

I remember when this guy came to power and the allegations of extra-judicial executions as part of his war on drugs. I didn’t realise the ICC had caught up with him.
FLOSS virtualization hacker, occasional brewer
I remember when this guy came to power and the allegations of extra-judicial executions as part of his war on drugs. I didn’t realise the ICC had caught up with him.
Very expensive and still slower than an hard coded ASIC.
Sure if they needed to bypass ads I can introduce them to Free tube or whatever but for all it’s sins they need moderated exposure to the YouTube experience so they’re equipped enough not to go totally wild when they finally have unfettered access.
I thought my youngest was all about watching hour long Minecraft playthroughs but really they are quite interested in game mechanics and speed running. They are just a lot more tolerant of watching hours of videos around a particular game.
I don’t overly police their content consumption (although we do talk about limiting shorts). The main thing is at the weekend to kick them off the TV after the morning to go and do something more interactive.
When we first let the kids watch YouTube it was on the main TV with it’s own account. We have consistently monitored it and actively prune recommendations while slowly introducing them to the concept of “the algorithm”. From secondary school they pretty much need YouTube on their own PC’s for homework reasons and it’s harder to totally lock down - we use the family link controls to limit it a little but if they tried to get around them they could. The hope is we’ve at least prepared them a little before they have totally unfettered access to the internet.
We did try YouTube kids a little but it was such a garbage experience we just blocked the app everywhere.
The article says it only applied to apps requesting certain permissions. I agree I’m an ideal world it would be nice to get f-droid directly from the Play store but at least according to the article the ability to install it isn’t being blocked here.
From the article it sounds like the limitations come for some app types downloaded directly from a browser. I think this doesn’t affect alternate app stores like f-droid where you are effectively delegating approval to their process.
I have come across the other limitations mentioned with the Home Assistant companion app which I could only get matter registration to work with the version downloaded from the Play store.
I can second the alcohol free beers. The modern ones have excellent taste and hit the refreshing hoppy spot for me and are much better than juice or sodas when it comes to calories. I’m not totally dry, I drink 2-3 units a week, but I’m certainly feeling better for not having alcohol every day.
I’m forever telling my children to pay attention in car parks because they are full of moving cars.
We use GitLab for hosting and CI as well as the issue tracker. Just the patch workflow goes over email although we have considered just maintainers submitting pull requests once the review and tags have been collected on list.
A lot of the more senior maintainers find the process of patch review in the webui suboptimal compared to email.
It’s an ongoing debate in one of the projects I work with if we should move to a more forge oriented development process. For all it’s faults email does provide a good record of discussion as well as evidence of review.
I finally figured out the ramalamma runes to run stuff from hugging face. It sure does like to “think” through its problems:
➜ ramalama run huggingface://jedisct1/MiMo-7B-RL-GGUF/MiMo-7B-RL-Q4_K_M.gguf
Downloading hf://MiMo-7B-RL-Q4_K_M.gguf:latest ...
Trying to pull hf://MiMo-7B-RL-Q4_K_M.gguf:latest ...
99% |███████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████ | 4.36 GB/ 4.36 GB 34.04 MB/s 0s 🦭 > what sort of coding capabilities do you have?
Okay, the user is asking about my coding capabilities. Let me start by recalling what I know. I can handle a lot of programming languages, right? But wait, I need to list the main ones without getting too technical. Frontend like JavaScript, HTML, CSS. Backend languages such as Python, Ruby, maybe Java or C#. Then frameworks and libraries: React, Node.js, Django, TensorFlow. Oh, and I can help with algorithms, debugging, and code optimization. Also, version control with Git. Should I mention specific examples where possible? Like helping with Python scripts or JavaScript functions. Don't forget to mention that I can explain concepts and assist with coding interviews. Wait, maybe add something about being updated with the latest trends. Also, emphasize that I can provide explanations and walk through code step by step. Avoid mentioning any limitations, like not having real-world execution. Make sure the answer is clear and covers the key areas without being overwhelming. Structure it with bullet points for clarity. Check for any recent updates in programming languages I should include. Yeah, I think that's covered. Alright, time to put it all together in a friendly, concise way.
I can assist with a wide range of coding-related tasks, including:
### **Programming Languages**
- **Frontend**: JavaScript (ES6+), HTML, CSS, React, Vue.js, Angular.
- **Backend**: Python, Node.js (JavaScript), Ruby, Java, C#, PHP, Go, Rust.
- **Data Science/ML**: Python (NumPy, Pandas, scikit-learn, TensorFlow/PyTorch).
- **Databases**: SQL (MySQL, PostgreSQL, SQLite), NoSQL (MongoDB, Redis).
### **Frameworks & Tools**
- Web Development: Django, Flask, Express.js, Spring Boot, React/Next.js.
- DevOps: Docker, Kubernetes, AWS/GCP/Azure, Git (and GitHub/GitLab/Bitbucket).
- Testing: Unit tests, mocking (with tools like unittest, pytest, JUnit).
### **Key Skills**
- Algorithm design, code optimization, debugging, and problem-solving.
- Code review, formatting, and refactoring.
- Generating code snippets, pseudocode, or explanations for specific tasks.
- Walk-throughs for complex projects (e.g., building APIs, sorting algorithms).
### **Additional Help**
- Coding interview preparation (examples, explanations, time/space complexity analysis).
- Concepts like OOP, REST APIs, design patterns, and best practices.
- Debugging assistance (e.g., interpreting errors, logic issues).
Let me know what you need! I can also explain ideas in simple terms or guide you through steps. 🚀
🦭 > Can you write me a short C function to reverse a string?
