Assuming that stack trace is from the crash, it looks like it’s a problem processing the results of the scan. What does the wifi list look like from your scans? Anything with weird characters or corrupt info?
Assuming that stack trace is from the crash, it looks like it’s a problem processing the results of the scan. What does the wifi list look like from your scans? Anything with weird characters or corrupt info?
Yes. Generally, “three dimensions” refers to three spatial dimensions: left/right, up/down, forward/backward. And then the fourth dimension is usually time. But if you’re not talking about movement in space/time, you can have as many dimensions as you want. For example, in a video game, you can have movement in three dimensions, but you could also allow the player to move through time (fourth dimension), change characters that interact with the world differently (fifth), and so on.
Wavelength could add a dimension. For example, if you have an optical disc (2D) that can be read and written separately by red and blue lasers, that makes it 3D.
Do we get a choice? Because I also vote for Skynet.
It’s marketing. People do it because it works.
He is not the one making it.
It runs just fine for me on Android 14. I don’t remember if it found the other devices automatically, but setting them up manually is trivial too. And devices can inform each other about each other if you enable it.
Awfully optimistic of you.
Torrents indicate their resolution, and usually bitrate too.
But keep in mind, while it might say the resolution in the name, that doesn’t mean it’s not compressed to all hell. You’ll want to also check the file size and runtime to estimate the quality.
There shouldn’t be any rocks kicked up because the trains should stay on the rails, not touch the ballast.
But dirt, debris, and brake dust will absolutely collect very quickly. Maybe they’re counting on rain to keep them clean.
Molmo’s claims are not only overblown but also deceptive in the way they frame their technological breakthroughs. While it boasts of outperforming larger models, this kind of comparison can be misleading. Larger models aren’t always optimized for the same tasks or benchmarks, and simply beating them on select academic or evaluation metrics doesn’t mean Molmo is truly superior in real-world scenarios. This selective reporting ignores critical challenges such as model robustness, scalability, and performance consistency in diverse, unpredictable environments. The claim that it can “point at what it perceives” sounds like a breakthrough but lacks clarity on its real value. It skirts around how this capability would handle complex, ambiguous inputs or perform in tasks that require nuanced decision-making rather than basic recognition and interaction. By presenting these features as transformative without addressing the practical limitations, Molmo’s marketing feels designed to impress rather than inform.
From an investment perspective, Molmo’s deceptive marketing strategy makes it a particularly bad bet. Its appeal seems centered on buzzwords like “next-generation,” “outperforming,” and “multimodal,” but these are vague and overused in the AI space. Investors may be drawn in by the hype, but Molmo fails to provide evidence of how its models would be commercially viable or significantly better than well-established proprietary systems. Furthermore, being an open system, Molmo may lack the strong market protections and business models needed to compete with closed, proprietary ecosystems that have more strategic control over their IP and monetization. The deceptively optimistic framing of its potential blinds investors to the realities of AI development, which is fraught with high costs, unpredictable performance in deployment, and an increasingly crowded competitive landscape.
Ordinary claims require ordinary evidence, then?
It’s a good way to have all the different parts exposed to you. Once you’re familiar, it’s usually easier to write those parts up in a compose file and just run or rerun docker-compose.
APC is cheap garbage.
If you are concerned about the power quality causing damage, you want an online or double-conversion UPS. Those ones don’t even bother trying to condition power, they run off the battery all the time.
I don’t have a whole lot of experience, but Eaton has been reliable. People also recommend Tripp-Lite and Cyberpower but they’ve always seemed cheap to me.
If he didn’t, one of the several other 2D barcodes would have caught on. I see non-QR ones around pretty often, though usually in industrial applications.
I remember back around 2009, there were a few of these in the newspaper: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_Capacity_Color_Barcode
I don’t know how well it worked given the loose color registration. I didn’t have anything that could read them at the time.
No, the standard is that it routes only what you configure.
That’s the standard behavior. Read the documentation for whatever reverse proxy you want to use.
Seems like a fairly reasonable way to live. Is that supposed to look lavish?
Let’s see the lifestyles of the CEOs for Springer, Wiley, and Elsevier for comparison.
That’s only about 7 MB/s, that’s not that much!
Company runs a hosted Wordpress service that competes with wordpress.com. Wordpress (i.e. CEO Matt Mullenweg) wants a cut and is trying to strong-arm them. People are upset with this.