Eh, please tell me how you’d implement a heuristic that doesn’t work either through magic or an algorithm.
Eh, please tell me how you’d implement a heuristic that doesn’t work either through magic or an algorithm.
So how does that neural network perform that task? There I can see only two possible options:
Is sort by upvotes an algorithm?
Any sorting at all can only happen through one of the following:
I’d love to back up my phone locally, if there was an option, but AFAIK there isn’t, so I’m stuck.
Can you not use Syncthing?
There’s also a whole lot that’s just C/C++ exposing a Python interface, without any wrapping.
What I’d like to know: For anyone using some app other than AntennaPod: Why? How is it worth it?
Even more real scenario: The first real visitor isn’t even a customer but a bored teenager who says nothing at all and instead takes a piss on the floor. (Anyone who ever published anything on the internet knows this scenario.)
The primary barrier for me: I’m not convinced that it’s a good idea.
Please, it’s only necessary to think about it seriously for a single moment to realize that a school where children are taught “that the earth is 6000 years old” obviously doesn’t exist.
But the joke here is about Americans, right? (If not, what is the joke that you’re trying to make!?)
Come on, I like a good “look at how stupid those Americans are” as much as anyone, but for it to be funny it has to be within the realm of what could possibly be true.
Sure. You’re very funny.
The question was about things taught at school.
[ˈslɑwɐ ʊkrɐˈjini]
I found The Ambassador by Mads Brügger to be particularly gripping, he goes too far and realizes that he’s gone too far and many uncomfortable truths are revealed:
You need to enter the UK using a British passport as a British citizen.
This is very common and the EU has the same requirement, anyone who has EU citizenship must use their EU passport (or national identity card) to enter the EU (even if they also have other passports that could otherwise have been used).
Already with a single standard in a single project things have a tendency to start breaking down as soon as there’s more than one developer and disagreement arises about what the text in the standard specification actually means.
Hm, this one intrigues me: what is commonly referred to as a website, without actually being a website?