basic mill. Oh you need more fancy tooling for the mill now…
Schnappi, das kleine krokodil was quite popular in Australia in the early 00’s.
Not to mention most “8-bit” CPUs had a 16 bit address bus.