They were already contracted by NHS to monitor vaccine distribution and covid data in 2020, that contract was terminated and moved to Mozaic Services after public outcry over data privacy concerns. https://www.cnbc.com/2021/09/10/uk-ends-one-of-its-data-shar...
This is what I have experienced as well. My employer (large SaaS company) declared a "code red" concerning AI about 6 months ago and built a team responsible for laying the foundation for how we will be using AI. They built a RAG framework for development which is scary efficient and accurate.
Developers who are testing the waters with cursor or warp have no idea what is possible.
I am scared for all devs, newer and older. Newer devs will have a harder time gaining experience. And the older devs who don't adapt will be looking for jobs in another line of work within 5 years.
The lightest SuperDuty has a gas engine. Diesel SuperDuty fuel economy is a bit better, but the vehicle also weighs more and is likely to be carrying/pulling more. But regardless of whether the multiple is 2 or 3.4 or somewhere in between, it is a small fraction of the added road wear.
By the fourth power law, an unloaded diesel Superduty creates ~22x the road wear of a honda civic. Loaded can be 100x more.
From a libertarian perspective, I always thought betting should be legal. Trust people to know their limits and remove the organized crime aspect. People will find a way even if it is illegal. Turns out there may have been a reason this was illegal in the first place.
Why would it be difficult? You have a single CA, so a single place where certs are issued. That means there’s a single place with the knowledge of what certs are issued for which identity, how long are those valid for, and has there been a new cert issued for that identity prior to previous cert expiration. Could not be simpler, in fact.
How do you get the inventory? Are you using a standard property API like the rest? Or is most of this a manual process at this point and is that why you are focusing on one city?
You are so confused, it’s not funny. There is no such thing as SSL 3.4. OpenSSL is not SSL. There were 3 SSL versions: 1.0, 2.0, 3.0. Following the 3.0, the protocol has been renamed to TLS. As of 2025, all versions of SSL (1.0, 2.0, 3.0) and early versions of TLS (1.0, 1.1) are considered insecure and have been deprecated by major browsers and the IETF. Modern secure communications rely exclusively on TLS 1.2 and TLS 1.3.
No major bank has an unhedged silver position remotely large enough to risk its solvency, the market is just not large enough. When I read this kind of conspiracy post I think you're long and talking your book.
This is synthetic demo data kept it short so people could see the methodology clearly. Real reports have way more transactions (platform handles 10k+ via Celery).
It's meant to be public as a sample showing the output format. Real client data is obviously private/encrypted.
What would you have expected model quality to have been this year, it’s greatly exceeded my expectations, I’m genuinely confused by this perspective…considering where we were a very very short time ago
For mojuba and myself, email is a way to organize TODO items. Things to take care of exist either way, and email is an awesome way to keep track of, and process, events / tasks asynchronously.
shermantanktop and you, forbiddenvoid, seem to refuse organizing TODOs, or perhaps even the concept that external events be allowed to generate TODOs for you ("my attention should be directed at what I want to do, when I want to"). I closely know this -- i.e., "garbage dump with tire fires in it" -- because that's precisely what my SO's mailbox looks like. Whereas I've maintained a perfect inbox 0 for several decades, both at work and privately.
This is an unbridgeable psychological divide between two attitudes toward, or even two definitions of, tasks and obligations. People who can naturally implement inbox 0 never lose track of a task (not just in email, but in any other medium either), and get indignated when they receive reminders. They're excellent schedulers, and orderly, but also frequently obsessive-compulsive, neurotic. People who can't instinctively do inbox 0 cannot be taught or forced to do it, they tend to need repeated reminders, and may still forget tasks. At the same time, they have different virtues; they tend to shine with ill-defined problems and unexpected events.
Neither group is at fault; the difference has biological roots, in the nervous system. Our brains physically differ.
Also there's a funny little Easter egg within the SSH connection to exe.dev, if you look closely. I don't want to spoil it for anyone, but it was nice to see.
Debian’s apt do not use SSL as far as I know and I am not aware of any serious security disaster. Their packages are signed and content is not considered confidental.
The puzzle consists of several levels. At each level, you need to find a key to proceed to the next. The key is hidden or encrypted in the video and looks like something like vFmTBOhkd00. Once you find it, you enter it into the link https://youtube.com/watch?v=vFmTBOhkd00 and proceed to the next level. Please leave a comment under the video after completing the levels. This will serve as proof that you've completed them (like a leaderboard). Those who have completed the levels are kindly requested not to publish the keys (links to the levels) so that others can enjoy the experience. This puzzle isn't as difficult as Cicada 3301, but despite this, few people have ever completed it. If you know similar puzzles or have ideas for a sequel, please let me know (contact information is in the channel profile). I'd be grateful.
We use a hybrid approach to keep costs low and performance high:
Function Metadata: Vectorized only once (for semantic search).
Execution Logs: Stored as standard structured data without embeddings.
Since we don't embed every log, the storage cost is virtually the same as using Postgres. The real value of VectorWave is automating this 'Vector for Search