Okay, I need to write a C function to reverse a string. Let's see. Hmm, how do you reverse a string in C? I remember that strings in C are arrays of characters, so the idea is to swap the characters from the beginning and the end.
First, I should think about the parameters. The function will take a string pointer and its length. Oh right, because to know how long the string is. But wait, strings are null-terminated, so the actual length is one less than the size including the null character. But maybe the user will pass the correct length. Hmm, maybe the function should accept both the string and its length. Or maybe calculate the length inside the function. Wait, but calculating the length each time might be inefficient, especially for long strings. So perhaps the user should pass the length as an argument. That's better.
So the function signature would be something like void reverseString(char *str, int length). But wait, in C, the length of a string can be found using strlen(), but that includes the null terminator. Oh right, so the actual number of characters is strlen(str) - 1. Wait, no. The strlen function returns the number of characters before the null terminator, so for example, if the string is "hello", it's 5 characters, and the null is at index 5. So the length parameter for reversing should be the same as the return value of strlen(str). But if the user passes the full size of the buffer, maybe that's different. But perhaps it's safer to have the function take the length as an argument. Because if the user provides the correct length (including the null terminator?), wait no. When reversing, you don't want to mess with the null terminator. So maybe the function should reverse the characters up to the null terminator. So perhaps the function should first find the length of the string using strlen(), then reverse the first length characters. But then the user doesn't have to pass the length. Hmm. Let me think.
If the function is written to take the string and its length, the user has to make sure they pass the correct length (excluding the null terminator?), but maybe that's up to the function to handle. For example, if the user passes the correct length, then the function can swap the characters from 0 to length-1. So perhaps the function can be written as:
void reverseString(char *str, int length) {
int left = 0;
int right = length - 1;
while (left < right) {
char temp = str[left];
str[left] = str[right];
str[right] = temp;
left++;
right--;
}
}
But then the user needs to calculate the length before calling the function. Like, int len = strlen("hello"); reverseString(str, len); That would reverse the first len characters, which are the actual characters without the null terminator. That makes sense. So the function swaps the characters up to the length provided. So the user is responsible for passing the correct length. But maybe in the example code, the user might just pass the string and the function calculates the length. Let me see. If the function doesn't take the length, then we can compute it inside the function. Let's see:
void reverseString(char *str) {
int length = strlen(str);
int left = 0;
int right = length - 1;
while (left < right) {
char temp = str[left];
str[left] = str[right];
str[right] = temp;
left++;
right--;
}
}
This way, the user just passes the string, and the function reverses it. That's probably better because the user doesn't have to compute the length. But then, what if the string is null? Well, we should handle that, but maybe for simplicity, the example code can assume the string is valid. Also, the function will modify the string in place, which is efficient. That's a common approach in C.
So putting it all together, the function would look like this. Let me test it in my mind. Suppose the string is "hello". The length is 5. Left starts at 0, right at 4. Swap 'h' and 'o' → "oleh". Then left 1, right 3: swap 'e' and 'l' → "olleh". Then left 2, right 2: stop. So reversed string is "olleh", which is correct. Yes.
So the answer would be a function that reverses the string in place using an in-place swap algorithm. The code would look like the second version, without the length parameter. That's better for the user because they don't have to compute the length. So the code is:
#include
void reverseString(char *str) {
int length = strlen(str);
int left = 0;
int right = length - 1;
while (left < right) {
char temp = str[left];
str[left] = str[right];
str[right] = temp;
left++;
right--;
}
}
Wait, but what about strings that are not null-terminated? But in standard C, all strings are null-terminated, so this should work. So this code should work for standard C strings. The function reverses the string in place, which is efficient. The user can call it like: char str[] = "hello"; reverseString(str); printf("%s", str); which would output "olleh".
So that's the code. I think that's correct. Let me check for possible errors. For example, when the string has only one character. Then left and right are same, the loop doesn't run, correct. For empty string, but then strlen would be 0, right would be -1, loop doesn't run. That's okay. So yes, the code should work.
Here's a C function that reverses a string in-place:
```c
#include
void reverseString(char *str) {
int length = strlen(str);
int left = 0;
int right = length - 1;
while (left < right) {
char temp = str[left];
str[left] = str[right];
str[right] = temp;
left++;
right--;
}
}
How to use it:
#include
int main() {
char str[] = "hello";
reverseString(str);
printf("Reversed string: %s\n", str);
return 0;
}
Output:
Reversed string: olleh
Explanation:
strlen()
.left
and right
) start at the beginning and end of the string.This approach reverses the string efficiently with minimal memory usage (in-place reversal).
Is the summary video an AI generated one from NotebookML?
Fair.
Still enjoyed it more for not being a third act CGI slugfest.
You would have thought for $33mil a pop they would have some countermeasures. I guess they are still several orders of magnitude cheaper than a jet with an expensive pilot so are more disposable?
I assume you need fairly sophisticated SAM systems to take out these drones. Are they all coming from Iran? Is this a step up in their missile capability?
PipePipe seems to work with my login to play age restricted stuff. I do generally have to trigger a login through settings and then research the video through.
Does anyone know what the underlying filesystem is on DSM? The ability to easily replace disks with a degree of redundancy across the 4 bays is the biggest plus point for Synology although I have no doubt all the bits underneath are the Linux storage stack.
It’s a shame because I really like the point and click nature of DSM. Although I’m a happy Linux hacker I don’t want another Linux box to suck up my limited admin time just to store files.
I think the first proper internet I had was downloading files from FTP servers at university. The first time I had it from home was over a modem to Demon ISP running some cobbled together TCP/IP stack for my Atari Falcon.
It was wild back then, I think even on windows you needed to install an IP stack before you could do anything because Windows didn’t have one but default because why would you?