

“Starch based” plastic is just a way to greenwash PLA.
Just because the C, H, and O originally came from starch, does not automatically make the chemically synthesized product safe.
Migrated to [email protected]
I am also @[email protected]


“Starch based” plastic is just a way to greenwash PLA.
Just because the C, H, and O originally came from starch, does not automatically make the chemically synthesized product safe.
Haha…yes fair enough. I changed the truck’s oil.


TSLQ
But, I don’t think it’s smart. Holding this for more than a day or two is irresponsible. You capture more risk on the up days then you will gain on the down days of the underlying ticker.
Instead, invest in a business you expect to grow. Just ignore the failing ones.


Everything’s computer


Cut a circle of plywood roughly the inner diameter of the pipe, glue it into the end of the pipe (or just snug it in if its a tight fit), then screw down through this into the bottom board.
Can just unscrew it and screw it somewhere else if needed. Can also unscrew it and leave it on a bench if you need to swap tools out.


Ph-trees can do range and closest queries across N dimensions very quickly. I have not used it for 1 dimension, but I’d imagine it would work fine.


Can you share sample code I can try or documentation I can follow of using an AMD GPU in that way (shared, virtualized, using only open source drivers)?


You really piqued my interest. I use docker/podman.
W/ an AMD graphics card, eglinfo on the host shows the card is AMD Radeon and driver is matching that.
In the container, without --gpus=all, it shows the card is unknown and the driver is “swrast” (so just CPU fallback).
To make --gpus=all work, it gives the error
docker: Error response from daemon: could not select device driver “” with capabilities: [[gpu]
I was doing a bad job searching before. I found that AMD can share the GPU, it just works a little differently in terms of how to launch the container. https://rocm.docs.amd.com/projects/install-on-linux/en/latest/install/amdgpu-install.html#amdgpu-install-dkms
But sadly my AMD GPU is too old/junk to have current driver support.
Anyways, appreciate the reply! Now I can mod my code to run on cheaper cloud instances.
(Note I’m an OpenGL/3D app developer, but probably OpenCL works about the same architecturally)


AFIK it’s only NVIDIA that allows containers shared access to a GPU on the host.
With the majority of code being deployed in containers, you end up locked into the NVIDIA ecosystem even if you use OpenCL. So I guess people just use CUDA since they are limited by the container requirement anyways.
That’s from my experience using OpenGL headless. If I’m wrong please correct me; I’d prefer being GPU agnostic.


Hired!


I think the pine hobby panels will be fine structurally. I think you mean the ones that are a bunch of smaller pieces glued together. In using these I have found not all the glue joints are great, though.
But, I suspect its the glue in the plywood that might damage the saw. Glued up hobby panels will likely act the same.
Might want to pick up a cheap crosscut saw / general carpentry saw for utility cutting and save the nice pull saw four detail work.
I bet the people you work with are very happy to have you as a lead.
I’ve been in this scenario and I didn’t wait for layoffs. I left and applied my skills where shit code is not tolerated, and quality is rewarded.
But in this hypothetical, we got this shit code not by management encouraging the right behavior, and giving time to make it right. They’re going to keep the yes men and fire the “unproductive” ones (and I know fully, adding to the pile is not, in the long run, productive, but what does the management overseeing this mess think?)

Thanks for replying, instead of just downvoting!
I think the bloat is not (primarily) in the end users experience, but in the extra code that the nginx maintainers must now continue to support, test, etc on an ongoing basis, which is not core to its function as a http server and proxy.
To me, this change goes against the Unix philosophy of simplicity, modularity, and the idea that programs should do one thing well.
Nginx should not contain logic that is not expressly related to serving or proxying web requests. The content it serves is up to the end user.
If we accept this change, should they also provide localized versions of all the error pages, too? I’m happy if their responsibility ends at just serving the content I provide.


They were just trying to make us smarter.
https://studyfinds.org/chewing-on-wood-brain-function-memory/
[kidding]
To be fair, if you give me a shit code base and expect me to add features with no time to fix the existing ones, I will also just add more shit on the pile. Because obviously that’s how you want your codebase to look.


I’m not sure why no one is direct linking it.
(the data looks incredibly incomplete)

Good. You can already do this via custom pages. Leave the bloat out.


There is value in just using something like this to break spending habits of the population.
A lot of people may find that a portion of their spending wasn’t that necessary after all, and will stop beyond the boycott. The businesses will need to improve services or lower prices to win customers back.
At least, that’s what I hope this achieves. The organizers might have varying goals.
Visual Studio has these issues daily.
Ten years ago VS was awesome. In the last 2 years, all they added is AI crap and every other feature got more buggy.