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xybersurfer
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Youtube hearted comments of xybersurfer (@xybersurfer).
ik vind het goed dat jullie uitleggen hoeveel werk het is om AI te maken. ik vond het interessant om over clickworkers te leren, die eigenlijk veel te weinig betaald krijgen. ik zou willen zeggen dat een, met veel mensen in een kantoor op de achtergrond goed zou zijn. maar het probleem is natuurlijk dat thumbnails meestal klein zijn. dus ik zou vooral daarom nummer 3 kiezen
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i'm glad that you started posting again. this is such an interesting channel
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nice recommendation! thanks
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this resonates with me. it makes me even more interested in your new book. i'm not sure whether i should wait for some reviews
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thanks for the great overview! hopefully the there will be enough RISC-V IP in the public domain to at least raise the bar for closed IP
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this is very exciting. i didn't know that RISC-V far along. open standards are good. i hope it catches on
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i think you were spot on. the humor was good too. i didn't intend to listen to this complete episode but time flew
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do you think that there is a technical solution to this problem, like limiting the number of profiles that men can like? great video by the way
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this looks like a really nice book
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i liked this experiment and Sara's thoughtfulness
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@HealthyDev a little bit technical: one of the things that immediately comes to mind is the web.config file that is part of .NET web services in and it's tight coupling with IIS, which is the server where such a web service is usually hosted. in IIS settings, the admin can set things like whether to use HTTP or HTTPS and what kind of Authentication to use (for example Basic or Anonymous Authentication, etc). the problem is that the web.config file, that's part of the web service, also requires specifying which of these will be used, or it won't work (errors). the web.config file does not have sane defaults and it's rather complicated and the documentation is rather poor. the result is that things crash when the admin changes these kinds of settings. and the developer is left trying to figure out what changed and how to mimic these settings in a poorly documented file. the struggling already happens during development, and combined with a deadline this becomes a huge issue. online you will find lot's of talk of people trying to solve web.config problems (who blames them?), not only related to IIS. but hardly anyone talks about what a mess this is that Microsoft designed. there are many more examples in other technologies and languages. i would say that this type problem, is where most of my time goes as a developer
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Great video! Very educational. I may get one in the future
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that's pretty interesting. the motherboard has a mix of typical SBC and desktop features. i know from personal experience what a challenge cable management is in ITX cases. you kind of have to just push the cables out of the way, and especially keep them away from fans. but it worked out pretty well. i like the case too
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good. i will add that trying to avoiding global mutable state or side effects is perhaps more important. especially when you start splitting things into functions, so that these functions don't have invisible interactions. always try to use the return value of a function for the result. global constants are of course okay, because they are not mutable. and you can't really avoid the side effect of writing to file or database, if that's what you need to do
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good video
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8:56 the left clip of the RAM is loose. i doubt anything bad will happen though
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@alexandergrace5350 that seems fair. i think i misunderstood. on second viewing, you did mention a feedback loop
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i was a bit skeptical about the title, but i completely agree with this advice
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i really like this video. i like the insight you provided, into what makes you tick. i was not disappointed :D
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